The Green Bay Packers have put themselves in a dangerous spot at running back, and it starts with a pair of question marks that could reshape the entire backfield picture before the 2026 season arrives.
On one side is Josh Jacobs, who has been as productive as the Packers could have hoped on the field. Over the last two seasons, he has piled up 2,258 rushing yards and 28 touchdowns in Green Bay.
Off the field, though, his situation is far less stable. Jacobs was arrested and jailed in late May on allegations of battery, criminal damage to property, disorderly conduct, strangulation and suffocation, and intimidation of a victim.
Those accusations still need to be proven in court, but the NFL has a long track record of getting involved in cases like this through its personal conduct policy. That leaves open the possibility that Jacobs could miss time in 2026, and it also creates the uncomfortable reality that he might not even be on the roster by season’s end.
The backup plan isn’t much easier to trust.
MarShawn Lloyd, the Packers’ third-round pick in 2024 out of USC, was supposed to bring juice to the position. His final season with the Trojans offered plenty of reason for optimism: 820 rushing yards, nine touchdowns and 13 receptions for 232 yards, a sparkling 17.8 yards per catch. Green Bay drafted him with the idea that he could be the lightning to Jacobs’ thunder.
So far, that vision has barely gotten off the ground. Lloyd has played in only one game since joining the Packers because of a long list of injuries, and in that appearance he was on the field for just 10 snaps.
The talent is obvious. The durability?
That’s the problem.
That’s why a veteran addition keeps coming up as a possibility. Denny Carter of Rotoworld Football recently pointed to the idea that Green Bay could go shopping for backfield help before the regular season, especially if Jacobs faces a suspension.
“Don’t be surprised if the Packers acquire backfield help ahead of the regular season if Jacobs’ legal problems lead to a suspension," Carter recently wrote. "This could include James Conner, a reliable between-the-tackles guy who appears to be expendable in Arizona."
Conner makes sense as a name to watch. He has a connection to new defensive coordinator Jonathan Gannon, who was most recently the head coach of the Arizona Cardinals before getting fired after going 15-36 in three seasons. Conner is also just one season removed from back-to-back 1000-plus yard rushing campaigns.
But the veteran market isn’t exactly clean. Conner is on the wrong side of 30 and missed most of last season after suffering a severe ankle and foot injury in only three games.
Joe Mixon is another possibility, though he is coming off a foot injury as well. Najee Harris also fits the veteran-reinforcement conversation, but he tore his left Achilles in Week 3 of last season.
There’s no perfect answer here. The Packers’ running back room is built on uncertainty, and that’s before even getting to the injury concerns and legal issues. At the moment, Chris Brooks may be the steadiest option of the group, and Green Bay just rewarded him with a two-year, $4.8 million extension.
In Other News...
Packers Suddenly Have A Real Shot At A Major Offensive Upgrade
The Packers interest in Jonathan Taylor is not a new one, and it makes sense from Green Bays side. Taylor is heading into the final year of his contract with Indianapolis in 2026, and CBS Sports has floated the idea that his situation could become one worth watching as the Colts sort through both roster direction and long-term money. For a Green Bay offense that has leaned on Josh Jacobs but still has room to think bigger at running back, Taylors combination of rushing production and passing-game value is the kind of upgrade that would change the conversation.
There is also some history here, which is part of what gives this storyline extra legs. Brian Gutekunst had already reached out to Colts general manager Chris Ballard in 2023 about Taylor, only to find Indianapolis asking for Christian Watson in return. A lot can change between now and then, especially if Taylors camp starts looking at the market more aggressively, and that is why this one feels worth keeping on the radar even before anything actually materializes. [Read more 🡒]
Packers Fans Wont Like Who Detroit Could Target In Green Bay
The Lions are suddenly in the market for cornerback help after releasing Terrion Arnold following his arrest on multiple felony charges, and the search has already widened beyond one obvious name. Detroit has reportedly checked in with the Browns on Denzel Ward, but it may also have a cheaper path to explore as it looks for a veteran answer in the secondary.
For Green Bay, the uncomfortable part is that the discussion could eventually land closer to home. Carrington Valentine is entering free agency and carries a modest base salary under the proven-performance escalator, which makes him the kind of player another team could view as attainable if the price is right. An inter-division trade would still be unusual, and if Detroit gets serious, the Packers would likely have to decide whether to let a rival make the first real offer. [Read more 🡒]
George Kittle Put Tucker Kraft On Blast In Hilarious Exchange
George Kittle and Tucker Kraft turned a quick social media misunderstanding into a reminder that the two tight ends have a pretty lighthearted rapport off the field. Kraft had to clear up confusion about a TikTok profile carrying his name, after the account picked up a big following and plenty of engagement while not actually belonging to him.
The exchange also spilled into a broader football conversation when Kittle used the moment to take another public shot at the NFLs continued reliance on artificial turf. He pointed to player health concerns and the natural grass setups used at World Cup stadiums, keeping the conversation focused on a league-wide issue even as the back-and-forth stayed playful on the surface. [Read more 🡒]
