The moment Jonathan Gannon was officially installed as the new defensive coordinator of the Green Bay Packers, the tone inside the organization shifted dramatically.
This was not a quiet hire. And it was not a patient transition.
According to multiple league insiders, Gannon immediately went to head coach Matt LaFleur with a blunt directive: three players he believes no longer fit Green Bay’s future must be removed from the roster immediately. No delays. No compromise. No sentimentality.
The names sent shockwaves through the building.
Those players are Rashan Gary, Elgton Jenkins, and Nate Hobbs.

Together, they represent star power, leadership, and massive financial commitment — and in Gannon’s view, the clearest symbols of a roster that must be reset.
Gannon’s arrival comes at a brutal financial crossroads. The Packers are buried deep in salary-cap trouble, with projections placing them more than $30 million over the limit entering the 2026 offseason. For a coordinator known around the league for demanding accountability, urgency, and schematic discipline, compromise was never going to be part of the plan.
Rashan Gary’s inclusion stunned many. Once seen as the face of Green Bay’s pass rush and a defensive captain, his production collapsed down the stretch of the 2025 season despite carrying one of the largest cap hits on the roster. To Gannon, sources say, Gary represents a defense that lost its edge when pressure mattered most.

Nate Hobbs, the high-profile cornerback signing meant to stabilize the secondary, never found his footing. Injuries, inconsistency, and a rapid loss of snaps turned what was supposed to be a cornerstone move into a glaring miscalculation. In a system Gannon intends to rebuild from the back end forward, Hobbs was viewed as an immediate correction.
The most controversial name, however, is Elgton Jenkins. An All-Pro-caliber lineman and respected locker-room presence, Jenkins’ declining play, injury concerns, and massive cap hit made him — in this scenario — an unavoidable casualty. While Jenkins plays on offense, the financial relief his departure would create is enormous, giving Gannon and LaFleur the flexibility to reshape the roster around a new defensive identity.

Inside the building, the reaction has reportedly ranged from disbelief to quiet alarm. Veterans understand what this means. Young players feel the pressure rising. Comfort has vanished overnight.
Gannon did not come to Green Bay to maintain. He came to erase complacency.
League observers are already calling this the most aggressive internal power shift the Packers have seen in decades. Whether it leads to resurgence or chaos remains unknown. What is clear is that the reset has begun — and no contract, reputation, or past accomplishment appears to be safe.
One era is ending in Green Bay.
Another, far more unforgiving one, has just begun.