Packers LT David Bakhtiari ruled out vs. Lions, to miss third straight game

No waiting for the inactive list this week. Packers LT David Bakhtiari was ruled out for Week 4 vs. the Lions. He’ll miss his third straight game.

The Green Bay Packers left no room for suspense in terms of David Bakhtiari’s availability for Week 4: The veteran left tackle won’t play Thursday night against the Detroit Lions. No surprises come the inactive list 90 minutes before kickoff. Bakhtiari was officially ruled out on Wednesday’s final injury report.

Bakhtiari, a five-time All-Pro who needed multiple surgeries to correct a significant knee injury suffered during the 2020 season, started the Packers’ Week 1 win over the Chicago Bears but has since missed games against the Atlanta Falcons and New Orleans Saints.

Bakhtiari didn’t practice all week and hasn’t practiced since Aug. 30. The surgically repaired knee continues to be an unpredictable problem for Bakhtiari and the Packers despite a modified practice schedule.

When on the field, Bakhtiari has been a dominant player. But given the early troubles with his knee, it’s unclear how many games the Packers will get with Bakhtiari available this season.

Second-year offensive tackle Rasheed Walker will get a third straight start at left tackle. He’s been impressive in pass protection to open the 2023 season and looks like a potential long-term replacement for Bakhtiari.

It’s possible the Packers will need to start Walker at left tackle and Yosh Nijman at right tackle. Zach Tom, the starter on the right side, is dealing with a knee injury coming out of Sunday’s win over the Saints and is officially questionable.

The Packers also ruled out starting left guard Elgton Jenkins, who injured his knee in Atlanta and will likely miss at least one more game before the bye, and inside linebacker De’Vondre Campbell, who injured his ankle in the first half last week and didn’t return. Neither player was available to practice this week. Safety Zayne Anderson, who is dealing with a hamstring injury and still hasn’t made his Packers debut, was also ruled out.

Packers LT David Bakhtiari addresses knee injury, playing on turf, Week 3 status

David Bakhtiari had a lot to say on Wednesday. Here’s everything.

After missing Sunday’s game against the Atlanta Falcons, Green Bay Packers left tackle David Bakhtiari spoke to the media for the first time on Wednesday, putting to bed any notions that his absence was due to the artificial turf playing surface at Mercedes-Benz Stadium.

Even before this Week 2 game with Atlanta took place, Bakhtiari’s feelings about turf surfaces were well known–he’s not a fan, to put it mildly. This topic was then at the forefront of conversations last week, given that Bakhtiari’s close friend, Aaron Rodgers, suffered a season-ending Achilles injury on a turf field.

That conversation and the timing of it all, coupled with a tweet from David’s brother, Eric Bakhtiari, led to speculation that the reason Bakhtiari didn’t play was because of the Falcons’ turf surface.

“If I wasn’t going to play on turf, I’d probably make more of a ruckus,” said Bakhtiari on Wednesday. “My brother loves drama, and he told me he was going to do it, I’m like go right ahead, I don’t give a (expletive). I don’t care what you do. It’s your social media. No. That (the turf surface) was not the reason at all. If it was going to be, that would definitely be something different. But it’s not. I clearly have an injury that I’ve been dealing with.”

The speculation around Bakhtiari’s absence on Sunday ran rampant and began to take on a life of its own as a main talking point, something that he did not appreciate.

“That’s the part for me that kind of got me fired up. I’m like, that’s bull (expletive),” said Bakhtiari. “I’ll talk to them on Wednesday. But to have all that and then to put Matt in that bind, it’s about the game. So for me, we can walk through stuff after the game.

“How many injured people do you talk to after games? It’s about the football game. It’s about the Packers. I don’t give a (expletive) about me, it’s about them. Let’s focus on them. And then Monday, how many times do y’all catch me? Only when I’m walking in here and have to change. But on Wednesdays, I’m always going to be open and available, and at times when we have a lot of ‘Hey, we have to be smart for the week,’ I’m going to make sure to very limitedly come by, but I still like to respect you guys, and you have your guys’ job, and your time.

“So I don’t appreciate the assumptions and putting people into boxes and making people like Matt, for one, I feel for him because he’s the head coach. He’s got a football game. It’s about the Atlanta Falcons last week and it’s about the Saints this week. Y’all got a question with me, come talk to me. I like to think I’m pretty open. I’ll still shoot you straight. I’ll still tell you guys what it is. So that’s the part that I got a bone to pick, not with one person that I know of, but just the collective, that it was weighing on me about.”

Matt LaFleur said on Monday that Bakhtiari was dealing with swelling in his knee and that is what kept him sidelined. When asked, Bakhtiari couldn’t pinpoint a specific play against Chicago that created the issue.

“I think there’s just a certain amount of, I don’t know, when my knee hits its limit, it hits its limit, so to speak,” said Bakhtiari.

“I’m going to be honest,” he added, “I’ve broken things in the middle of a game that I don’t even know. Like a lot of guys usually feel terrible like Monday night, Tuesday. So you don’t really know what you did in the game until that point, unless obviously, there’s certain things that don’t feel right in the moment since it is a collision sport. I can’t say I recall much. Maybe a little bit of something, but nothing I can pinpoint to a play or movement or anything like that.”

When on the field, Bakhtiari is still playing at a very high level. He gave up no pressures against the Bears, according to PFF, and was the highest-graded pass blocker in Week 1 among all tackles.

When Bakhtiari was asked a hypothetical question in which his knee was good, and there was an upcoming game on turf, if he would play or not, he quickly replied with, “Absolutely.” At the end of the day, Bakhtiari just wants to be back on the football field.

“I signed up to play,” said Bakhtiari. “I plan on playing. When I can play, I’m going to play. Certainly, if I’m not playing, there is something going on. It’s not like it’s been a secret. It’s something I’ve been battling with, and it’s been shitty. It’s been weighing on me a lot.

“You think I don’t want to play? You think I want to be a great football player and then just disappear? (Expletive) no. I appreciate Gutey. We’ve had plenty of talks. He’s been amazing to me, and being even able to vent to him about it. It’s been extremely stressful. It’s the human side. I’ve just been sitting here quietly just like, ‘Whatever it is, is going to be it.’ And I just have to take it for what it is.”

As far as Bakhtiari’s availability for this Sunday in Green Bay’s home opener against New Orleans and beyond, he and the Packers are still taking it day by day.

“Doing better,” said Bakhtiari about how he feels this week compared to last,” but we are just going to take it one day at a time. I hate to say it, day to day. I know you guys hate hearing that. I would never rule that out (playing Sunday and then Thursday).

“When I really mean it’s day-to-day, whatever type of control you think you have in a day-to-day, it literally has mine too. This could be the only game I even miss. I don’t know. I’m just making sure that I check my boxes. I’m able and ready. And when it is, great, let’s go out and play.”

Matt LaFleur says Packers LT David Bakhtiari had swelling in knee before Week 2

Matt LaFleur on David Bakhtiari not playing vs. Falcons: “His knee is injured. There was swelling.”

Green Bay Packers coach Matt LaFleur said swelling in David Bakhtiari’s surgically repaired knee was to blame for his team’s starting left tackle missing Sunday’s loss to the Atlanta Falcons at Mercedes-Benz Stadium.

Bakhtiari was listed as questionable entering the contest and was made inactive for Sunday despite playing in Week 1. LaFleur dismissed the idea that the artificial turf in Atlanta played a factor in Bakhtiari’s availability.

“His knee is injured. There was swelling,” LaFleur said Monday.

LaFleur also said he didn’t think Bakhtiari would have played Sunday had the game been at Lambeau Field.

All offseason and training camp, LaFleur said Bakhtiari’s knee would create a “fluid” situation in which the Packers might have to make late adjustments based on how the knee was feeling day to day.

Swelling has been a problem for Bakhtiari throughout his recovery from a significant knee injury suffered on New Year’s Eve in 2020. Three surgeries and almost three years later, Bakhtiari and the Packerws are still dealing the impact of the injury.

It’s unclear if Bakhtiari will play during Sunday’s home opener against the New Orleans Saints at Lambeau Field. He hasn’t practiced since Aug. 30.

Rasheed Walker and Yosh Nijman rotated in and out in place of Bakhtiari at left tackle. The Packers are also dealing with a multiple-week injury to left guard Elgton Jenkins, creating moving parts along the offensive line entering Week 3.

In terms of looking ahead, the Packers will practice and put up the first injury report of Week 3 on Wednesday. A final injury report arrives Friday.

Bakhtiari played 30 pass-blocking snaps in Week 1 and did not give up a pressure.

Packers LT David Bakhtiari inactive for Week 2 vs. Falcons

Packers LT David Bakhtiari is inactive for Week 2 against the Falcons.

The Green Bay Packers will be without David Bakhtiari on Sunday against the Atlanta Falcons. The Packers starting left tackle is officially inactive after being listed as questionable on the final injury report.

It’s unclear if Bakhtiari is dealing with a flare-up in his surgically repaired knee or if the playing surface at Mercedes Benz Stadium — artificial turf — played a factor in his availability.

Bakhtiari didn’t have a playing status designation in Week 1 and played without restriction on the grass field at Soldier Field.

Last season, Bakhtiari only played a partial game when the Packers faced the Detroit Lions on the artificial turf at Ford Field. It’s also worth noting that former Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers just suffered a torn Achilles tendon on the turf at MetLife Stadium in Week 1, reigniting Bakhtiari’s plea for the NFL to switch to all grass fields.

If turf was the mitigating factor, Bakhtiari would be expected to miss future games against the Detroit Lions (Week 12), New York Giants (Week 14), Carolina Panthers (Week 15) and Minnesota Vikings (Week 17).

With Bakhtiari inactive, second-year offensive tackle Rasheed Walker is expected to start at left tackle. Walker, a seventh-round pick last year, played 120 snaps at left tackle over three preseason games and gave up just two pressures. Sunday in Atlanta would be Walker’s first career NFL start.

David Bakhtiari blasts NFL’s artificial turf use after Aaron Rodgers injury: ‘I’m sick of this..Do better!’

One of Aaron Rodgers’ old teammates blasted artificial turf after the new Jets quarterback got injured.

The potentially season-altering injury that New York Jets quarterback Aaron Rodgers suffered on Monday night came with a very frustrating underlying factor for a lot of NFL players and fans.

While it didn’t necessarily look like this was the direct cause of Rodgers’ getting hurt, the moment happened on the brand-new artificial turf field at the Jets’ MetLife Stadium.

As many NFL players have in the past, Rodgers’ old Green Bay Packers teammate David Bakhtiari expressed his extreme displeasure with NFL stadiums using artificial turf fields instead of grass, with the argument being that athletes are less likely to sustain serious injury on grass playing fields.

The ongoing debate about what’s the safest turf for football players to play on might not settle anytime soon, but Bakhtiari’s fiery message to the NFL will grow louder with other players in the league if Rodgers’ injury is indeed serious.

Artificial turf might not be the culprit for Monday night’s big injury, but it might well be the fixture point for where the conversation goes.

Field issues were a major point of discussion after Super Bowl 57, and it doesn’t look like it’ll subside as an NFL hot-button issue anytime soon.

All part of the plan: Packers LT David Bakhtiari expecting to play vs. Bears

David Bakhtiari hasn’t practiced this week, but the Packers LT is expecting to play Sunday against the Bears.

Despite missing over a week of practice and not being on the practice field at all this week, Green bay Packers left tackle David Bakhtiari is expecting to play in Sunday’s season opener against the Chicago Bears.

“That’s the plan,” Bakhtiari said Thursday.

Bakhtiari hasn’t practiced since Aug. 30. Coach Matt LaFleur expressed no concern about his left tackle’s availability for Week 1.

“He’s a guy who has banked a ton of reps,” LaFleur said. “He feels good physically and so we anticipate him out there on Sunday.”

The Packers and Bakhtiari have been working together to manage his workload after three different surgeries on his knee cost him almost two years of football. Days off of practice are all part of the plan, which LaFleur has always admitted would be “fluid.”

It’s possible the Packers are saving most of Bakhtiari’s snaps for Sundays.

Bakhtiari, who has played in 130 career games, said he doesn’t need a lot of practice reps and will only require a few walkthroughs to feel ready to play a regular season game.

“Practice is important, but not everyone needs practice,” Bakhtiari said.

Bakhtiari played in 11 games last season and didn’t allow a sack. When on the field, he looked like the same five-time All-Pro as before the injury.

Now, the Packers are attempting to make sure Bakhtiari is available — and functioning at an elite level — for as many gamedays as possible.

“We’re just trying to find what’s best for the team and for me to be at my best on Sundays,” Bakhtiari said.

LaFleur didn’t rule out Bakhtiari practicing in some capacity on Friday. The final injury report and playing designations will arrive after practice on Friday.

5 Packers players to watch vs. Bears in Week 1

All eyes will be on Jordan Love on Sunday but what about the other Packers? Here are five players we’ll be watching from Green Bay.

We’re just hours away from the start of the 2023 NFL season for the Chicago Bears, and they kick things off by renewing their historic rivalry with the Green Bay Packers. The Bears and Packers meet for the 207th time, but this matchup will look a bit different than ones in the past.

For the first time in over three decades, the Packers will open the season with someone other than Brett Favre or Aaron Rodgers starting at quarterback as they enter a new era. All eyes will be on fourth-year quarterback Jordan Love as he officially takes over for Rodgers. But while Love is easily the most intriguing player on Green Bay, there are others to watch for as well.

Here are five Packers players we’ll be watching on Sunday.

Potential Jets trade target David Bakhtiari not being moved, Packers say

A potential option for the Jets is off the board.

With the continued questions at the offensive tackle position, the Jets could start eyeing potential trade targets to try and solve the problem. One of those targets may have been another one of Aaron Rodgers’ buddies in Packers offensive tackle David Bakhtiari. Key words here: “may have been.”

On Friday, Packers general manager Brian Gutekunst said the team is not trading Bakhtiari at all.

“First off all, we’re not going to trade David,” Gutekunst said, via Rob Demovsky of ESPN. “So let’s just get that out of the way because I know there’s been a little bit of chatter about that, and it’s not going to happen.”

The Packers has already taken $5.5 million of Bakhtiari’s 2023 base salary and his $9.5 million roster bonus and turned them into a $15 million signing bonus this offseason.

Bakhtiari is a five-time All-Pro tackle, but is now still managing his knee. He has undergone four surgeries since he tore his ACL near the end of the 2020 season.

This would then yet another reunion between a former Packer and Rodgers. The quarterback even posted a coy photo on his Instagram that included a “cheeky” tagging of Bakhtiari.

https://www.instagram.com/p/CwDDRQPuQvx/?igshid=MzRlODBiNWFlZA==

With issues at the offensive tackle position for the Jets, questions starting coming up about whether the Jets would move Alijah Vera-Tucker out to right tackle. The Athletic’s Zack Rosenblatt also looked at potential trade options, including a pair from the Arizona Cardinals in Josh Jones and Kelvin Beachum. They still seem willing to give Mekhi Becton a shot at right tackle and Becton is starting to warm up to playing the position.

Head coach Robert Saleh said Friday he’s not panicking yet about the group. “I think individually we have a good set of guys,” he said. “All of them can play football. It’s just becoming a unit. I don’t think there’s a panic.”

We should get another chance to see some of the line in action Saturday when the Jets host the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in New York’s third preseason game. They are 1-1 so far, notching a win last week against the Carolina Panthers and a loss in the Hall of Fame Game against the Cleveland Browns.

Packers GM Brian Gutekunst on David Bakhtiari trade rumors: ‘We’re not going to trade David’

Packers GM Brian Gutekunst killed the trade rumors involving David Bakhtiari: “We’re not going to trade David.”

Green Bay Packers general manager Brian Gutekunst all but killed the recent trade rumors involving All-Pro left tackle David Bakhtiari.

“First of all, we’re not going to trade David, so let’s just get that out of the way because I know there’s been a little bit of chatter about that, but that’s not going to happen,” Gutekunst said Friday.

The “chatter” Gutekunst referenced in his answer pointed at recent suggestions the Packers would trade Bakhtiari to the offensive line-needy New York Jets, who are struggling to protect former Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers during training camp.

At least for 2023, Bakhtiari will be in Green Bay blocking for Jordan Love. And the Packers are committed to helping Bakhtiari stay on the field and be as effective as possible.

“Dave’s a pro’s pro,” Gutekunst said. “I think he’s really in a good place now, understanding what he needs to do to get ready to play.”

Bakhtiari sat out during Wednesday’s joint practice with the Patriots but was back on the field on Thursday.

“He recognizes where we’re at and why he needs to be out there, but at the same time he knows when it’s time to back off. When we get into the season, there’s a lot of trust with him of what he needs to do to get ready to play,” Gutekunst said.

Gutekunst said the modified practice schedule is “not ideal” but Bakhtiari has the experience and ability to overcome the missed the time on the practice field.

“We feel pretty good about where he’s at,” Gutekunst said.

Bakhtiari will start at left tackle next to Pro Bowl left guard Elgton Jenkins along the Packers offensive line.

The Packers converted $15 million worth of base salary and a roster bonus  into a signing bonus for Bakhtiari in March. His cap hit balloons to over $40 million in 2024, the final year of his current deal.

Aaron Rodgers fed the David Bakhtiari Jets trade rumors by randomly tagging the Packers OT on Instagram

Does Rodgers know something we don’t about a trade?

In terms of being an on-paper Super Bowl 58 contender, the New York Jets have it all. They’ve got the play-faking quarterback, Aaron Rodgers. They’ve got game-changing offensive weapons like Garrett Wilson. And their defense, led by Sauce Gardner and Quinnen Williams, remains stout and elite.

But New York’s fatal flaw, at least for the time being, might be its offensive front. Veteran Pro Bowl-caliber starter Duane Brown is currently on the Physically Unable to Perform list, while key cogs like Laken Tomlinson have missed intermittent practice time here and there. Throw in former first-round pick Mehki Becton playing like a huge question mark, and the Jets and Rodgers could be in trouble.

So it’s no wonder rumors about a David Bakhtiari trade to New York have started to bubble.

Bakhtiari is, of course, one of Rodgers’ best pals on the Green Bay Packers and, when healthy, has played at an All-Pro level as one of the NFL’s premier offensive tackles. On Wednesday night, Rodgers not-so-subtly tagged Bakhtiari in an Instagram post that had nothing to do with him, seemingly fanning the flames of these trade rumors.

Hmm, that might mean more than meets the eye.

Look, I don’t know how realistic a Bakhtiari Jets trade is. I do think the Packers could try to offload the 31-year-old veteran because he hasn’t been completely healthy and available since the 2019 season. He makes more sense for a team trying to win now than a Packers squad trying to successfully transition to a young quarterback in Jordan Love.

But, according to Over The Cap, Bakhtiari has a salary cap hit of over 21 million in 2023. That number will rise to over 40 million in 2024. Barring some significant restructuring, I don’t see how the Jets finagle a deal with just over $16 million in team cap space.

Bakhtiari would be a ton of fun in New York, continuing a movement of veterans chasing a ring with Rodgers. It just doesn’t seem likely — no matter what strings Rodgers pulls behind the scenes.