Packers All-Quarter Century Team: Left Tackle voting

Packers All-Quarter Century Team: Left Tackle voting
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Which blind side protector will earn your top spot?

Now that we are about wrapped up with the ball-handling positions on offense, our quest to name the Green Bay Packers’ All-2000s (so far) team moves on to the offensive line. We will start with the premier pass-protecting position, the left tackle spot, where the Packers have had two players locking down the blind side for the majority of the last 25 years.

Another pair of players have multiple seasons as starters around those two longtime stars, giving us just four nominees for consideration. Take a look below and give us your vote for who is the Packers’ best left tackle of the last 25 seasons.


Left Tackle Nominees

Chad Clifton (2000-2011)

2x Pro Bowl

The Packers started this century off with a bang, finding a decade-long rock at left tackle in the second round of the 2000 NFL Draft. In fact, they found bookend tackles that year, first drafting Clifton 44th overall out of Tennessee before landing Wisconsin’s own Mark Tauscher in the 7th round.

Clifton was as steady as they come on the right side for most of 12 seasons with the Packers, taking over as a starter a few weeks into his rookie season and never looking back. After he missed the last six games of the 2002 season following a brutal blind-side block from Warren Sapp on an interception return, Clifton returned to become a set-him-and-forget-him tackle. In fact, he was so reliable that over the 8-year span from 2003 to 2010, Clifton missed a grand total of six games while making his two Pro Bowls (2007 and 2010).

After protecting Aaron Rodgers’ blind side en route to a win in Super Bowl XLV, Clifton returned at age 35 for one more season in 2011 but missed 10 games with back and hamstring injuries. He was able to suit up in week 17 and in the Packers’ playoff game that year, but the team released him with a failed physical the following spring and retired shortly thereafter.

In all, Clifton played in 165 games with 160 starts, protecting both Brett Favre and Aaron Rodgers throughout his career as one of the longest-tenured full-time starting offensive linemen in team history.

Marshall Newhouse (2010-2013)

When Clifton missed those ten games during the 2011 season, it was Newhouse who took over for him. The 5th-round draft pick in 2010 did not play as a rookie but Clifton’s injuries thrust him into the starting lineup, where he would remain through the end of the season. Clifton’s return late in the season then shifted Newhouse over to right tackle for week 17, filling in for an injured Bryan Bulaga.

With Clifton retiring and Bulaga solidly entrenched on the right side for the 2012 season, Newhouse was the team’s every-week starter at left tackle that year. His first and only season as a full-time starter for the Packers was a bit of a roller-coaster, which did help lead the...