Jordan Love’s 2025 numbers are giving Packers fans plenty of reason to look ahead, especially with Green Bay leaning on him and working with the receivers already on the roster.
One stat in particular stands out: Love had the fifth-lowest interception rate of any full-time starter last season, according to Mina Kimes in a post on X. Kimes said she was surprised to see him left off the list compiled by ESPN’s collection of scouts, coaches, and executives.
“It’s really hard to find a meaningful quarterback metric where he doesn’t rank top five,” Kimes said. “Something that was brought up a lot with him as a criticism is taking care of the football.
He had a lower interception rate than eight of the top 10 quarterbacks on this list. I don’t think that perception matches reality.”
Love’s season backed that up. He completed 291 of 439 passes for 66.3%, throwing 23 touchdown passes against only six interceptions.
Kimes also pointed to the traits that make Love such an intriguing quarterback.
“What I see on tape (is) an aggressive, talented thrower of the football who can make every throw, all parts of the field,” Kimes said. “He just looks like a top-10 quarterback to me. The kind that lifts up everyone around him.”
He’s got support inside the locker room, too. Micah Parsons made that clear when reacting to Love being ranked No. 72 in the league.
“71 players in the NFL aren’t better than Jordan Love!” Parsons said.
At the top of the rankings was Josh Allen, followed by Patrick Mahomes, Matthew Stafford, Joe Burrow, and Lamar Jackson. Dak Prescott, Justin Herbert, Drake Maye, Jared Goff, and Caleb Williams filled out the top 10.
Love landed in honorable mention alongside Sam Darnold, Jayden Daniels, Brock Purdy, Baker Mayfield, and Jalen Hurts. Bo Nix, Daniel Jones, and CJ Stroud also received votes.
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Spains 2-1 win over Belgium only added to the atmosphere around the night, and the tournament now shifts toward a semifinal against France at AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas. For Green Bay, the more interesting part may be less about the result than the sight of Love moving comfortably through a major event and not letting the noise around him change the mood. [Read more 🡒]
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Coaches have reason to believe there is more there, even if the next step still has to show up on the field. The appeal is obvious enough: if his development comes as hoped, it would give the Packers another answer up front and help firm up the kind of protection and run-game stability that can lift the whole offense. The only real question is how quickly that promise turns into something the team can count on. [Read more 🡒]
