• Jason Wilde on The Homer Hour
    Feb 19 2026
    Jason Wilde joined The Homer Hour to break down the latest around the Green Bay Packers and their NFC North rivals. The conversation started with reaction to reports that the Chicago Bears are exploring building a stadium in Indiana and what that could mean for the rivalry. From there, the focus shifted to Green Bay’s offseason priorities — specifically the offensive line. Which position group up front is the biggest key, and is the O-line the Packers’ biggest question mark heading into the season? They wrapped with some quarterback talk, debating which signal-caller would pose the tougher challenge if they were with the Minnesota Vikings — Malik Willis or Aaron Rodgers.
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    17 mins
  • Jason Wilde on KBN
    Feb 19 2026
    Jason Wilde joined KBN to break down the latest surrounding the Green Bay Packers, starting with a little NFC North banter — does he regret ever wishing the Chicago Bears were good considering how insufferable their fans have become? The conversation shifted to Associate Head Coach/Special Teams Coordinator Rich Bisaccia stepping down. Who ultimately made the call, and why didn’t it happen a month earlier? The guys debated whether the special teams issues were on Bisaccia or tied more to the roster-building philosophy of GM Brian Gutekunst. They also evaluated Jordan Love’s 2025 season — was it simply average? — and examined why the Packers’ year ultimately ended the way it did.
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    17 mins
  • Jason Wilde Questions the Bisaccia Exit: “It Just Doesn’t Add Up”
    Feb 19 2026
    Rich Bisaccia is out in Green Bay, and Jason Wilde isn’t buying the easy explanation. In his appearance on Jen, Gabe & Chewy, Wilde digs into the timing of Bisaccia’s departure and why the whole situation feels off. Forty days after the Bears loss, with other teams already filling special teams jobs and assistants moving on, Wilde says the press release and glowing quotes don’t answer the real questions. Was this friction? Reflection? Something else entirely? The conversation dives into what Bisaccia actually meant to the Packers. Was he respected as a culture-setter, or just liked as “the easy teacher”? Wilde pushes back on that narrative, arguing that players respected him as both a coach and a leader. At the same time, he acknowledges the glaring special teams failures — especially in the return game — and walks through how special teams rankings really work, why Daniel Whelan’s elite punting doesn’t erase return struggles, and how one bad kicking performance can skew the perception of the entire unit.
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    14 mins
  • Jason Wilde on The Homer Hour
    Feb 18 2026
    Packers reporter Jason Wilde joined The Homer Hour to break down Rich Bisaccia stepping down and whether a return to the college ranks could be in his future. The conversation also explored whether Bisaccia played a role in Matthew Golden not being used more as a returner, and how the Packers handled the kicking situation during Brandon McManus’ injury. Wilde also reflected on whether Bisaccia inherited a dumpster fire on special teams, if history will be kind to his tenure in Green Bay, and whether Packers fans should be concerned about finding the right replacement.
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    22 mins
  • Jason Wilde on Packers' Big Three Blame Pie & Matt LaFleur the Motivator! - Jim, Matt & Molly
    Feb 18 2026
    Jason Wilde joins Jim & Molly to talk about the Packers' offseason and the shortcomings of their Big Three - Love, LaFleur & Gutey! First, Jim asks Jason to grade Matt LaFleur's postgame speech to the Badgers MBB after last Friday's big win over MSU -- is a "lack of grit" the biggest issue for LaFleur as a head coach? Jason also shares his insight for LaFleur's biggest strength as a head coach, and he breaks down his assessment of the "blame pie" for why the Packers haven't won a Super Bowl in the Love-LaFleur-Gutey era!
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    17 mins
  • Jason Wilde: Jordan Love at 14? Cap Pressure, Gary Decisions & What the Packers Are Really Planning
    Feb 17 2026
    ESPN Wisconsin reporter Jason Wilde joins Jen, Gabe & Chewy to address the debate Packers fans can’t stop arguing about: Is Jordan Love really just the 14th-best quarterback in the NFL? 021726 Jason on JGC Wilde pushes back on the ranking and explains why both the eye test and the numbers suggest Love belongs higher — and why the criticism of Matt LaFleur from a vocal portion of the fan base surprises people outside Wisconsin. 🏈 If Love Is 14th… What Does That Say About LaFleur? Wilde makes an interesting point: If Jordan Love is truly middle-of-the-pack while the Packers consistently make the playoffs, then Matt LaFleur deserves even more credit than critics give him. Outside the Green Bay bubble, Wilde says many observers are stunned by how quickly some Packers fans are willing to move on from LaFleur — especially given the sustained success. 💰 The Real Story: Roster Bonus Decisions From there, the conversation pivots to the cap calendar. Wilde explains that the next few weeks are critical because of: Roster bonus trigger dates Restructure pivot points “Water get off the pot” decisions Players like Rashan Gary and Elgton Jenkins face major financial crossroads, where the Packers must decide whether to: Convert bonuses and spread money out Restructure at lower numbers Or move on entirely Wilde calls it personnel malpractice if the front office doesn’t already know which direction it’s going. 🧠 Aaron Banks & Nate Hobbs Structure Tells a Story Wilde notes something subtle but important: The Packers structured the contracts of Aaron Banks and Nate Hobbs differently than recent signings — building in roster bonuses that the players may never see. That tells you the front office wanted flexibility. Banks’ future, in particular, isn’t as secure as it once looked. 🔄 Malik Willis Is About to Get Paid The quarterback market also enters the discussion. With a weak draft class and limited free agent options, Wilde believes Malik Willis’ market is real — potentially similar to Justin Fields’ two-year, $40 million deal. That impacts the Packers’ compensatory pick equation, which Wilde says they are absolutely factoring into their strategy. Green Bay could be targeting the maximum four comp picks in 2027 — meaning external signings will likely come from the “released veteran” market instead of true unrestricted free agents. ⚖️ The Bottom Line Jason Wilde’s message is measured but clear: Jordan Love isn’t 14th. LaFleur isn’t on the hot seat nationally. The Packers have cap levers — but using them requires sacrifice. And the roster bonus decisions coming in the next 20 days will define this offseason. The Packers may look stable on the surface — but behind the scenes, the next wave of major decisions is already underway. 🎧 A sharp, insider breakdown of quarterback rankings, coaching perception, and the financial dominoes about to fall in Green Bay — with Jason Wilde on Jen, Gabe & Chewy.
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    12 mins
  • Jason Wilde on Packers Offensive Assistant "Regurge" & Possible Free-Agent Retentions! - on Jim, Matt & Molly
    Feb 14 2026
    Jason Wilde joins Jim & Molly to talk about the Packers' lack of offensive coaching changes and some of their impending free agent questions! First, Jason provides a sad Olympics update... Molly asks if it's wrong for her to feel like the Packers are "regurgitating" offensive assistants -- can Luke Getsy still be an a good QBs coach, and how much should it matter who Love' QBs coach is at this point in his career. Producer Primetime also gets in his free-agency question: which free agent is most likely to be re-signed by Green Bay -- Quay Walker, Kingsley Enagbare, or Sean Rhyan?
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    22 mins
  • Jason Wilde: 155 Wins, No Super Bowl — Why the Packers Still Haven’t Broken Through
    Feb 13 2026
    The Packers’ 155 wins since 2011 Zero Super Bowl appearances NFC Championship failures Brian Gutekunst’s offseason uncertainty The salary cap “credit card” flexibility Whether Green Bay is truly close 📌 Based strictly on the Jason Wilde segment from 021326 JGC Hour 1 021326 JGC Hour 1 🎧 Jen, Gabe & Chewy — Jason Wilde Segment (021326) 🎙️ Podcast Title Options (SEO Optimized for Packers Growth) 🏆 BEST OVERALL (RECOMMENDED) “Jason Wilde: 155 Wins, No Super Bowl — Why the Packers Still Haven’t Broken Through” 🔥 Strong Alternates “Jason Wilde on the Packers’ Super Bowl Drought Since 2011” “Four NFC Title Games, Zero Rings — Jason Wilde Explains the Gap” “Jason Wilde: What’s Actually Holding the Packers Back?” “Winning Isn’t Enough — Jason Wilde on the Packers’ Ceiling” “Jason Wilde Breaks Down the Packers’ 14-Year Super Bowl Frustration” 📱 Short / Apple-Friendly Option “Jason Wilde on Why the Packers Haven’t Returned to the Super Bowl” 📝 Full Podcast Description (Jason Wilde Only) The Green Bay Packers have won 155 regular-season games since 2011 — fourth most in the NFL. They have also made zero Super Bowl appearances during that span. In this candid conversation on Jen, Gabe & Chewy, ESPN Wisconsin reporter Jason Wilde breaks down why that gap exists — and why it’s more complicated than blaming one coach, one quarterback, or one roster flaw. 021326 JGC Hour 1 🏈 It’s Not a Failure — It’s a Pattern Wilde revisits the Packers’ NFC Championship losses in 2014, 2016, 2019, and 2020, explaining that each collapse had a different cause: Defensive breakdowns Special teams disasters Offensive stagnation Roster imbalance Green Bay hasn’t lacked talent. They’ve lacked alignment. As Wilde puts it, the Packers have been good — just not complete at the right moments. 🧠 The Sam Darnold Contrast Wilde uses Seattle’s recent Super Bowl win as an example of how balance wins championships. Sam Darnold didn’t carry Seattle. He avoided mistakes while the roster around him executed. The Packers, by contrast, have rarely had: Elite offense Top-tier defense Functional special teams All peaking simultaneously. 💰 The Cap “Credit Card” Question The discussion then turns to the offseason. While Brian Gutekunst insists the Packers have the flexibility to “do what they want,” Wilde admits something unusual: He doesn’t have a clear read on what the plan actually is. Questions remain: What happens with Rashan Gary? Is Elgton Jenkins truly gone? How many 2022 draft picks walk? Are they really committed to keeping Romeo Doubs? The “credit card” flexibility exists — but using it requires conviction. ⚖️ The Bottom Line The Packers aren’t dysfunctional. They aren’t rebuilding. They aren’t far away. But they also haven’t been complete enough to finish. Winning 10–13 games a year is impressive. Winning in January is different. And until Green Bay solves that balance problem — roster construction, late-game execution, and offseason decisiveness — 2011 will continue to loom large. 🎧 A clear-eyed, thoughtful breakdown of the Packers’ Super Bowl drought and what still separates them from finishing the job — with Jason Wilde on Jen, Gabe & Chewy.
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    14 mins