Packers P Daniel Whelan among several young players experiencing growth

Like so many other young players in Green Bay, first-year punter Daniel Whelan is getting better and better as the year goes on.

It’s not only on the offensive side of the ball where the Green Bay Packers have seen growth over the last month, but on special teams as well, and specifically with first-year punter Daniel Whelan.

For some perspective on Whelan’s recent performances, here is where he stands since Week 10:

— Third-most punts in the NFL where he’s pinned the opponent inside their own 20-yard line.

— Whelan ranks first in punt return rate during that span with only 21.4 percent of his punts being returned.

— Just one put attempt out of 14 resulting in a touchback.

— Whelan is tied for fourth in fair catches.

— He ranks ninth in hang time.

“Obviously, he’s improved,” said special teams coordinator Rich Bisaccia. “He’s played well to this point. I think the big factor for us early was his basic football awareness. What to do in different situations. Where am I on the field? What’s the wind doing? Am I doubled to one side, singled to the other? Is it double-double or whatever those things are? I think he’s concentrated on his drop, trying to get a little more hang.”

In the Detroit game alone, Whelan had three punts that ended up inside the Lions’ 10-yard line. That ability to flip the field can be an underrated but obviously an important element throughout the course of the football game by forcing the opponent to have to go further and put together more plays if they hope to score. Then in return, if the defense can force a subsequent three-and-out or a short drive by the opponent, the Green Bay offense then benefits from good starting field position of their own.

Through the first half of the season, you could tell that pinning the opponents deep in their own territory was an aspect of Whelan’s game that he was working through. We know he has a big leg. We’ve seen that since training camp and it’s been on display several times this season.

But there’s also the other side of that punting coin, when the team is close to midfield – which the Packers seemed to be quite often – where finesse instead of power is required. Through the first five games, Whelan led the NFL in touchbacks. Only one of his 22 punt attempts were downed.

Along with Whelan’s improvement, the Packers punt coverage unit, their fliers specifically, have been much better as well. Due to injuries on defense, the trickle down effect of that has then had an impact on who starts on special teams. At the flier position, Green Bay has had a number of players take snaps in that role, including Jonathan Owens, Robert Rochell, Corey Ballentine, and Innis Gaines. But lately, there has been more continuity, and as a result, stability.

“Going back to the Saints game, he had one of his best punts,” said Bisaccia, “but we didn’t get good coverage at the same time. Where he is on the field, he’s trying to do a better job of what he’s trying to kick, what ball he’s going to hit to help the coverage but to help him be a little bit better without worrying about the coverage. What his hang looks like, if he’s hitting a fat ball, a flop, depending on where he is on the field.”

As is the case for any young player, consistency is key. What the Packers have seen from Whelan in recent weeks needs to continue to become the norm, rather than the outlier. Although his impact, especially over the last two games against two of the NFL’s best, may fly under the radar, that ability to find the sweet spot of not kicking the ball into the end zone while also not allowing a return has put the Green Bay defense in more advantageous situations.

Across the board and in all three phases of the game, the Packers are seeing growth and development from a number of their young players. This has resulted in more complimentary football, something that eluded them early on in the season, but is a key component of a winning formula.

“I still think he’s figuring out what he can hit and where. Figuring out where his strength is and trying not to get touchbacks. Trying to get it down inside the 10 and learning how is fliers are playing on the outside and who can make plays at that position. There’s a lot of growth at that position and he’s certainly on the up hill of the trajectory.”

Packers release veteran punter Pat O’Donnell, Daniel Whelan wins punting job

The Packers released veteran punter Pat O’Donnell, clearing the way for Daniel Whelan to be the team’s punter in 2023.

The Green Bay Packers are going with youth and potential at punter to start the 2023 season. The team announced the release of veteran punter Pat O’Donnell on Monday, suggesting Daniel Whelan has won the punting job for the Packers to open the season.

O’Donnell, 32, spent one season with the Packers after signing as a free agent before the 2022 season. He averaged 44.5 yards per punt and had 24 punts placed inside the 20-yard line over 17 games last season.

Whelan, who consisently boomed punts during training camp, appears to have won the punting job. His six punts averaged 45.2 yards (37.2 net) during the preseason. Of his six punts, three ended up inside the 20-yard line. Whelan’s net average was hurt by one touchback and one punt returned for 21 yards.

A record-setting punter at UC-Davis, Whelan spent time with the New Orleans Saints last year before earning All-XFL honors as a member of the D.C. Defenders in 2023. The Packers signed him in May. Whelan is a native of Ireland.

Whelan is only 24 years old and on a one-year, $750,000 deal. He will be an exclusive rights free agent in 2024 and 2025, giving the Packers at least three years of cost control at punter.

The release of O’Donnell is the first cut for the Packers on the way to trimming the roster to 53 players.

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Can punter Daniel Whelan push veteran Pat O’Donnell for Packers roster spot?

A roster battle you probably didn’t know was coming in training camp: Pat O’Donnell vs. Daniel Whelan for Packers punter.

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The Green Bay Packers signed Daniel Whelan this offseason, giving them two punters on the 90-man roster, along with veteran Pat O’Donnell. This is not a training camp battle that will garner a ton of attention. In fact, it might not even be an actual training camp battle. But there’s a reason — whatever that may be — that the Packers added Whelan, so the question at punter heading into the summer is: Can the inexperienced Whelan push the veteran O’Donnell for the starting job?

Wheelan was named to the All-XFL team this past spring, beating out former NFL punter Marquette King. Whelan averaged 45.6 yards per punt, the third-best in the league, with a long of 66 yards. He also had 11 of his 29 punt attempts finish inside the 20-yard line with only two touchbacks.

Before that, Whelan was an All-American punter at FCS UC-Davis. In 2021, his final season, Whelan averaged 46.3 yards per punt, with 22 of his 55 attempts ending up inside the 20-yard line with a return rate of 40%, including 15 fair catches. For what it’s worth, Whelan graded out very well by PFF’s metrics with a final grade of 88.7, which would have been among the best at either the FCS or FBS levels.

Although we got just a small glimpse of Whelan during the open minicamp practices, what was evident was the power he packs. As Bill Huber of SI noted, Whelan’s average hang time on the six punts he had during the second day of practice was 4.74 seconds compared to O’Donnell’s 4.20 second average. Along with punting, Whelan was also taking reps as the holder on field goal attempts for Anders Carlson.

After bouncing from JK Scott to Corey Bojorquez, O’Donnell was brought in last offseason to provide some stability to the punter position, which he did. In terms of raw numbers, such as yards per attempt, punts inside the 20, hang time, and number of fair catches, O’Donnell ranked in the bottom third — or close to it — in those categories, but there weren’t any egregious errors either, which for the Packers was a win. O’Donnell also played a role in Mason Crosby’s bounce-back season with his ability as a holder, one of the big reasons he was signed.

If I were to guess right now, I would still predict that O’Donnell will be the Packers’ punter come Week 1. For starters, while there are cap savings if Green Bay were to release him, that figure is just $1.25 million. Not to say that the Packers can’t use all the cap help that they can get, but that number on its own isn’t nearly enough to dictate the decision, either.

Upon the signing of O’Donnell last offseason, Rich Bisaccia mentioned how he had admired his game from afar, and we have all seen, especially this offseason, the say that Bisaccia has when it comes to special teams decisions. The last thing I’ll mention is that with a rookie kicker, having O’Donnell’s experience and sound holding abilities on field goals could be quite valuable.

With that said, some of that logic could go out the window, given where this Packers team currently is. As they find themselves in the midst of transitioning to Jordan Love, just as they are doing at kicker with Carlson, at punter, Green Bay could be more willing to weather the storm that comes with relying on an inexperienced player in the hopes that they find a long-term answer at the position. If that’s the case, then Whelan may have a shot — if he performs well — to make the team.

Saints announce a flurry of roster moves before training camp, sign RB Malcolm Brown

The Saints announced 6 roster moves, including the signing of free agent running back Malcolm Brown and former Texans starting center Nick Martin:

When it rains, it pours. The New Orleans Saints filed a quick list of roster moves on Tuesday’s update to the daily NFL transactions wire — signing three new players and waiving three others to make room for them. Let’s dig into each transaction and what it means moving forwards: