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The Packers are moving on from their veteran kicker.

Green Bay is releasing Brandon McManus on Friday, ESPN’s Adam Schefter reports.

The club selected kicker Trey Smack out of Florida in the sixth round of last month’s draft.

McManus had been with Green Bay since 2024. While injuries limited him to 14 games, he hit 24-of-30 field goals in 2025 along with 32-of-33 extra points. He also missed two field goals and an extra point in the club’s playoff loss to the Bears.

As noted by Rob Demovsky of ESPN, Green Bay paid McManus a $1 million roster bonus in March.

McManus previously spent nine seasons kicking for the Broncos before kicking for Jacksonville in 2023. He’s hit 82.0 percent of his career field goal attempts and 97.4 percent of his extra points.


The Texans are going to take a look at a quarterback during their rookie minicamp.

Per Jonathan Alexander of the Houston Chronicle, Clayton Tune has accepted an invitation to try out for the club this weekend.

Tune, 27, was a Cardinals fifth-round pick in 2023. He appeared in 13 games for the club in his first two seasons before he was waived during roster cuts.

Tune then signed with Green Bay’s practice squad, starting the club’s Week 18 loss to the Vikings with the Packers resting starters for the postseason.

In his 15 career appearances, Tune has completed 21-of-38 passes for 112 yards with three interceptions.

Tune played his college ball at Houston, making this weekend’s tryout a homecoming of sorts.


Packers defensive coordinator Jonathan Gannon has been running defenses in the NFL for a while, but anyone expecting the approach in Green Bay to look like the ones he employed in Arizona and Philadelphia is going to be disappointed.

That was the message from Gannon when he spoke to reporters at a press conference this week. Gannon said that “we develop the playbook when we get here” and that he told players that they will be seeing tape from a long list of teams to illustrate the things because Gannon doesn’t “really get caught up in” what he’d done before.

“I just believe you’ve got to continually every year try to adapt and solve problems with your guys in mind,” Gannon said, via the team’s website. “Before scheme, I truly believe it’s not what you play, it’s how you play. It’s a players’ game, man, you know what I mean? And everybody fits into winning. Everyone’s role might be different, but it all fits into winning, and you have to perform your role at a high level.”

The Packers brought in a couple of players who have played under Gannon in the past, but it doesn’t sound like that is going to give linebacker Zaire Franklin or defensive tackle Javon Hargrave much of a leg up as they start from scratch in Green Bay.


The Cowboys closed the book on the Micah Parsons trade during draft weekend. The team used the extra picks to make even more trades.

In the end. . .

The Cowboys sent the All-Pro edge rusher to the Packers. They traded defensive tackle Mazi Smith and a 2026 second-round pick to the Jets (later traded to the Lions) and the better of their two 2027 first-round picks to the Jets.

The Cowboys acquired defensive lineman Quinnen Williams, defensive lineman Kenny Clark, outside linebacker Malachi Lawrence (23rd overall), cornerback Devin Moore (114th overall) and defensive lineman LT Overton (137th overall).

The team has walked away from Parsons feeling as if they have won the trade.

“We feel really good about it,” executive vice president Stephen Jones told Adam Schein on Mad Dog Sports Radio. “Obviously, much respect for Micah and what he stands for and how he plays and the caliber of player he is. At the same time, we feel good about what we’ve added via that trade. You look at a guy like Quinnen Williams and Kenny Clark. They’re alpha players, who are not only great players on the field, but they’re leaders in the meeting rooms, how about they go about their business in the offseason. Just bring great leadership to this team.

“I just feel very optimistic that we have the right pieces in place. Ultimately, the decision we made was that one player is not worth four or five good ones, and we feel like that’s where we’re going to end up here in a good spot. We had that opportunity there. Didn’t feel like we were one player away last year, but I certainly feel like we’re putting the pieces together to give us an opportunity to go do what our fans deserve, what we want, which is to go and try to win the big trophy.”

Cowboys owner Jerry Jones predicted after the trade that Dallas would turn the trade into “three, four, five, six players for one.”

It’s unlikely that any one of the players the Cowboys acquired is as good as Parsons, but Williams is only 28 and has four Pro Bowls and is a one-time All-Pro. Clark is a three-time Pro Bowler.

The Cowboys, who are switching to a 3-4 defense under new coordinator Christian Parker, will have only three of the same starters from Week 1 of last season in what turned out to be a historically bad defense. If the Cowboys can have even a mediocre defense in 2026, they could contend, even without an All-Pro edge rusher.


The Packers lost a pair of key players to injury last season, both of whom may have helped change the team’s ultimate outcome in 2025.

Tight end Tucker Kraft suffered a torn ACL in November, prematurely ending what was a breakout season. Then linebacker Micah Parsons suffered a torn ACL in December, cutting off his strong first season with Green Bay.

But both should be back for the majority of 2026, according to General Manager Brian Gutekunst.

“They’re doing great,” Gutekunst said in a recent interview with SiriusXM NFL Radio. “Tuck’s been in here every day, and he’s obviously a little bit ahead of schedule, just because his injury happened earlier than Micah’s did. But Micah’s such a — he’s a little bit of a freak. So I think some of that has taken over, and he’s doing really well, as well.

“So, certainly expect both of those guys back early in the season. And they’ll be a big part of what we’re doing moving forward.”

In eight games last year, Kraft caught 32 passes for 489 yards with six touchdowns.

Parsons tallied 12.5 sacks with 12 tackles for loss and 27 quarterback hits, earning AP first-team All-Pro honors for the third time, despite playing just 14 games.