Pro Football Rumors
Then 9-3-1 and riding a four-game winning streak, Green Bay was rolling heading into Denver for a Week 15 clash with the Broncos. The wheels began falling off for the Packers that afternoon in a 34-26 defeat. Adding injury to insult, the Packers lost their best defensive player, superstar pass rusher Micah Parsons, to a torn ACL.
Parsons’ injury was a fatal blow to the Packers, who failed to win a game without him. They closed the regular season with four straight defeats before limping into a wild-card matchup against the archrival Bears. The Packers stormed out to a 21-3 halftime lead, but the Bears flipped the script in the second half and pulled off a shocking 31-28 win.
While the Packers are stewing over a brutal end to their season, they at least received some good news earlier this week. Parsons said he doesn’t expect to open the 2026 campaign on injured reserve, per Ryan Wood of USA Today. Doing so would keep Parsons out for at least four games, but he’s aiming to make his season debut in either Week 3 or Week 4.
After beginning his career in Dallas, where he earned first-team All-Pro Honors three times in four years, Parsons joined the Packers with great fanfare last summer in a stunning late-August trade. Months of drama between Parsons and owner Jerry Jones culminated in the Cowboys sending the 26-year-old to the Packers for two first-round picks and defensive tackle Kenny Clark. The Packers immediately handed Parsons a four-year, $188MM extension with $136MM in guarantees.
Parsons lived up to the hype and the mammoth contract in his first 14 games as a Packer. With 12.5 sacks, he became the first player to amass a dozen or more in each of his first five seasons. He also tallied 79 pressures, 26 QB hits, 12 tackles for loss and two forced fumbles. Parsons ended the year as Pro Football Focus’ third-ranked edge rusher out of 188 qualifiers. In PFF’s estimation, only Myles Garrett and Will Anderson had better seasons than Parsons, who made his fifth straight Pro Bowl.
Parsons underwent successful knee surgery on Dec. 29. Barring setbacks, a healthy return will go a long way in helping the Packers rebound from a 2025 campaign that started with promise but ended with a collapse. Parsons’ absence proved crucial during a four-game stretch in which the Packers mustered just four sacks.