Packers land talented but unproven offensive weapon in wild trade proposal that would turn heads around the NFL
Fox Sports suggests a Packers’ trade that would unite wide receiver Marvin Harrison Jr. with Jordan Love, trying to extract more than what the Cardinals have gotten from the former first-rounder so far.
The Green Bay Packers have a big question at wide receiver. While the roster has six players at the position who are essentially roster locks, four of them (Christian Watson, Jayden Reed, Dontayvion Wicks, and Skyy Moore) are in contract year. So, what about making a trade for Marvin Harrison Jr.?
That’s what Fox Sports NFL reporter Ralph Vacchiano proposes. In an article with trade proposals for every NFC team, he suggests the Packers could land the former Arizona Cardinals’ first-round receiver for a 2026 second and a 2027 third-rounder. There are several questions around the topic, though, and it’s clearly a difficult deal to pull off.
“They have the same situation at WR as usual — good depth, decent players, but no apparent No. 1. And they let their best receiver (Romeo Doubs) go while only bringing in Skyy Moore. Harrison has been a disappointment with the Cardinals, but that could be all about their miserable quarterback situation. Pair him with Jordan Love, and his numbers should soar. It would be a big deal, and complicated by the fact that the Packers don’t have a first-rounder again until 2028. But Matt LaFleur could ask his old boss, Sean McVay, about why players are more important than those pesky high picks. Then he could call his brother Mike, the new coach in Arizona, and get this deal done.” — Ralph Vacchiano
Talent and productivity
Marvin Harrison Jr. was the fourth overall pick and the first receiver in a class that also had Malik Nabers, Rome Odunze, Brian Thomas Jr., Xavier Worthy, Ricky Pearsall, and Xavier Legette all in the first round, and, for instance, Ladd McConkey in the second. In the pre-draft process, scouts and draft media were basically unanimous to declare him an elite prospect.
So far, though, Harrison hasn’t been able to translate that into actual production. Whether it’s for the lack of connection with former Cardinals quarterback Kyler Murray, how he’s deployed in Arizona, or any individual issue, he’s had 103 catches for 1,493 yards, and 12 touchdowns in his two seasons combined in the NFL — that’s not necessarily bad, but certainly underwhelming based on his pre-draft expectations.
The most concerning factor is the lack of development from one year to another. It’s not just volume numbers, because he missed five games last season. The efficiency was also worse — going from 1.63 to 1.58 in yards per route run, in addition to five drops.
LaFleur vs. LaFleur
The second point is scheme fit, and it goes both ways. The new Arizona Cardinals head coach is Mike LaFleur, Matt’s brother, and they run a similar offensive philosophy. So if the Cardinals don’t perceive Harrison as a good schematic fit, why would the Packers?
The only potential scenario where a trade actually makes sense here is if the Cardinals are willing to commit to a real rebuilding process, making them willing to move on from Harrison for extra draft capital in a move that would go beyond Xs and Os.
Contract and draft compensation
The final aspect is the trade package, plus Harrison’s deal. The Packers are already without first-round picks in each of the next two drafts after trading for Micah Parsons. In this scenario, they would part ways with two Day 2 draft picks, putting a lot of stress on a top-heavy roster and on how Brian Gutekunst would operate with lower picks.
Green Bay was willing to acquire Parsons because he’s a generational talent with a proven track record. Harrison is not that, and even though his talent is real and the compensation is lower, it’s hard to make everything work at the same time.
The good part is, although Harrison is a high draft pick, his contract is still palatable — especially because the Cardinals would keep the cap hit from the $22.5 million signing bonus. Green Bay would absorb $4.01 million in 2026 and $5.618 million in 2027, plus would have the right to exercise or not his fifth-year option for 2028.
It’s an interesting scenario, and the thought of putting together players like Christian Watson, Matthew Golden, Jayden Reed, and Marvin Harrison on the same roster is enticing. But the entire package is hard to process, and the chances of something like that actually happening are insanely small.
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