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Packers general manager: ‘We are not going to trade Aaron Rodgers’

Aaron Rodgers passes a ball before a game.
Packers general manager Brian Gutekunst says the team remains committed to Aaron Rodgers “for the foreseeable future” amid reports the future Hall of Fame quarterback wants out of Green Bay.
(Mike Roemer / Associated Press)
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Packers general manager Brian Gutekunst says he can’t envision any scenario in which he would deal quarterback Aaron Rodgers.

“We are not going to trade Aaron Rodgers,” Gutekunst said Thursday night after the first round of the NFL draft.

ESPN reported in the hours leading up to the draft that Rodgers doesn’t want to come back to the Packers. The ESPN report, citing unidentified sources, said the Packers have offered to extend the reigning NFL most valuable player’s contract and that team chief executive Mark Murphy, Gutekunst and coach Matt LaFleur each met with Rodgers during the offseason.

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Gutekust responded to the report by saying that “we are committed to Aaron in 2021 and beyond.” He expanded on those remarks late Thursday following the Packers’ first-round selection of Georgia cornerback Eric Stokes.

“I’m not going to speak for Aaron, but I think obviously we have a really good team and I do think he’ll play for us again,” Gutekunst said. “Like I said, we’re going to work toward that and we’ve been working toward that on a number of different fronts. The value that he adds to our football is really immeasurable, you know what I mean? He brings so much to the table, not only as a player but as a leader. He’s so important to his teammates, to his coaches, so yeah, that’s the goal.”

Rams general manager Les Snead wouldn’t say if the team tried to trade for Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers earlier this offseason.

San Francisco 49ers general manager John Lynch acknowledged he had checked with the Packers about Rodgers’ potential availability and was quickly rebuffed. The 49ers selected North Dakota State quarterback Trey Lance with the third overall pick.

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“We inquired and it was a quick end to the conversation,” Lynch said. “It wasn’t happening.”

Without going into specifics, Gutekunst said Packers officials had communicated with Rodgers on Thursday.

Rodgers, 37, has spent his entire career with Green Bay since the Packers selected him with the 24th overall pick in the 2005 draft. But his long-term future has been a topic of speculation ever since the Packers traded up four spots in the first round to select Rodgers’ potential successor, Utah State quarterback Jordan Love, with the 26th overall pick in last year’s draft.

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Rodgers acknowledged after that draft that he was surprised by the Love selection and that it complicated his hopes of finishing his career at Green Bay.

LSU standout Ja’Marr Chase is joining Joe Burrow in Cincinnati and Alabama’s Jaylen Waddle will be catching passes from Tua Tagovailoa in Miami.

“I certainly look back to last year’s draft and just kind of, maybe some of the communication issues we could have done better,” Gutekunst said. “There’s no doubt about it. The draft’s an interesting thing. It can kind of unfold differently than you think it’s going to unfold and it happens pretty fast. But certainly I think looking back on it, sitting where we sit today, there could have been some communication things we did better.”

Rodgers has three years remaining on his contract after signing a four-year, $134-million extension in August 2018.

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