Jordan Morgan Emerging as a Standout at Packers OTAs, A Promising Sign for Green Bay

Green Bay Packers Jordan Morgan

The Green Bay Packers entered the offseason counting on a leap from former first round pick Jordan Morgan. Losing Elgton Jenkins and watching Rasheed Walker leave in free agency created real uncertainty at one of the most important positions on the roster. But early in OTAs and minicamp, one development is giving the team reason to breathe easier: Jordan Morgan looks ready for the job.

The former first‑round pick has been one of the clear bright spots of the offseason program, and his progress is exactly what the Packers needed.

Jordan Morgan Impresses Early After Moving Back to His Natural Position

Bill Huber of Packers On SI listed Jordan Morgan among the biggest winners of mandatory minicamp, noting that the young lineman finally looks comfortable after two seasons of inconsistency. As the document states, “Morgan more than held his own against the speed rushers that dominate this time of the year.”

That’s a meaningful step. Shorts-and-helmets practices don’t tell the whole story, but they do reveal whether a player is moving confidently, processing quickly, and winning the reps he should win. Morgan is doing all of that.

In another observation, Huber highlighted a rep where Jordan Love completed a pass because Morgan stonewalled rookie pass rusher Dani Dennis‑Sutton, the kind of moment that shows technique, strength, and poise.

For a player who bounced between both guard spots last season due to injuries, returning to his natural home at left tackle appears to be unlocking his potential.

Why Morgan’s Development Matters So Much

The Packers’ offensive line depth is thin, especially at left tackle. The team let Walker walk because they believe Morgan can be a long‑term starter. That belief now needs to translate into reality.

Green Bay’s fallback options are limited:

  • Darian Kinnard is listed as the primary backup, but he played mostly on the right side last year.
  • Extended playing time for Kinnard would be a gamble.
  • External help is possible, but only if Morgan or Kinnard falter in training camp.

This is why Morgan’s strong start is so important. The Packers aren’t just hoping he develops, they’re counting on it.

A Positive Trendline for a Critical Position

Morgan’s early performance doesn’t guarantee he’ll dominate once the pads come on, but it does show he’s trending in the right direction. He’s doing exactly what a young left tackle should be doing in June: winning reps, showing consistency, and giving the coaching staff confidence.

If he continues on this trajectory, the Packers may have found their next long‑term blindside protector, and one of the biggest offseason concerns could quietly become a strength.