Despite a stunning postseason collapse against the Chicago Bears, Green Bay finalized a multiyear contract extension with head coach Matt LaFleur, according to multiple reports. The move immediately sparked debate across the league, coming on the heels of a loss in which the Packers surrendered a 21–9 fourth-quarter lead and allowed Chicago to score on three consecutive drives to end their season in humiliating fashion. It was the second late-game collapse to the Bears in a matter of weeks, intensifying outside speculation about LaFleur’s future.

Instead of reacting emotionally, the Packers chose continuity.
LaFleur’s regular-season résumé remains among the strongest in the NFL. Over seven seasons, he has compiled a 76–40–1 record and guided Green Bay to the playoffs six times. While postseason breakthroughs have been limited, the organization believes the underlying foundation is intact — and that entering another season with uncertainty at head coach would only create unnecessary distractions.
Internally, LaFleur’s decision to stay went beyond job security.
“I didn’t stay because it was comfortable,” LaFleur said. “I stayed because I know how that season ended, and I know who ended it. Losing to the Bears like that doesn’t leave you — it sits with you every day. I’m here because I want that rematch, and I want to make sure we’re the ones standing at the end next time.”
Those words carried weight inside the building.
Rather than treating the Bears loss as a breaking point, the Packers viewed it as fuel — a moment meant to sharpen resolve, not fracture leadership. Team executives believed allowing LaFleur to enter 2026 as a lame-duck coach would undermine authority in the locker room and disrupt continuity at a critical stage of the roster’s development.
The extension also reflects confidence that LaFleur can still steer this group back into Super Bowl contention, even after a season defined by injuries, late collapses, and missed opportunities. Green Bay invested heavily last offseason, and leadership remains convinced the championship window has not closed.
That belief, however, comes with urgency.
Expectations are reset. Patience is thinner. And going forward, LaFleur’s tenure will be judged less by regular-season records and more by January results. After the way the season ended, one opponent will loom larger than any other.
For Matt LaFleur, this extension was never just about remaining in Green Bay.
It was about unfinished business — and a loss to Chicago he clearly has not forgotten.