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Packers Week 2 Snap Counts

Let’s take a look at which Green Bay Packers played the most against the Washington Commanders, and make some notes about what has changed between Week 1 and Week 2. Surprisingly, there were some adjustments that the Packers made to their depth chart for this game, which could have been a response to open competitions that the team still has or the Commanders’ playing style.

Quarterback

63 snaps: Jordan Love

0: Malik Willis

Running Back

49: Josh Jacobs - 1 SPT

11 Chris Brooks - 17 SPT

5: Emanuel Wilson - 4 SPT

So far this season, Chris Brooks has played 53 snaps for the Packers compared to Emanuel Wilson’s 11. Keep that in mind when MarShawn Lloyd comes off the injured reserve, as it appears that Wilson would be the first to go if Green Bay only had the space to hold onto three players at the position.

Wide Receiver

45: Romeo Doubs - 1 SPT

37: Matthew Golden - 3 SPT

36: Dontayvion Wicks - 1 SPT

22: Malik Heath - 9 SPT

10: Savion Williams - 5 SPT

4: Jayden Reed

Slot receiver Jayden Reed was injured early in the first quarter, leading to the Packers leaning heavier into a three-man rotation of Romeo Doubs, Matthew Golden and Dontayvion Wicks. So far, Doubs leads the receivers in offensive snaps this year (78) with Golden (59) and Wicks (57) being virtually equal. Rookie third-round pick Savion Williams was much more involved in the game plan this week, as his only real snap in Week 1 was a jet sweep. He also contributed on special teams, as more than just a kick returner, which is all he did against the Detroit Lions.

57: Tucker Kraft

20: Luke Musgrave - 10 SPT

19: John FitzPatrick - 9 SPT

At this point, don’t even consider Luke Musgrave a true number two tight end. Over two games, John FitzPatrick has played 34 offensive snaps to Musgrave’s 37. They’re used in different situations, with Musgrave as a pass-catcher and FitzPatrick as a blocker, but the title of “TE2” is much closer than most fans would assume.

Offensive Line

63: Jordan Morgan (LG) - 6 SPT

63: Elgton Jenkins (C)

63: Sean Rhyan (RG) - 6 SPT

63: Rasheed Walker (LT) - 6 SPT

46: Anthony Belton (RT) - 6 SPT

17: Darian Kinnard (RT) - 6 SPT

0: Donovan Jennings

0: Brant Banks - 4 SPT

To the surprise of many, it was Anthony Belton who received the most snaps at right tackle this week, following Darian Kinnard taking most of the snaps at the position once Zach Tom dropped against the Lions. Brant Banks, called up from the practice squad, got on the field in field goal protection over Donovan Jennings, who was a healthy scratch in Week 1.

Defensive End

44: Micah Parsons

41: Rashan Gary

33: Lukas Van Ness - 14 SPT

19: Kingsley Enagbare - 13 SPT

6: Barryn Sorrell

The restrictors are off of Micah Parsons. He played 68 percent of the defense’s total snaps and led the defensive end room. Interestingly, rookie Barryn Sorrell was not used up until Washington’s final drive of the game. The team must be slow-playing his return to the field. Sorrell was a significant contributor on special teams in the preseason, and special teams coordinator Rich Bisaccia loves playing ends on his units. Expect for Sorrell’s snaps to ramp up in the coming weeks.

Defensive Tackle

49: Devonte Wyatt

44: Karl Brooks - 10 SPT

21: Colby Wooden - 5 SPT

3: Nazir Stackhouse - 6 SPT

Colby Wooden (34 snaps) and Karl Brooks (33) essentially split snaps at defensive tackle last week behind Devonte Wyatt, which makes Brooks’ doubling of Wooden’s reps this week odd. I’ll have to look at the film later this week to confirm, but I’m guessing that Wyatt actually had to play a lot of nose tackle in this game, considering the splits. Rookie Nazir Stackhouse remains a niche player who serves as a short-yardage and red zone run-stopper. On the year, he’s played just 11 snaps compared to Wyatt’s 96, Brooks’ 77 and Wooden’s 55.

Linebacker

65: Quay Walker - 5 SPT

64: Edgerrin Cooper - 5 SPT

7: Isaiah McDuffie - 21 SPT

0: Ty’Ron Hopper - 16 SPT

0: Nick Niemann - 16 SPT

Green Bay played pretty much the entire game in nickel against Washington. This is a pretty stark contrast to how the team opened up against the Lions in Week 1, when they were playing three-linebacker sets to Detroit’s three-receiver looks to stop the run.

Cornerback

65: Keisean Nixon - 8 SPT

38: Carrington Valentine - 8 SPT

31: Nate Hobbs - 4 SPT

0: Kamal Hadden - 3 SPT

0: Micah Robinson

Nate Hobbs and Carrington Valentine rotated at cornerback opposite Keisean Nixon, who might have had the best performance of any individual player in the game. On the year, Kamal Hadden has played zero defensive snaps and five special teams snaps. Micah Robinson, a practice squad call-up in back-to-back games, has failed to get on the field in any way. Robinson only has one more call-up available from the practice squad for the rest of the season.

65: Evan Williams - 11 SPT

65: Xavier McKinney - 12 SPT

55: Javon Bullard - 11 SPT

0: Kitan Oladapo - 12 SPT

Last week, the Packers started Javon Bullard as the 4-3 safety, but kicked him into the slot in nickel looks. This week, Evan Williams was the full-time safety starter, and Bullard mostly came off the bench as a slot-only defender, though he also split time there with cornerback Nate Hobbs.

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