NFL NEWS

Packers offseason review, draft preview

The Sports Xchange

April 12, 2016 at 11:01 am.

Nov 30, 2014; Green Bay, WI, USA; Green Bay Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers (12) passes the ball during the second half against the New England Patriots at Lambeau Field. The Packers won 26-21. Mandatory Credit: Chris Humphreys-USA TODAY Sports

Mandatory Credit: Chris Humphreys-USA TODAY Sports

GREEN BAY — Contrary to overwhelming public opinion, the Packers have been active so far this offseason.

Consider that:

–They re-signed veteran defensive tackle Letroy Guion to a three-year, $11.25 million deal shortly after last season ended, a prudent move that came a month before starting nose tackle B.J. Raji decided as a free agent to quit football for at least a season.

–They rewarded kicker Mason Crosby, the team’s scoring leader, with a sweet four-year contract of more than $16 million before he reached free agency in March.

–They brought back two other key players by re-signing No. 2 halfback James Starks and situational outside linebacker Nick Perry as unrestricted free agents to two- and one-year deals, respectively.

–Last but not least, general manager Ted Thompson made the rare splash that has long convinced people the Packers don’t do much by way of offseason acquisitions when they signed veteran tight end Jared Cook to a one-year, $2.75 million contract as March ended.

Those moves have more than offset what few losses Green Bay has incurred this spring – nickel back Casey Hayward and No. 2 quarterback Scott Tolzien signed with the San Diego Chargers and Indianapolis Colts, respectively.

“Free agency is a long process,” head coach Mike McCarthy said a few days before the Cook signing. “We’ve been pretty fortunate that most years we try to get our own (players) back and then see what else fits. I think that’s a reflection of our philosophy.”

Among their unsigned free agents, the Packers remain open to having outside linebacker Mike Neal and Pro Bowl fullback John Kuhn back, but they are moving on without veteran receiver James Jones.

Of course, the Green Bay way under Thompson the last 11 years has included a lot of drafting and developing players.

With the April 28 start of the draft looming, the Packers are poised to address what few needs they have and bolster depth at other positions.

“I’ve always focused on our own goals,” McCarthy said. “I’m always open to improving our football team from the outside, but the draft has always been our lifeline, and that’s where the majority of our emphasis goes in the offseason.

“Just because we don’t sign anybody, we are active on free agents. Whether we sign them or we don’t is a different matter.”

The signing of Cook, a salary-cap casualty for the Los Angeles Rams in February, suggests Thompson will have a defense-first mentality going into this year’s draft.

Tight end had been one of the team’s most pressing needs. Not anymore as Green Bay pairs the playmaking Cook with budding third-year player Richard Rodgers.

The Packers still must address depth concerns on the offensive line, particularly at tackle and also thinking long-term with three starters (guards Josh Sitton and T.J. Lang as well as left tackle David Bakhtiari) in the final year of their contracts.

Just the same, the uncertainty of featured back Eddie Lacy’s future with the team as he goes into the final year of his rookie deal could prompt the selection of a running back.

Those scenarios can wait to days 2 and 3 of the draft as Green Bay figures to invest the No. 27 pick of the first round in a player who can help right away to shore up a defensive deficiency.

The Packers used two first-round selections on Raji and Clay Matthews in 2009. Interestingly, both players are at the crux of what needs to be fixed in short order – a tackle to make up for the loss of Raji and an inside linebacker to compensate for the team’s plan to shift Matthews back to the outside, where he can best flourish as a pass rusher.

“You always want to do better,” McCarthy said about upgrading the pass rush, which was a strength for the defense in 2015, when Green Bay had 43 sacks to rank seventh in the league. “I think the biggest thing is the pressures. We’re getting there, we’re creating matchups, and you look at it, it was definitely a positive.

“(But) you don’t just stop there. It can be better.”

Still to be determined in the next few weeks is which direction Thompson will go first in the draft as his preferred way of keeping the Packers atop the NFC North and in contention for the Super Bowl. He makes no apologies for the perceived lack of inactivity in yet another offseason.

“We get better by practicing better and doing better and finding better personnel and doing all the things that we do,” Thompson said.