No. 9 is one of the trickier calls in the Green Bay Packers jersey-number series, but the choice lands on a familiar old name: Jug Earp.
The Packers have cycled through a long list of players in the number, including Bryan Barker, Josh Bidwell, Fred Borak, Dirk Borgognone, Dean Dorsey, Jug Earp, Dave Hayes, Bob Kahler, DeShone Kizer, Jim McMahon, Jon Ryan, Jaylon Smith, Bryan Wagner, Seneca Wallace, Christian Watson, and Whitey Woodin. That group includes a few recognizable names, but the decision here comes down to Earp and Woodin, both Packers Hall of Famers.
Woodin is already represented elsewhere in the series, and Earp wore No. 9 for more seasons, so he gets the nod.
And yes, that last name is the kind of trivia nugget that sticks: Earp was related to Wyatt Earp, the legendary lawman, as second cousins once removed.
Francis Earp played 12 NFL seasons from 1921 to 1932, and while he logged a few games for the Rock Island Independents, Frankford Yellow Jackets, and New York Yankees, the Packers were his team. He made 132 career appearances, with 120 of them coming in Green Bay.
That run also made him a piece of franchise history. Earp was the first player in Packers history to appear in 100 NFL games. He also became the first Packer at center to snap the football with one hand, a detail that adds a little more shine to his place in team lore.
Earp spent time at several spots along the offensive line, but center was where he lived most often. In 1929, he earned Second-Team All-Pro honors and helped the Packers win their first NFL Championship, finishing 12-0-1. He was also part of Green Bay’s title teams in 1930 and 1931.
His Packers career was spread across several jersey numbers - 11, 7, 29, 38, and 39 among them - but No. 9 is the one he wore most often, and that’s enough to make him the best Packers player to wear it. He was also part of the first class inducted into the Packers Hall of Fame in 1970.
In Other News...
Packers Double Down On Isaiah McDuffie With New Defensive Commitment
Isaiah McDuffies rise from depth piece to trusted part of the Packers defense has now been rewarded. Green Bay signed the linebacker to an extension after a 2025 season in which he handled a much bigger role on defense and special teams, giving the team another example of how it wants to keep its own players in place as they earn larger responsibilities.
The move also gives the Packers some control over McDuffies future before he can get to unrestricted free agency after the 2026 season. For a player drafted by Green Bay in 2021, it is another sign that the organization sees value in developing and retaining homegrown talent, especially when that player has proven he can handle steady snaps and contribute in multiple phases. [Read more 🡒]
Packers May Finally Have The Missing Piece Behind Josh Jacobs
MarShawn Lloyd has spent much of his first two seasons trying to get on the field, but the Packers still have reason to be intrigued by what the 2024 third-round pick can become. The former USC back brought real juice to college football, and even in preseason glimpses he showed the kind of speed and receiving ability that can change the shape of an offense when he is healthy enough to use it.
This offseason, Lloyd took another step in trying to get there, working with specialists to get to the root of the soft-tissue issues that have slowed him down and heading into camp looking healthier than he has in a while. If that progress holds, Green Bay could finally have a back who gives Josh Jacobs a different kind of partner in the backfield, one the offense has been missing for some time. [Read more 🡒]
Packers Have A Hidden Backfield Problem That Could Derail 2026
Josh Jacobs remains the centerpiece of Green Bays rushing attack, and the Packers know it. He gave the offense a reliable downhill identity last season, but the bigger issue now is what comes after him. The room behind Jacobs is thin enough that the team cannot afford much disruption, especially with the offense leaning so heavily on the run game to stay on schedule and keep balance.
Chris Brooks is viewed as the third-down option, while MarShawn Lloyd is next in line if Green Bay has to reach deeper into the depth chart. That is where the concern starts to sharpen for 2026, because the Packers are one injury, one setback, or one stretch of missed time away from asking a lot more of their backups than the roster may be built to handle. [Read more 🡒]
