Packers Still Have The Same Linebacker Problem In A New Defense

Can the Green Bay Packers finally find consistency at linebacker amid a decade of uncertainty and revolving strategies?

The Packers’ linebacker room still doesn’t have a clean answer.

That’s the strange part. It’s not a position in full rebuild mode, and it’s not one that feels settled, either. Green Bay has spent years trying to piece it together through different defensive regimes - from Mike Pettine to Joe Barry to Jeff Hafley and now Jonathan Gannon - without ever really landing on a long-term shape for the group.

Brian Gutekunst’s track record there tells the story. He brought in Christian Kirksey to fill the Blake Martinez void, only to watch Kirksey get hurt.

The Packers then ended up with De’Vondre Campbell, doubled down after his huge year, and got burned soon after. They tried Campbell with Quay Walker, then Walker with Edgerrin Cooper, and now Cooper is being paired with former Jonathan Gannon collaborator Zaire Franklin.

The through line isn’t a philosophy so much as a search for two players who can handle most of the snaps.

Franklin is the latest swing. He’d been a full-time starter in Indianapolis since 2022, but 2025 was a down year by just about any standard.

At 30 and on the wrong side of the age curve, there’s a real question about what Green Bay is getting if he’s already starting to lose a step. At the same time, there’s a case that this could be the right environment for him to bounce back.

He’ll be back with Gannon, who coached him in Indianapolis, and Gannon’s defense may fit him better than what Lou Anarumo was running there. The Colts defense struggled across the board, so Franklin may have been caught in the middle of a bad situation.

Then there’s Cooper, who was recently voted one of the ten best linebackers in the NFL. His 2025 season looked different from his rookie year in 2024, though not necessarily worse.

As a rookie, he was unleashed as the kind of sideline-to-sideline threat his speed suggests. In 2025, with Micah Parsons handling most of the pass rushing, Cooper was used in a more conservative, coverage-heavy role.

That wasn’t a mistake, but it did take away some of what makes him special. The big question now is whether Gannon lets him hunt again or keeps him in a more controlled role.

After those two, the depth chart gets murkier fast.

The Packers recently extended Isaiah McDuffie, a player who feels like he’s squeezed every last drop out of his skill set. He gives Green Bay everything he has, every snap.

The issue is that what he has sometimes isn’t enough - not against teams throwing over him, and not against teams running past him. He’s dependable, but he’s not the kind of player you build an entire defense around.

Ty’Ron Hooper is still hanging around as one of the more frustrating examples of Green Bay’s third-round history. He’s played only 144 defensive snaps over the last two regular seasons, even though he’s been healthy for all 34 games.

The Packers trading for Franklin and extending McDuffie this offseason doesn’t exactly scream confidence in his role. If he was going to force his way into something bigger, it probably would have happened by now.

Behind them are Nick Niemann, Krisian Welch, and T.J. Quinn, all of whom are basically fighting for special teams work.

Niemann is a special teams force and led the Packers in special teams tackles last year despite appearing in only seven games. But his first defensive snap of the season came in the playoffs, and the Bears were able to target and exploit his special teams-based profile in a key moment.

Welch is in a similar lane, though without any real defensive footprint yet. He’s back in Green Bay for a second stint and looks like a pure special teams player.

Quinn is the most unusual of the group. He looks more like a safety than a linebacker, and he moves like one, too. But being under-tall and underweight at linebacker is a tough sell, even if the speed is solid.

So that’s where the Packers are: a crowded, awkward mix of veterans, role players and specialists, with no obvious blueprint for how it all fits together. Maybe Gannon sorts it out. Right now, though, linebacker remains one of the most puzzling spots on the roster.

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