Reviewing the Offensive Line at the Halfway Mark

A deep dive into the situation surrounding the offensive line play. 

As we turn the page into the second half of the 2025 season, the Green Bay Packers stand 5-2-1, atop the NFC North. They have a chance to further consolidate that position, and potentially regain their spot as the first seed in the NFC with a win against the Eagles on Monday night. 

While the Packers have their work cut out for them in that game, I’m going to take the opportunity to take a bird’s eye view of one of the largest issues plaguing the Packers’ offense: the offensive line. 

Entering the 2025 season, the offensive line was perceived to be a massive strength of the team. There was a lot to be excited about. They had ended 2024 as one of the best units in the entire league, after all. Zach Tom had something of a breakout season, as a dominant right tackle. Both Rasheed Walker and Sean Rhyan had looked like they had taken a step forward in their development, and they had a high end backup in Jordan Morgan, who would have the opportunity to challenge for a starting gig. During the offseason, the front office made three additional moves to further solidify the line. 

First, they allowed the 2024 starting center Josh Myers to walk in free agency. Myers had been long perceived as the weakest link in the weak link system that is an offensive line. Myers had never quite lived up to his draft position (especially having been taken right before all-pro Creed Humphery), and while he always had great chemistry with Jordan Love, it seemed to be a relatively easy decision for the Packers to let Myers out the door. 

Next, free agent Aaron Banks was lured to Green Bay, to the siren song of a four year, $77 million dollar contract. While Banks had never really been a great offensive lineman in his time in San Francisco, he had at least been average with flashes of good. Which, it seems, was enough to convince the Packers to hand Banks the contract, and move versatile veteran Elgton Jenkins to center. 

Lastly, they drafted tackle Anthony Belton in the second round, to the surprise of many. They had just taken Jordan Morgan in the first, after all, who was a tackle. Zach Tom was still in line to get his massive extension, and Rasheed Walker had a good season. The Packers choose to double down anyway. Belton is an absolute mammoth of a human being, standing 6’ 6”, 336 lbs. 

All in all, these moves seemed to signal a bit of a philosophy change for the Packers, and what they prefer in their offensive linemen. As we all know, the Packers are very selective when it comes to the athletic profiles and body types of players on their roster, but the offensive line had always been a zone blocking unit, one that highly emphasized agility and pulling ability. Over the last year, the Packers have been slowly adding weight and mass to that offensive line, to the point where it now more closely resembles a power gap blocking system. The average weight for the 2025 Packers is 317 lbs, while the 2024 version averaged 314 lbs. That might not seem like a big difference, but keep in mind that the second smallest lineman (Myers) was swapped out for the heaviest (Banks), while Anothny Belton is now the heaviest lineman on the team at 336 lbs. 

Now that we are halfway through the 2025 season, it’s looking like those investments and changes to the offensive line have not paid off. 

So far in 2025, the Packers OL is 19% in pressures allowed, 24th in yards per carry, 17th in yards before contact, 27th in explosive run rate. Their best areas are preventing sacks (4th in sack rate) and 8th in avoiding stuffed runs. 

The offensive line has been inconsistent at best to begin 2025, and a huge part of that has been injuries along the front. To begin with, the Packers have been missing some depth pieces for the line all year. Second year players Travis Glover (shoulder) and Jacob Monk (Hamstring) suffered injuries in training camp. Glover will not be seeing the field at all in 2025, while Monk has only been activated from IR a few weeks ago. This led to the acquisition of Darian Kinnard a few days before the preseason ended via trade (another heavier lineman at 322 lbs). Meanwhile, Aaron Banks has been hurt on and off all year, missing two games. Zach Tom and Sean Rhyan have also missed time, along with Kinnard and Anthony Belton. I want to be clear that I’m not blaming those players for missing time. Injuries suck. But those injuries have drained the Packers OL of consistency, because guys can’t get used to playing next to each other when the guy next to them is always changing. Which leads me to my next point: rotations. 

The Packers are one of the only teams (if not the only?) in the NFL who use rotations along the offensive line. The mainstream opinion on the subject is that playing the same combination of linemen (barring injuries, of course) allows those players to settle into their individual assignments, build chemistry with their teammates, and gel together into an effective unit. As part of their “draft and develop” philosophy, the Packers will rotate players at certain positions, in order to get their younger players reps on the field, facilitating that development. It’s certainly an opinion that goes against the grain among NFL circles, but it’s part of something baked into the DNA of the Packers: competition. Take Matt LaFleur’s recent comments on the rotations: “When you feel good about multiple people, you want to keep them playing. Keep them engaged, keep them a part of everything, and keep developing them”.

Between injuries and rotations, the Packers have used ten different combinations of lineman across the five man front. The most common combination has been Walker-Banks-Jenkins-Morgan-Tom, and it has only been played for 29% of snaps, the 6th lowest rate in the league. Any offensive line would struggle with this amount of instability, which is further reflected among those rankings. Towards the top, you’ll generally see teams with better offensive lines (IND, SEA, PIT), while teams towards the bottom have generally struggled (GB, CLE, NO). 

Now, as important as it is to talk about the offensive line as a cohesive unit, it’s equally important to acknowledge the individuals that comprise it. 

Rasheed Walker

Entering this season, Rasheed Walker had the opportunity of a lifetime in front of him. Imagine being Walker when you hear the news that Dan Moore Jr, a worse player than you, has signed a four year, $82 million contract. You’re entering a contract year, have won the starting job with ease, and had a good season the year previous. Cha-ching, right? 

Fast-forward, and Walker has probably cost himself with his performance so far this year.  He’s allowed three sacks this season and seventeen hurries, which are both the most on the entire team. His worst game came in the loss against Cleveland, in which Myles Garrett took his lunch money all game long, and Walker was the subject of one of the best player mic’ed up clips I’ve seen in a long time.  

Aaron Banks

Banks’ season has been a constant fight to just stay on the field at all. So far in 2025, he’s battled through ankle, groin and knee issues. He’s missed only two full games, but only played 264 out of the team’s 511 snaps of offense this year. 

When he has been on the field, Banks has been… not great. His latest game against the Panthers was his highest PFF graded performance of the season. That being said, he only played for nine snaps against the Panthers… So, you know.  

Elgton Jenkins

Jenkins’ move to center was supposed to be a simple matter of addition by subtraction for the team. Exit Myers, enter Jenkins, equals better OL, right? Turns out it may have not been as simple as that. Jenkins has been a bit up and down at center this season. Opponents like Cleveland and Detroit have been able to exploit Jenkins, but he’s also had some really, really good showings against Dallas and Washington. 

Despite the inconsistency he’s shown in moments, he’s still been one of Green Bay’s best linemen this season. Jenkins’ future in Green Bay is unclear, with the massive cap figure the team could save by moving on next offseason. 

Sean Rhyan 

Rhyan finds himself in a similar situation as Rasheed Walker. He’s now in a contract year, playing worse than he did last year. The difference is that Rhyan seems to be in danger of losing his job entirely. He was benched in week 7, in favor of Jordan Morgan, and has shared snap rotations with Morgan all season long. 

Zach Tom 

Tom received a massive contract extension from the Packers on July 22nd, tying him to Green Bay through the 2029 season in exchange for a cool $88 million. Since returning from an oblique injury that plagued him in the early season, Tom has once again established himself as the anchor of the Packers’ offensive line. He’s yet to surrender a sack on the year (knock on wood!), and only six hurries. 

Jordan Morgan

Stop me if you’ve heard this one before. A Packers’ offensive lineman has had an inconsistent, up and down season, rotating in and out of the lineup. The Packers’ first round pick in 2023 has not found a way to impact the team in a real way, though perhaps that's no fault of his own. Morgan has found himself moved all along the offensive line over his first two seasons in Green Bay. The only position Morgan has not played or practiced (to my knowledge) is center. 

The Packers have, in recent weeks, shown a willingness to “settle” him down at a single position: right guard. It was notable, during the Panthers’ game, that when Aaron Banks left the game it was Sean Rhyan who replaced him at that spot. Rhyan had not played on the left side yet in the NFL, though Morgan has. I appreciated that they were able to keep themselves from moving Morgan, since that would have meant moving two players around instead of just one. 

Looked at individually, the Packers’ offensive linemen have been marred by inconsistency. Run blocking has been especially problematic. According to ESPN’s run block win rate, they are 21st in the league with a 71% mark. 

Remember how the Packers have been adding heavier and heavier lineman to the roster this season? That sort of change is usually associated with a move towards a gap run blocking scheme, as opposed to a zone scheme that the Packers have run in the majority for years. 

So far in 2025, the Packers have run 49% zone scheme rate, and a 34% gap blocking rate. These numbers place the Packers at 13th in zone usage, and 18th in gap blocking. Per PFF, the players have been slightly more effective at running gap schemes, with Zach Tom and Rasheed Walker grading positively, Sean Rhayan and Aaron Banks average, and the others falling below average. In zone blocking, Zach Tom has been above average, Rasheed Walker and Elgton Jenkins average, and Sean Rhyan, Jordan Morgan and Aaron Banks falling below average. 

I will be interested to see how the split between zone blocking and gap blocking progresses through the year. When I last wrote about this topic, the Packers had a near even split between the two. 

As the team stands now, the Packers have a date with the Philadelphia Eagles on Monday night. The Packers are facing a team that is not exactly the same ferocious unit that won the Super Bowl last season. The Eagles are 26th in team sacks, 16th in rushing yards allowed, and 11th in passing yards allowed. On paper, the Packers are not over matched like they were last year. There’s an opportunity for the line to show that they can take care of business against the defending champions. If they can’t? My hand might start hovering over that big red panic button.

 

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Co-Owner of the thirteen time world champion Green Bay Packers. Sometimes I write about them. Follow me on Twitter at https://x.com/kjones_in_co and on Substack for film breakdowns!

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Comments (24)

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Razer's picture

November 09, 2025 at 07:26 am

Good info Kalani. On an individual basis, we should have enough parts to cobble a very good O-line but the sum of the parts doesn't add up. Weak play at center has been a problem for a while now and it has not gotten better with the Jenkins move. Our interior line play is simply not strong or consistent enough. I won't go off on my dislike for the retraining of tackles to guards but please give me some road graders for Christmas.

I don't know if these guys will gel into a cohesive unit or have the strength to win in the trenches. I do know that I wouldn't ask Gutekunst to draft me an O-line nor would I entrust our current coaching staff to train them up. Sorry, Sunday morning coming down. Hopefully they prove me wrong against Philly.

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jannes bjornson's picture

November 09, 2025 at 09:43 am

Their cavalier attitude regarding line play most likely cost them a trip to the SB in the '21 NFCCH game.
Gutedkunst's time is up. Why play games with Ben Sims? The guy was part of your system and better hands than Fitzpatrick. Whyle is another big WR and stiff in the routes. Gadsen was still hanging around in the 4th, but he took a guy who is sitting on IR.

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NFLfan's picture

November 09, 2025 at 08:25 am

Good article. When each player is individually evaluated, it looks more dire.
With the exception of Tom, they seem injury-prone, below average or in decline. What's going on with Rhyan and Walker?

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Packers0808's picture

November 09, 2025 at 09:03 am

It comes down they should maybe have kept Meyers. Right in article as center play has been a problem this year. I said last year and still believe Jenkins should have remained at guard. If anything the Packers made the Oline weaker and the problem shows now.

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dblbogey's picture

November 09, 2025 at 12:19 pm

Myers was bad. I'm just surprised jenkins has struggled at a position he played in College and most thought would be his best position as a pro. Maybe father time and injuries have caught up. Giving Banks huge money was just dumb. Picking Morgan in the first round, when they could have traded back to the 2nd round, got an extra pick, and still selected Cooper DeJean. I'm far from an expert, but some of the decisions are just puzzling. How many games did Anders Carlson cost us until they finally dumped him? How many games did the Amari Rogers experiment cost us until even the Packers figured out he was horrible?

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Packers0808's picture

November 09, 2025 at 04:52 pm

Disagree Meyers was made out by fans far worse than he really was.

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SicSemperTyrannis's picture

November 10, 2025 at 10:46 am

He was always our weak link. His ceiling was clearly shown.

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vin0770's picture

November 09, 2025 at 01:46 pm

The two untouched blitzes up the middle last week is a center blunder that was an obvious NC scout pickup. So Meyers is replaceable but would he have seen those coming?

Doesn’t matter if you like MLF play calls run or pass and the timing if the line play sucks they don’t work. The run game is struggling not because of the RB because he’s dependent on the o line. The o line play is the reason the offense is so inconsistent minus Love throwing three unexplainable balls which has become a telling sign that he can’t overcome.

Which leaves them one dimensional which is passing as the o line is more consistent but not great. Love needs to take seven yard timing pass plays all the way down the field and MLF needs to scheme them up.

But the o line is key. If they get their heads out of their a$$ they can be a threat otherwise they are what they currently are 😢

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SicSemperTyrannis's picture

November 10, 2025 at 10:49 am

Interesting that you recognize #8 is doing the best he can without the O line blocking for him effectively, but when JL10 makes a bad throw under pressure you don't recognize that's on the O line not protecting him.

If MLF doesn't play 6 O linemen we're cooked this season, but even that won't shore up the middle.

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jannes bjornson's picture

November 10, 2025 at 01:49 pm

He wants ground and pound in the Shanahan Demo-Derby offense, but doesn't utilize a Fullback ?

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Leatherhead's picture

November 09, 2025 at 02:22 pm

Thank you for this, Mr. Jones. It's meaty, and it's going to take a while to digest all this.

Just yesterday, I watched a youtube clip of Wilde and Tausch and Bulaga and Tauscher had their take on the offensive line.

They didn't hesitate when they said last year's line was better. They pointed the finger at Jenkins for the "leakage" in the run game (I guess that's what it's called when you squeeze a 300 lb man between two 300 lb men) because he wasn't communicating the blocking adjustments. In his defense, we haven't had a lot of stability at the guard spot, mostly because Banks has been unavailable. They did mention reacquiring Myers, and thought it would be a cheap improvement.

FWIW.

Anyway, I want to make sure I understand the knock on Walker. He gives up about 2 pressures a game, and a sack less than one every other game, while going against the other team's premier pass rushers? He especially had a hard time with Myles Freaking Garrett? OMG. That's unacceptable.

You're a harder grader than I am. I think that's a pretty damn good season from a 7th round pick. He's stayed healthy, he's missed 6 snaps all season. He does his job, and he'll get a real good payday next year from somebody, probably not us.

I think the offensive line has done a good job overall, especially in pass protection. I mean, Love is completing over 70% of his passes, and he's only been sacked 11 times. That's not happening without people being blocked. I tend to agree with Tausch and Bulaga that we're not playing with enough cohesion on the interior line No matter what three guys we have in the interior, it's not as good as last year's lineup of Jenkins, Myers, and Rhyan. I actually expect we'll improve in that regard with the dozens of practices and games we have remaining.

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SicSemperTyrannis's picture

November 10, 2025 at 11:03 am

Speaking of Walker probably not being in GB next year, Jordan Morgan is best on the left side and is the heir apparent at LT. He's not doing well at RG, if MLF wants to give him snaps to develop him wouldn't it make more sense to rotate him in at LT? Or just keep him on the bench for the toughest part of the schedule and win some games?

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Leatherhead's picture

November 10, 2025 at 11:28 am

Using a first round pick on a Left Tackle is a solid move. Using a first round pick on a Right Guard? Not so much. I believe that Morgan was chosen to be our Left Tackle when Walker departed in FA. He's gotten on the field the past two years at guard, some times because of injuries and other times in a rotation. I would dispute the bit about him not doing well at RG....the Oline as a unit, including Morgan has done a very good job in pass protection.

We're not going to rotate at LT while we're in a playoff hunt. At RG, maybe, because that's the least important position on the line, but LT is the most important position on passes.

IMO, the Packers intended all along to resign Tom and let Walker and Rhyan test FA. Morgan was always intended to be the LT in 2026.

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Bitternotsour's picture

November 10, 2025 at 11:57 am

If Morgan had grabbed the left tackle spot right out of the gate, it may have allowed a trade of Walker, but I believe your assessment is mostly true. Walker is going to be a comp pick, likely in the third round as it stands...

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Leatherhead's picture

November 10, 2025 at 12:38 pm

Would you rather have your starting LT be a rookie, or a first round pick who has had a couple of years to get ready. Look at how we treat the most important position on offense, and look how we're treating the most important position on the line. See the similarities?

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Bitternotsour's picture

November 10, 2025 at 02:53 pm

I'd rather the better player won the job. Plenty of great 1st round tackles started on day one...

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Leatherhead's picture

November 10, 2025 at 04:14 pm

I get your point. Me, I'd feel more comfortable going into a season with a guy who'd been around the track before at such an important position. It's not really a "learn on the job" thing when you're protecting the blind side of a guy making $50M a year.

Sometimes, a guy is that good. Sometimes, as with Tauscher; opportunity knocked, he answered the door, and that was that.

I think the Packers were fine with Walker playing LT while Morgan learned and improved. Unfortunately, he was hurt a lot last year and couldn't practice or play. The overall fact is that Tom, Walker, and Rhyan were all going to be FAs after 2025. Additionally, Jenkins was about to become expensive . I thought/hoped that they would move Jenkins to Center, extend Tom, let Walker and Rhyan leave and replace them with Morgan and Belton.

The deal is this, IMO: You just can't afford to pay all your offensive linemen, so most of them have to be on a rookie contract, which means you have to draft about two of them year. We're paying Jenkins, Tom, and Banks already. It's not a question of how good Rhyan or Walker is, it's a question of paying veteran offensive linemen

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THESZOTMAN1's picture

November 09, 2025 at 06:14 pm

Right now, the O-Line is LESS than the sum of its parts. It has protected Love ok, but struggled mightily in run blocking.
If it doesn't become MORE than its parts, we'll spend the rest of year watching Jacobs getting stoned at the line of scrimmage. Hence, his lack of even one 100 yd game after 8 weeks. We can't keep expecting JJ to make something out of nothing.
Advice to front 5: Knock the snot out of somebody ASAP.
The Szotman

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SicSemperTyrannis's picture

November 10, 2025 at 11:04 am

FRONT SIX

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brenner's picture

November 09, 2025 at 09:46 pm

I think they missed on getting a true C in the off-season. Would've made signing banks completely unnecessary. Drafting Belton felt to me like maybe eventually moving Tom to C, leaving the tackle spots for Belton and Walker

Now we've got Walker on a down year, Banks can't stay healthy, Jenkins wishing he was still playing LG, Dice roll at RG, and Tom holding down RT.

Hate to look ahead to next year but Walker, Jenkins and likely Rhyan could all be gone next year.

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SicSemperTyrannis's picture

November 10, 2025 at 11:05 am

Monk is our true Center.

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Renllaw's picture

November 10, 2025 at 06:40 am

Policy has to determine if this is a chicken or egg scenario....

Since promoting Stenavich in 2022 the line has slowly gotten worse.
OR
has Gute failed to provide quality players for the room as GM?

I initially blamed Butkus, then I started looking at Gute's acquisitions. And Now I have no idea who to blame. LoL

Draft Picks
Cole Madison – 2018
Elgton Jenkins – 2019
Jon Runyan Jr. – 2020
Jake Hanson – 2020
Simon Stepaniak – 2020
Josh Myers – 2021
Royce Newman – 2021
Sean Rhyan – 2022
Zach Tom – 2022
Rasheed Walker – 2022
Jordan Morgan – 2024
Jacob Monk – 2024
Travis Glover – 2024
Anthony Belton – 2025
John Williams – 2025

Free Agent Signings
Byron Bell – 2018
Dennis Kelly – 2021
Andre Dillard – 2024
Aaron Banks – 2025

UDFAs / Waiver Claims / Street SigningsAlex Light – 2018 (UDFA)
Yosh Nijman – 2019 (UDFA claim)
Jon Dietzen – 2021 (UDFA)
Jacob Capra – 2021 (UDFA)
Coy Cronk – 2021 (UDFA)
Caleb Jones – 2022 (UDFA)
Michal Menet – 2022 (waiver claim)
Luke Tenuta – 2022 (waiver claim)
Kadeem Telfort – 2023 (UDFA)
Donovan Jennings – 2024 (UDFA)
Trente Jones – 2024 (UDFA)
Tyler Cooper – 2025 (UDFA)
J.J. Lippe – 2025 (UDFA)

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SicSemperTyrannis's picture

November 10, 2025 at 11:13 am

I think that the way signings haven't been used has been a terrible combination with who was signed. How many drives did we see end on third and short with AR12 trying to thread needles from a mile away? With 3 huge linemen taking up roster spots, Caleb Jones Luke Tenuta and Kadeem Telfort. Never even TRIED to have them push everybody forward for a yard or two to keep a drive alive. Some of that time Josh Nijman was starting. Never played 6 O linemen.

Complete waste of 3 roster spots. Now they've again gone bigger by not as big as they had. Do we have better players now? I don't see how anybody could know. Will MLF at least TRY a jumbo package? We have no blocking TE, can't run block consistently, and allow JL10 to get pressured WAY too much. 6 O linemen or we're cooked for this season.

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Leatherhead's picture

November 10, 2025 at 11:48 am

We're one of the best pass blocking lines in the league. Some people are overwrought, IMO, about our running game. Go to

https://www.pro-football-reference.com/years/2025/ and look at the rushing offense data. We compare to Rams, Eagles, Bucs, Seahawks.....all teams that look like NFC playoff teams right now.

Our immediate concern, the Eagles, have rushed 10 fewer times than us. Green Bay has 10 more yards rushing than the Eagles. The Packers have one more rushing TD, and get 1.3 more yards every game. We have two more fumbles. They've scored 2 more points this season. So, we're pretty similar: We don't throw it as much as most teams and we score more points than most teams.

Now, they have Saquon Barkley, and Jalen Hurts. How can we possibly be nearly the same on the ground?

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