'is that a trick question? ': packers insist aaron rodgers is their long-term qb

'is that a trick question? ': packers insist aaron rodgers is their long-term qb


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Green Bay Packers general manager Brian Gutekunst and coach Matt LaFleur say they expect Aaron Rodgers to remain their team's starting quarterback in 2021 and beyond. Gutekunst and


LaFleur made the comments on Monday during season-ending Zoom sessions with reporters. After the Packers' 31-26 loss to the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in the NFC championship game, Rodgers


had said, "there's a lot of guys' futures that are uncertain, myself included." "We're really excited not only for next year, but the years to come,"


Gutekunst said When asked specifically whether that meant keeping Rodgers beyond the 2021 season, Gutekunst replied, "Absolutely." Rodgers has three years remaining on a four-year,


$134m contract extension he signed in August 2018. LaFleur, meanwhile, left little room for doubt when he was asked if Rodgers has a future beyond 2021 in Green Bay. "Is that a trick


question?" LaFleur said. "Absolutely. There's no doubt about it. You're talking about the guy that's going to win the MVP of the league. We're not in this


position without him. I couldn't be happier with just not only his performance but how he led our football team, all the little things he does within that locker room to ensure that


everybody is locked in, focused and ready to go. Absolutely he will be here for a long time. I know I've said that before, but a long time." Rodgers' long-term future has been


a topic of league-wide speculation ever since the Packers traded up four picks to take Utah State quarterback Jordan Love with the 26th overall selection in the 2020 draft. Rodgers has said


on multiple occasions that the Love selection complicated his own hopes of playing his entire career with Green Bay. The subject came up again when Rodgers discussed his future after the


NFC championship game. The two-time MVP clarified his remarks two days later on SiriusXM Radio's The Pat McAfee Show by saying that "I don't think there's any reason why


I wouldn't be back" but added that "there's not many absolutes, as you guys know, in this business." Gutekunst said on Monday he views Love "as a very talented


prospect that we're really excited about developing." Gutekunst noted the Packers have a history of giving young quarterbacks time to develop. Rodgers, a first-round pick in 2005,


backed up Hall of Fame quarterback Brett Favre for three seasons before taking over as the starter. Gutekunst cited the examples of Matt Hasselbeck and Aaron Brooks, who also backed up Favre


at Green Bay before starting multiple seasons elsewhere. "I'm really excited about the limited development that Jordan has been able to do in the short period of time that


we've had him. ... There were some unforeseen challenges as far as offseason and no preseason games and things like that," Rodgers, 37, had one of the best seasons of his stellar


career to earn All-Pro honors. He set franchise single-season records for completion percentage (.707) and touchdown passes (48) while throwing only five interceptions. He had five touchdown


passes, one touchdown run and one interception in two playoff games. "You're talking about the guy that's going to win the MVP of the league," LaFleur said.


"We're not in this position without him. I couldn't be happier with just not only his performance but how he led our football team, all the little things he does within that


locker room to ensure that everybody is locked in, focused and ready to go. Absolutely he will be here for a long time." During his Zoom session, LaFleur also discussed two notable


plays from the NFC championship game. LaFleur blamed himself for miscommunication that contributed to Tom Brady's 39-yard touchdown pass to Scotty Miller with one second left in the


first half. LaFleur had said after the game that "it was man coverage, definitely not the right call for the situation." "That was just a flat-out miscommunication and


ultimately, any time something like that occurs, that 100% falls squarely on my shoulders," LaFleur said. "I've got to make sure that I'm crystal clear with our


communication and those mistakes cannot happen, especially when the stakes are so big." LaFleur also was criticized for attempting a field goal when the Packers had fourth-and-goal from


the eight-yard line while trailing 31-23 with just over two minutes left. Mason Crosby's 26-yard field goal cut the lead to 31-26, but the Packers never got the ball back. "If I


had to do it again, if it's fourth-and-goal from the eight-yard line, we're kicking a field goal," LaFleur said. "If it's fourth-and-goal from the five, I think we


have a different discussion. You've got to play the percentages."