What does Jayden Reed extension mean for Packers in 2026 draft?
The Packers and Jayden Reed agreed to a contract extension on Friday. What does the deal tell us about the Packers in the 2026 draft?
The Green Bay Packers and receiver Jayden Reed agreed to a three-year, $50. 25 million contract extension on Friday, with ESPN's Adam Schefter reporting the deal just hours before the start of Day 2 of the NFL draft. The timing is probably both coincidental and revealing for what the Packers plan to do in the 2026 draft, which restarts with the start of the second round at 6:00 p.
m. CT on Friday night. Before the Reed extension, the Packers were set to enter the draft with only two wide receivers under contract past the 2026 season: 2025 first-round pick Matthew Golden and 2025 third-round pick Savion Williams.
Now, with Reed signed for multiple seasons, and the Packers still expected to extend the contract of Christian Watson at some point this offseason, the team will have invested significantly in four wide receivers long-term. Reed's future in Green Bay was a bit of a question mark before the extension. Now, he's locked in, and the plan is becoming clear.
What does it mean for the draft? More than likely, Reed's new deal drastically reduces the chances of the Packers using a meaningful 2026 draft pick on a wide receiver -- meaning no pick is coming at the position during Day 2. At the very least, the Packers have no short-term or long-term need to reinvest at receiver, even after losing Romeo Doubs and Dontayvion Wicks this offseason.