Jacob Monk enters Packers training camp with little margin for error.
The Green Bay center’s path to the roster has gotten narrower, and it was already thin. He barely saw the field last season while the offensive line kept taking hit after hit from injuries, and now the Packers have added another body to the mix with Kentucky interior lineman Jager Burton, taken with the 153rd pick in this year’s draft.
Burton looks like a strong bet to stick, and that matters because he cuts directly into Monk’s best route to a job. Monk also missed OTAs while dealing with a biceps injury, which only makes the coming training camp stretch more important for a player whose stock has already slipped.
On paper, the Packers moving Sean Rhyan and Jordan Morgan into full-time starting roles should have opened a lane for Monk to settle in as a top reserve. Instead, his chances may hinge on how many linemen Green Bay decides to keep, and even then he’ll have to win every inch of the fight.
Monk was drafted 10 picks after Burton and two years ahead of him, but that draft slot hasn’t translated into much on-field value yet. The Duke product played only on special teams as a rookie, logging 43 snaps, and all but six of his offensive snaps in 2025 came in Week 18 against Minnesota, when Green Bay was already locked into the seven-seed. In other words, the Packers still haven’t gotten much from him.
That doesn’t close the door. It just means Monk is climbing uphill after two quiet seasons.
Burton is positioned to be the primary backup at guard and center, if not more. Darian Kinnard, who played in all 17 games last year and started four, looks like a steady bet to make the 53-man roster as well.
That already gives Green Bay seven linemen in the mix: five starters and two reserves. The Packers could also carry John Williams, a 2025 seventh-round pick who missed his entire rookie season with an injury, as another guard option. Travis Glover, who also spent 2025 sidelined, gives them another possibility at tackle.
If the team keeps eight linemen, or even nine, Monk is suddenly battling a cluster of fringe candidates for one or two openings. He might have the edge over Williams or Glover on paper, but both are unknowns because they haven’t had a chance to show what they can do over a full season.
That leaves Monk with the simplest and toughest assignment of all: play well enough to force the issue. If he doesn’t, even a practice-squad landing spot isn’t guaranteed, depending on how Williams, Glover, or any of the undrafted rookies perform.
At this point, Monk may be fighting not just for a roster spot, but for his place in Green Bay altogether. Training camp and the preseason will decide whether he stays in the picture.
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