The Packers made their preference pretty clear when they went up for Trey Smack in the draft. They traded both of their seventh-round picks to move into the sixth, a move that said plenty about how they viewed him. Mason Crosby backed that up, calling Smack the "best kicker in this draft."
But draft status doesn’t win kicking jobs in the NFL. Made kicks do.
That’s where Lucas Havrisik comes in. He has a real chance to turn Green Bay’s planned outcome into an actual competition, and maybe a messy one at that. The Packers may want Smack to be their kicker this season, but they can’t afford to simply hand him the job and hope it works out.
Smack has already had some uneven moments in OTAs and minicamp. He missed four kicks in one practice while dealing with windy conditions.
His leg strength isn’t the issue; he can drive the ball from distance. The concern is whether he can be steady on the shorter kicks that matter most in the NFL.
Havrisik has given them a reason to pause. Last season, he filled in for an injured Brandon McManus and handled the spot well enough to make this summer matter.
He hit all four of his field goals, including a franchise-record 61-yarder, and went 7-for-9 on extra points. Both misses came in his final game, which left a sour finish, but the body of work was enough to put him back in the conversation.
And that conversation matters because Green Bay has already seen what happens when it bets too long on a kicker who isn’t getting it done. The Packers moved on from McManus after a tough season, and they know better than to just ride with a rookie because he was drafted. They also lived through the Anders Carlson experience, which ended with a missed fourth-quarter field goal in the playoff loss to the San Francisco 49ers.
That history is exactly why Havrisik has leverage now. The Packers can’t treat this like a formality, especially with Super Bowl aspirations hanging over the season. If Havrisik keeps outperforming Smack once camp opens, Green Bay may have no choice but to go with the veteran.
It’s not the outcome the Packers planned for when they spent draft capital on Smack. If he doesn’t even make the 53-man roster, that decision will look rough.
But Havrisik doesn’t have to worry about that part. His job is simple: keep kicking well enough to make Green Bay choose.
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