Green Bay, Wisconsin – January 2026
NFL Hall of Famer and longtime broadcaster Troy Aikman believes the league is misreading the story of Jordan Love — and in doing so, repeating a familiar mistake the NFL has made before.

According to Aikman, Love’s career arc is beginning to mirror that of Matthew Stafford during his years in Detroit: a quarterback playing at an elite level, regularly doing his job — and then some — while being let down by the team around him, particularly on the defensive side of the ball.
“Jordan Love is not the reason the Packers are coming up short,” Aikman said.
“It’s the defense around him that keeps failing to finish games. Give him a team that can protect a lead, and people will suddenly remember just how good he really is.”
The comparison is pointed — and uncomfortable for Green Bay. Stafford spent more than a decade producing high-level quarterback play, only to be labeled as “incomplete” because his teams couldn’t close games. When he finally landed with a roster capable of supporting him, the narrative flipped overnight. One season later, he was a Super Bowl champion.
There are actual humans on this app saying Jordan Love isn’t the guy pic.twitter.com/GEDI4MzgtT
— Eli Berkovits (@BookOfEli_NFL) January 11, 2026
Aikman sees echoes of that pattern in Love’s situation with the Green Bay Packers.
Statistically and on tape, Love has continued to elevate Green Bay’s offense, especially in high-pressure moments. Late drives, third-down throws, and red-zone execution have rarely been the problem. Instead, the Packers have repeatedly watched advantages slip away as defensive breakdowns, missed assignments, and failure to close out games undo Love’s work.
That dynamic, Aikman argues, creates a dangerous illusion — one where the quarterback becomes the easiest target for frustration, even when the evidence points elsewhere.

The NFL, Aikman notes, has a long history of mislabeling quarterbacks who are forced to carry incomplete rosters. Stafford endured it. So did others. The difference between “good” and “great,” between “can’t win” and “champion,” often comes down to one organizational move — the right defensive support, timely stops, and the ability to finish.
For Love, Aikman believes that move hasn’t happened yet — but it’s close.
The warning embedded in Aikman’s assessment is clear: if Green Bay fails to recognize what it has, history suggests someone else eventually will. Quarterbacks like Love don’t suddenly become elite. They reveal it — and wait for the team around them to catch up.
For now, Love remains in the familiar place Stafford once occupied: doing enough to win, watching others decide whether that’s allowed to be enough.
And as Aikman made clear, the league has seen this story before.