The Packers seem reluctant at times to develop their White talent, seeming to be almost embarrassed to not be as coal black as many other NFL teams, but they still rank among the best in a league that rigidly adheres to the Big Lie of black athletic supremacy.
On defense, the Pack drafted three White players in rounds 3 and 4 and will start three White linebackers and an end in the new season.
It was painfully obvious last year that then-rookie Jake Ryan was noticeably better than Nate Palmer and the other sub-replacement level talent the team was using at inside linebacker. Ryan’s racial apprenticeship was finally ended and he played well toward the end of the 2015 season and has kept his spot to open 2016.
This year’s fourth round pick Blake Martinez will not have to serve a racial apprenticeship, as he will line up next to Ryan. Martinez combines speed (4.7) with the strong tackling and ball hawking abilities he displayed at Stanford.
The emergence of Ryan and Martinez will enable Clay Matthews to move back to his natural position outside, where he ranks among the very best in the league. Very fast and aggressive, Matthews has averaged over 9 sacks per season along with making numerous other big plays.
Like Martinez, end Dean Lowry of Northwestern was also taken in the fourth round of the ’16 draft. After being listed as a backup all training camp, on Sept. 7 he was promoted to starting LE.
Outside linebacker Kyle Fackrell also was drafted in ’16, in the third round. Tall and rangy, he’s a terrific athlete who the team hopes can eventually bookend Matthews as a pass rushing specialist.
The offense is centered around the great Aaron Rodgers, who at 32 is still in the middle of his prime years. Rodgers and the offense sputtered last season without Jordy Nelson, who was lost for the season with a torn ACL. No one realized how key Nelson was to the offense, with the media assuming the likes of Randall Cobb and Davante Adams would pick up a lot of the slack. But Nelson is the first superstar White outside receiver since Steve Largent (and some might say Cris Collinsworth) back in the 1980s. And Nelson was pigeonholed as a possession receiver coming out of Kansas State and remained a backup his first three seasons. It took the sheer brilliance of his talent to force the Packers to finally use him the way he should have been from day one.
Yes, the NFL dreads big, fast outside White receivers just as much as it fears White running backs and White cornerbacks. Which explains why Jeff Janis – built almost identically to Nelson and maybe even a step faster – continues to languish in a prolonged racial apprenticeship. Janis is still on the team, but it was clear from the media reports emanating from training camp that he was inexplicably in the doghouse, as the media often does some of the dirty work of the Caste System in paving the way for the purging of White players.
Jared Abbrederis isn’t a “threat” the way Janis is, being more of a slot receiver, so he may see the field quite a bit in 2016. He should be ahead of the dreadful Davante Adams, but is pretty much “tied” with him currently in the battle to be the Packers’ third receiver.
Rookie Joe Callahan from Wesley is the third quarterback behind Rodgers and Brett Hundley.
Tight end Justin Perillo has some talent but is currently mired as the third stringer behind cement-footed Richard Rodgers and Jared Cook, a career bust that has managed to hang on into his eighth season in the league.
Second year man Aaron Ripowski replaces John Kuhn in the role of human bulldozer (fullback).
Four Whites start on the line. David Bakhtiari out of Colorado returns at left tackle. C. J. Tretter is the starting center. T. J. Lang is the right guard, and big Bryan Bulaga, the former first round pick, is the right tackle.
Backups are rookie Jason Spriggs, a super athletic tackle out of Indiana who was drafted in the second round, T/G Don Barclay, and T Kyle Murphy.
To sum up, the Packers project to start the season with 11 White starters and 22 Whites on their roster.
On the practice squad are Devon Cajuste from Stanford, listed as a tight end but who could easily be a starting outside wide receiver in a league not blinded by the racist ideology of the Caste System, guard Blake Muir of Baylor, and guard Lucas Patrick of Duke.
Starters:
QB Aaron Rodgers
FB Aaron Ripowski
WR Jordy Nelson
LT David Bakhtiari
C C. J. Tretter
RG T. J. Lang
RT Bryan Bulaga
OLB Clay Matthews
ILB Blake Martinez
ILB Jake Ryan
DE Dean Lowry
Total number of White players on 53 man roster: 22
Grade: C+
On defense, the Pack drafted three White players in rounds 3 and 4 and will start three White linebackers and an end in the new season.
It was painfully obvious last year that then-rookie Jake Ryan was noticeably better than Nate Palmer and the other sub-replacement level talent the team was using at inside linebacker. Ryan’s racial apprenticeship was finally ended and he played well toward the end of the 2015 season and has kept his spot to open 2016.
This year’s fourth round pick Blake Martinez will not have to serve a racial apprenticeship, as he will line up next to Ryan. Martinez combines speed (4.7) with the strong tackling and ball hawking abilities he displayed at Stanford.
The emergence of Ryan and Martinez will enable Clay Matthews to move back to his natural position outside, where he ranks among the very best in the league. Very fast and aggressive, Matthews has averaged over 9 sacks per season along with making numerous other big plays.
Like Martinez, end Dean Lowry of Northwestern was also taken in the fourth round of the ’16 draft. After being listed as a backup all training camp, on Sept. 7 he was promoted to starting LE.
Outside linebacker Kyle Fackrell also was drafted in ’16, in the third round. Tall and rangy, he’s a terrific athlete who the team hopes can eventually bookend Matthews as a pass rushing specialist.
The offense is centered around the great Aaron Rodgers, who at 32 is still in the middle of his prime years. Rodgers and the offense sputtered last season without Jordy Nelson, who was lost for the season with a torn ACL. No one realized how key Nelson was to the offense, with the media assuming the likes of Randall Cobb and Davante Adams would pick up a lot of the slack. But Nelson is the first superstar White outside receiver since Steve Largent (and some might say Cris Collinsworth) back in the 1980s. And Nelson was pigeonholed as a possession receiver coming out of Kansas State and remained a backup his first three seasons. It took the sheer brilliance of his talent to force the Packers to finally use him the way he should have been from day one.
Yes, the NFL dreads big, fast outside White receivers just as much as it fears White running backs and White cornerbacks. Which explains why Jeff Janis – built almost identically to Nelson and maybe even a step faster – continues to languish in a prolonged racial apprenticeship. Janis is still on the team, but it was clear from the media reports emanating from training camp that he was inexplicably in the doghouse, as the media often does some of the dirty work of the Caste System in paving the way for the purging of White players.
Jared Abbrederis isn’t a “threat” the way Janis is, being more of a slot receiver, so he may see the field quite a bit in 2016. He should be ahead of the dreadful Davante Adams, but is pretty much “tied” with him currently in the battle to be the Packers’ third receiver.
Rookie Joe Callahan from Wesley is the third quarterback behind Rodgers and Brett Hundley.
Tight end Justin Perillo has some talent but is currently mired as the third stringer behind cement-footed Richard Rodgers and Jared Cook, a career bust that has managed to hang on into his eighth season in the league.
Second year man Aaron Ripowski replaces John Kuhn in the role of human bulldozer (fullback).
Four Whites start on the line. David Bakhtiari out of Colorado returns at left tackle. C. J. Tretter is the starting center. T. J. Lang is the right guard, and big Bryan Bulaga, the former first round pick, is the right tackle.
Backups are rookie Jason Spriggs, a super athletic tackle out of Indiana who was drafted in the second round, T/G Don Barclay, and T Kyle Murphy.
To sum up, the Packers project to start the season with 11 White starters and 22 Whites on their roster.
On the practice squad are Devon Cajuste from Stanford, listed as a tight end but who could easily be a starting outside wide receiver in a league not blinded by the racist ideology of the Caste System, guard Blake Muir of Baylor, and guard Lucas Patrick of Duke.
Starters:
QB Aaron Rodgers
FB Aaron Ripowski
WR Jordy Nelson
LT David Bakhtiari
C C. J. Tretter
RG T. J. Lang
RT Bryan Bulaga
OLB Clay Matthews
ILB Blake Martinez
ILB Jake Ryan
DE Dean Lowry
Total number of White players on 53 man roster: 22
Grade: C+
Last edited: