Mark Murphy shares important details about the Packers' training camp schedule
The offseason is finally coming to an end. The Green Bay Packers still have one week of OTAs and the mandatory minicamp between June 11 and 13, but president Mark Murphy released the training camp reporting dates in his monthly column on Packers.com. Rookies and selected players will report for training camp on July 17. Veterans […]
The offseason is finally coming to an end. The Green Bay Packers still have one week of OTAs and the mandatory minicamp between June 11 and 13, but president Mark Murphy released the training camp reporting dates in his monthly column on Packers.com.
Rookies and selected players will report for training camp on July 17. Veterans will report on July 21. Murphy also shared some details about practice time and the shareholders meeting — something that is unique to the Packers at this degree.
"Breaking news, our annual meeting of shareholders will be held on Monday, July 22, at 3 p.m.," Murphy wrote. "Our first training camp practice will be that morning at 10:30 a.m., and we are hoping that many shareholders will come into town for the weekend and stay to watch practice and attend the meeting."
The full details of the Packers' training camp schedule have not been released yet — the NFL will do that soon for all 32 teams.
However, the league has already announced the preseason dates. The Packers will have joint practices leading up to the preseason games against the Denver Broncos and Baltimore Ravens — but only one practice with each team to avoid the usual day 2 fights.
Packers preseason schedule (CT)
- August 10, 3:25pm Green Bay Packers at Cleveland Browns
- August 18, 7pm Green Bay Packers at Denver Broncos
- August 24, 12pm Green Bay Packers vs Baltimore Ravens
The Packers open the regular season in Brazil, facing the Philadelphia Eagles on September 6 in São Paulo.
Special season for Murphy
Back in February, the Packers announced it had opened the process to select their next CEO. Mark Murphy, who has been the Packers president and CEO since 2007, will formally retire in July 2025, when he turns 70 — a mandatory retirement age for the position, as required by organizational by-laws.
The hiring process is expected to take between six and nine months, in time for the next CEO to work alongside Mark Muphy during a transitional period.
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Green Bay opens the season in Brazil