GREEN BAY, Wis. — Green Bay general manager Brian Gutekunst remains optimistic about the Packers' long-term outlook as they head into the offseason after a gut-wrenching playoff loss to the Chicago Bears.
But he acknowledges they must do a much better job of finishing games.
Gutekunst spoke to reporters Wednesday for the first time since the Packers signed him as well as coach Matt LaFleur and executive vice president/director of football operations Russ Ball to multiyear contract extensions last week. The move by new Packers team president/CEO Ed Policy keeps the Packers' football leadership triad intact despite a string of disappointing postseason defeats.
''In every season, there's successes, and there's failures and there's disappointments,'' Gutekunst said. ''I was proud of our team in a lot of areas this year, but finishing games is certainly something that we got to concentrate on as we head into 2026.''
The Packers (9-8-1) dropped their final five games, including a 31-27 wild-card loss to the Bears in which they blew a 21-3 halftime lead and allowed 25 fourth-quarter points.
Green Bay hasn't reached the Super Bowl since the 2010 team — assembled by GM Ted Thompson, coached by Mike McCarthy and quarterbacked by four-time NFL MVP Aaron Rodgers — won it all. And the team has won only one playoff game since ending the 2020 season with an NFC championship game loss to Tom Brady and the eventual Super Bowl champion Tampa Bay Buccaneers.
The final loss to the Bears came after the Packers went 9-3-1 to start the season and had a four-point lead entering the fourth quarter of a 34-26 loss to the Denver Broncos on Dec. 14.
The Packers had won four in a row at that point, but they watched No. 1 wide receiver Christian Watson leave the stadium in an ambulance after suffering a chest injury, then lost All-Pro edge rusher Micah Parsons to a torn ACL in his left knee later in the game.