It is not very often that the Green Bay Packers give third contracts to players that they draft. Indeed, most of the best Packers players go through their rookie contract and sign a multi-year second contract and end up staying in Green Bay for seven or eight years. After that, though, the Packers usually move on from them, and more often than not they get the timing right.
There are, of course, a few exceptions. Aaron Rodgers, obviously, signed multiple extensions with Green Bay during his 18-year tenure with the team. Former left tackle David Bakhtiari, too, signed two extensions beyond his rookie contract.
It is truly an honor that goes to the best of the best, and this offseason, the Packers gave a rare third contract to their current longest-tenured player, defensive tackle Kenny Clark.
Kenny Clark and the Green Bay Packers Narrowly Defeated the Chicago Bears on Sunday
Clark also told the media that special teams coordinator Rich Bissacia had identified a weakness in Chicago’s protection during their preparation this week. He knew that the Packers were going to block at least one kick on Sunday, and it just happened to be the most important one.
“We were going to block it. We talked about T.J. [Slaton] or KB [Karl Brooks] blocking the kick all week. They’ve got holes in their field goal protection, and a couple of them, they got close. We’ve been talking about that all week, T.J, or one of them getting a block this week. It was a problem. So Coach Rich been telling them all week, and we ended up getting one.”