Green Bay, Wisconsin — The Unthinkable Has Happened
For the first time since the departure of Aaron Rodgers, the Green Bay Packers are staring directly at a quarterback crisis — one few inside the organization believed was even possible just months ago.

What began as a season filled with optimism and validation around Jordan Love effectively unraveled in Week 15, when the Packers’ franchise quarterback suffered a torn MCL combined with a severe high ankle sprain in a brutal loss to the Detroit Lions. The injury not only derailed Green Bay’s playoff hopes, but also opened a door to a question Packers fans never expected to ask so soon:
What if Jordan Love isn’t ready for next season?

The Nightmare Scenario
Love’s recovery timeline is far from clear. While standard MCL injuries can take six to eight weeks, the added high ankle sprain — an injury that already limited his mobility earlier in the season — has raised serious concerns among medical experts. Several league sources warn that full recovery could stretch into late summer 2025, putting his availability for training camp and Week 1 firmly in doubt.
Publicly, the Packers remain optimistic. Privately, the anxiety is growing.
“They just built the franchise around this kid,” one NFC executive told ESPN. “Now there’s a real chance they’re opening next season without him.”
The timing could not be worse.
Green Bay committed four years and $220 million to Love last summer, with roughly $160 million guaranteed, officially closing the Aaron Rodgers chapter and declaring Love the unquestioned future of the franchise.
Now, that future is uncertain.

A Thin — and Risky — Backup Plan
If Love isn’t ready for Week 1 of 2025, the Packers’ quarterback depth chart becomes one of the thinnest in the NFL.
Sean Clifford, the current backup, has yet to throw a single career touchdown pass in meaningful NFL action. Coaches view him as a developmental prospect, not a bridge starter.
Beyond Clifford, options are scarce.
“That’s it. That’s the room,” one Packers insider admitted bluntly.
General manager Brian Gutekunst has reportedly spent recent weeks quietly gauging the veteran market for insurance — and one name continues to surface in league circles:
Ryan Tannehill.
Enter Ryan Tannehill
The former Tennessee Titans starter has remained unsigned since his release last offseason. At 36 years old, Tannehill is no longer a long-term solution — but he is experienced, steady, and capable of running an NFL offense.
According to ESPN’s Rob Demovsky, preliminary conversations have taken place between the Packers and Tannehill’s representatives regarding a potential one-year deal. The contract would likely fall in the $8–12 million range, structured to avoid long-term cap damage.
“He makes sense,” one AFC scout said. “He’s not taking you to a Super Bowl, but he can manage games and buy you time until Love is healthy. That matters.”
Yet the very existence of those talks has rattled Packers fans.
The $160 Million Question
This is where things become uncomfortable.
Green Bay didn’t just invest in Jordan Love — they committed their future to him. They rebuilt the offense around his arm talent. They moved on from Rodgers. They told the fanbase this was the plan.
Now, less than a year later, they’re quietly exploring veteran stopgaps.
“If Love is your guy, you roll with Clifford and live with it,” one former NFL GM said. “Looking at Tannehill tells you there’s less confidence than they’ll ever admit publicly.”
Silence From Love, Tension From LaFleur
Since the injury, Love has remained conspicuously quiet. No interviews. No social media updates. No public rehab timeline.
Sources close to the team say he’s frustrated and deeply focused on recovery — but the silence has only fueled speculation.
Head coach Matt LaFleur attempted to calm concerns during his Monday press conference.
“Jordan Love is our quarterback. Period,” LaFleur said. “We’re going to support him through this recovery.”
When pressed about contingency plans, his tone sharpened.
“We prepare for every scenario. That’s what good organizations do. But Jordan Love is the future of this franchise.”
Translation: preparations are happening — just not publicly.

The Question No One Wants to Ask
Here’s the reality Green Bay is struggling to face:
What if Love isn’t the guy?
What if durability becomes the defining trait of his career? What if the Packers rushed into a massive extension before truly knowing what they had?
“They’re stuck,” one NFC executive said. “They can’t move on without massive dead money. But if he keeps getting hurt, they’re wasting the primes of players like Jaire Alexander and Rashan Gary.”
A Fanbase Divided
Across Wisconsin, the debate is fierce.
One side urges patience — pointing out Love’s age and growth curve.
The other believes the Packers panicked, paid too early, and walked away from Rodgers too soon.
Both sides agree on one thing:
This offseason will define the franchise.
Sign Tannehill and admit uncertainty?
Roll with Clifford and risk disaster?
Trade for another veteran option?
None of the paths feel safe.
For a franchise spoiled by decades of Hall of Fame quarterback play, the Packers now find themselves in unfamiliar — and terrifying — territory.
And the question they can’t escape is simple:
Did Green Bay bet $160 million on the wrong future?