Romeo Doubs on his future: I would love to be a Green Bay Packer

Romeo Doubs on his future: I would love to be a Green Bay Packer
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The Green Bay Packers came into the 2025 season with two starting receivers on the final years of their contracts: Christian Watson and Romeo Doubs. Both were taken in the 2022 draft, with Watson taken 34th overall and Doubs drafted 132nd.

Before Watson ever returned from his ACL tear that he suffered in the 2024 season, he signed a one-year extension with the team worth $11 million plus incentives. Meanwhile, Doubs has yet to receive a second contract from the team.

According to sources I’ve spoken with, Doubs’ camp attempted to get the ball moving on an extension around the combine last offseason. Those requests were shot down by the Packers, who were worried about locking in the receiver to a long-term contract because of Doubs’ concussion history (he had two in the second half of the 2024 season).

The heat only turned up at the receiver position (no one wants to be the odd man left out of an extension) when the Packers drafted first-round pick Matthew Golden and third-round pick Savion Williams in April. The logjam at the position is one reason why Jayden Reed’s new agent, Drew Rosenhaus, set up a meeting with Green Bay general manager Brian Gutekunst immediately after the draft.

Going into 2026, Doubs’ contract has expired, and Watson, Reed and Dontayvion Wicks are all in contract years. Green Bay will likely only keep one of these players long-term, maybe two, considering the squad’s cap situation over the next three years.

As I’ve been told, the Packers are not expected to retain Doubs, as contract talks stalled this offseason and haven’t really picked up at any point in any meaningful way. The assumption is that when Doubs tests the market as a free agent this year, he will be able to net a deal similar to Khalil Shakir’s, in the $13 million per year range. If that’s Doubs’ number, Green Bay should be able to collect a 2027 fifth-round compensatory draft pick for losing Doubs, as long as they don’t offset the loss with an outside signing in free agency. (The Packers will probably hit the maximum of four compensatory picks this offseason. Between that and their cap situation, don’t expect them to be in the free agent market much in 2026. They’re in a bad situation to spend and are incentivized to stay out of free agency.)

On Wednesday, Doubs was asked by FanDuel’s Kay Adams about whether he’s coming back to Green Bay next year. Here was his response:

I would leave that unknown. I would love to be a Green Bay Packer, but I’m just aware of this business. I understand how things go.

Other NFL teams also recognized the Packers’ situation with Doubs, in that Green Bay didn’t want to pay him long-term. Throughout 2025, the Packers received several trade offers for the receiver, but none that they believed were worth the offset of his 2025 contributions to the team and the 2027 compensatory pick they would receive if...