The Green Bay Packers have spent the last few seasons building their wide receiver room around quantity and flexibility, not a traditional alpha. That approach has changed this offseason, and the move that drew the most heat from ESPN’s Ed Werder was the decision to trade Dontayvion Wicks to the Philadelphia Eagles.
Green Bay had already started reshaping the position group before that deal. The Packers let Romeo Doubs leave in free agency, kept young second-year receivers Matthew Golden and Savion Williams in the mix, and locked up Christian Watson and Jayden Reed with contract extensions. They also didn’t bring in any additional wideouts, signaling a clear shift in how they want the room constructed.
The Wicks trade was welcomed by many Packers fans, and it’s easy to see why. Wicks had shown some growth in 2025, but the drop problems that have followed him for much of his career still loomed large, and he was never viewed as one of the team’s top three receiving options.
Werder, though, saw it differently. He called it the move he felt least comfortable with, saying:
“The only receiver transaction I’m lukewarm on is the Wicks deal. They got fifth- and sixth-round picks for him, but I believe Wicks - who has shown an above-average ability to get open throughout his career - might have more production in him than he has shown to date. Granted, Matthew Golden and Savion Williams are still around, but we have yet to see either player make a big impact.”
That read makes sense on one level. Wicks does have a knack for separation, and there’s a fair argument that he has more to give than he’s shown so far. But the Packers clearly never saw him as a long-term piece worth paying again, and they made their priorities obvious by extending Watson and Reed and spending two top-100 picks in 2025 on Golden and Williams.
Wicks was a fifth-round pick, and in Green Bay’s view, he was part of the crowd blocking the path for the younger receivers behind him. That’s part of why Golden and Williams were not able to make a bigger early impact.
It’s easy to imagine Wicks finding another gear in Philadelphia. It’s much harder to picture Green Bay waiting around for that version to arrive.
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