The Packers’ Culture Club

Despite being the youngest team in football, these Packers are showing a maturity, dedication, and focus far beyond their years.

When Aaron Rodgers took over as the Packers starting quarterback in 2008, it was something of a baton pass from the Brett Favre era. While certainly a new dawn in Titletown, the locker room was still full of veterans like Chad Clifton and Mark Tauscher, both in their 8th season, and Donald Driver, in his 9th season. On the defensive side of the ball, familiar names – Al Harris, Charles Woodson, Aaron Kampman, Nick Barnett – were abundant.

Yet when Jordan Love took the helm after the 2022 season, it felt less like a baton pass, and more like a reboot. Yes, veterans David Bakhtiari, Aaron Jones, and Jaire Alexander remained, but Bakhtiari and Jones would be gone just one season later; Jaire, the season after that. Almost overnight, Brian Gutekunst had completely reshaped the team. It was suddenly the youngest team in football – and it was a mystery.

Like many others, I was bullish on Love and optimistic about the influx of new talent, but I also wondered, given the absence of veteran leadership, if these young Packers might struggle. Would habits, traditions, and accountability slip in a locker room full of young men new to the NFL and the responsibilities that come with it?

That hasn’t happened. In fact, Packers “culture” seems to be thriving as strongly as ever. Maybe it’s the coaches, maybe it’s the type of players the Packers bring in, maybe it’s the magic of Green Bay – its history, stadium, and fans. Probably, it’s all of the above. 

During an interview with Barstool Sports this week, Packers tight end Tucker Kraft addressed that culture. “This is a great atmosphere. Guys come from other teams…and you know, I’m spoiled, because this is the only organization I’ve known, but they come from other teams and they tell us that we got it different here, so we’re just trying to keep up that culture, that standard, everyday.”

Right alongside “culture” you’ll frequently hear Packers players mention that other buzz word: “standard” – another sign of maturity and shared accountability. Micah Parsons echoed that in an interview this week. “We’re coming together as a cohesive unit…now it’s kind of like the standard’s been set in the room and we just talk about the standard, the standard..”

For these Packers, words like “culture” and “standard” isn’t just talk, it’s rooted in action. Nowhere was that more evident than last Sunday night when Christian Watson, less than 300 days removed from a torn ACL, caught four passes for 85 yards, alongside several big blocks, two of which helped spring Packer touchdowns.

Talking to ESPN’s Rob Demovsky, Tucker Kraft showered his teammate with praise for his hard work and determination. "That's a guy right there who has been battling his tail off for the last year. Coming in, not missing a day. You can't. You have a reconstructive surgery like that, you can't miss a day. That's just a credit to him and all the work he's put in. He's a great guy, he's a good father, amazing teammate. I'm very glad to have him back on our team."

The camaraderie between these young Packers seems to flow freely. In another interview, Parsons marveled at Quay Walker, talking about his dedication throughout the week, “Even pregame, I’m sitting next to him, I’m listening to tunes and he’s looking through his play call sheet.”

In a locker room speech after the Packers 27-23 Week 7 win over the Arizona Cardinals, a game Josh Jacobs had to negotiate with team trainers to even be a part of, an emotional Jacobs told his teammates, "I don't ever want anybody in here to doubt what I give and how I care about y'all boys, bruh. Every day I come in here to work, and I can't look you in the eye, bruh, if I don't give you everything I got. I love y'all boys."

Another noteworthy element of this team’s culture is what they seemingly lack: distraction – and how refreshing! For all of their greatness, both Favre and Rodgers came with significant off field baggage. Maybe Love will face some human challenges at some point in his future, but for now, and by stark contrast to his predecessors, he is wonderfully non-controversial - and his teammates seem to be following his lead. This team just wants to ball.

They’ll get that opportunity again this weekend, facing a Carolina team that has won three of their last four. But if the culture holds this Packers team will be focused on just three things: their God, their family, and The Green Bay Packers.

 

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Mark Ballard is an obsessive Green Bay Packers fan, born in Buffalo Bills country, but raised right by a Mom from Rice Lake, WI. You can find him on X at @ballark

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Comments (15)

Fan-Friendly This filter will hide comments which have ratio of 5 to 1 down-vote to up-vote.
mnbadger's picture

October 31, 2025 at 10:19 am

Great article. I'm even more excited to be a proud cheesehead.
As a fan (fanatic) I reserve the right to cheer too enthusiastically or offer direct critical reviews as I see is warranted.
I'll respect comments that I may disagree with while quietly acknowledging how wrong fellow cheeseheads can be sometimes.
That's the standard and culture that this platform allows us to share.
Bless us all.
Pack 37 - toothless cats 16.
GPG!

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bjkdad44's picture

October 31, 2025 at 01:02 pm

🤞🏻🙏🏻🤞🏻

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Leatherhead's picture

October 31, 2025 at 10:33 am

Many players play their entire career and never get to a Super Bowl; the Packers certainly must realize they have a legit chance to make that happen this season. That breeds a certain level of focus. Nobody wants to be the guy that costs his team a trip to the Super Bowl, not even Brandon Bostick.

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Packerpasty's picture

October 31, 2025 at 11:06 am

OMG don't mention that name I can see the whole sequence in my mind right now..

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dblbogey's picture

October 31, 2025 at 02:00 pm

Speaking of sad memories, I see Royce Newman just signed with his 5th or 6th team. Some team must be desperate.

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Leatherhead's picture

October 31, 2025 at 04:36 pm

The Good Lord only made so many people with the bodies it takes to play on an NFL line.

We played Newman because we didn't have anybody better.

Is it too early to be making Boy George jokes?

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Since'61's picture

October 31, 2025 at 11:18 am

This week's game against the Panthers will be a true test of the Packers culture, standard and maturity. If they play 60 minutes of solid football and don't beat themselves with penalties and/or poor execution then we will see how well this Packer team measures up to their culture, standard and their maturity level.

However if they come out flat or play poorly because they are looking ahead to next week's Eagles game then we will know they are not measuring up to their culture, standard or maturity level. This game against the Panthers can be the perfect trap game for a still young Packers team. If they under estimate this Panthers team they will be in trouble. If they lose to the Panthers they will be in danger of losing two home games against NFC opponents which will leave them with eight games 5 of which will be on the road. This Panthers game could be critical to their season in terms of reaching the playoffs and their playoff seeding.
They need to win their home game against weaker opponents and they need to win their division and conference games to achieve a home seed for the playoffs.

I'm hoping that Love can carry the team if they come out flat or fall behind. He's been playing excellently he needs to keep it going this week. GPG!
Thanks, Since '61

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HawkPacker's picture

October 31, 2025 at 12:11 pm

I agree Since '61. They just need to play solid ball.

I wrote a comment yesterday talking about peaking too early. They need to start peaking at playoff time but in the meantime, let's be solid and win games!

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Turophile's picture

October 31, 2025 at 04:08 pm

The true test is not one game, it is across the season. The Panthers are just 1 of 17 games in the regular season. The Browns game was no less important. They lost that one, but it didn't define the season for them.

Also, EVERY game against a significantly weaker opponent will cause someone to name it a trap game. In the NFL on any given Sunday, etc etc.

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Since'61's picture

October 31, 2025 at 04:31 pm

Hi Turophile I always appreciate your feedback and I enjoy reading your posts. Speaking for myself a trap is a game which follows an emotional victory in the previous week's game such as the Packers come from behind win against the Steelers followed by a game against a weaker team such as the Panthers (in this case at Lambeau) which is followed by a game against a strong opponent such as the Eagles.

The factors involved here include an emotional letdown after the comeback win against the Steelers, underestimating the Panthers and mistakingly looking ahead to the Eagles game as the more important opponent. Plus the Packers are an 11 point favorite which could contribute to underestimating the Panthers.

If the Packers were playing the NY Jets following the Panthers game I would not consider the Panthers game a trap game.

Yes, the Packers lost to the Browns on the road. Maybe they were looking ahead to the Dallas game or maybe the offense just did not execute well and beat themselves against one of the best defensive teams in the league at that point in the season.

Others may have their own definition of a trap game and that's fine, to each their own. Thanks, Since '61

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Turophile's picture

November 01, 2025 at 02:45 pm

Good reply '61.....

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Leatherhead's picture

October 31, 2025 at 04:42 pm

Bryce Young has won 2 games on the road in his 2 1/2 year career. He's started over 30 games and has only won two road games, and one of those was this year against the Jets, so I'm not sure if it really counts.

We should be able to handle this. There's no reason for it to go down to the last play.

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LeotisHarris's picture

October 31, 2025 at 07:44 pm

"There's no reason for it to go down to the last play."

Karma karma karma karma karma chameleon.

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NFLfan's picture

October 31, 2025 at 03:02 pm

I think Kraft, Jacobs, Watson, Doubs, Parsons all play like fire & want to help Love. Kraft is becoming a national phenom and bit of a showman. All of them have heart.
They can't underestimate the Panthers, though. It is actually disrespectful to do so.

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bleedgreen's picture

November 01, 2025 at 11:46 am

Panthers are 4 and 4. Its not like they haven't beat anyone this season. Perfectly capable of beating Packers if we don't play well.

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