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The Green Bay Packers head into the 2026 NFL draft with eight picks and significant roster needs. After three consecutive playoff appearances, they aim to strengthen their team, particularly at cornerback, despite lacking a first-round pick.
The Green Bay Packers are going into the 2026 NFL draft with only eight draft picks and plenty of roster needs to address after another promising season fell apart late. Despite three straight playoff appearances, the Packers haven't finished higher than the No. 7 seed in the postseason field or advanced past the divisional round during the Jordan Love era. Without a first-round pick due to the Micah Parsons trade, the Packers will need to win Day 2 and 3 to find contributors and long-term foundational pieces in this year's draft.
Can the Packers use the 2026 draft to finally get over the hump in the NFC?
Packers Wire’s position-by-position draft preview continues at cornerback:
Bo Melton is listed as a cornerback, but he didn't play a single snap there in 2025. He is a receiver moonlighting as an emergency corner until proven otherwise.
The Packers have several roster needs to address, particularly at cornerback, as they prepare for the 2026 NFL draft.
The Packers have a total of eight draft picks for the 2026 NFL draft.
The Packers lost their first-round pick due to the trade involving Micah Parsons.
During the Jordan Love era, the Packers have made three straight playoff appearances but have not advanced past the divisional round.
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Moderate to high. This all depends on your evaluation of Nixon and Valentine as starters. Nixon isn't a reliable No. 1 corner, while Valentine can't defend the run and is probably too inconsistent. Both really struggled down the stretch in 2025. St-Juste provides competition, and he appears to be a strong fit as a zone corner in Jonathan Gannon's scheme. But even one injury could create chaos because depth on the perimeter is non-existent. Javon Bullard will be the slot defender again in 2026, but the Packers don't have a great backup option there. It's hard to factor Belton into the equation because he didn't play any corner last season.
High. There's arguably no position on the roster with a bigger long-term need than cornerback. The only player signed past 2026 is St-Juste, who will need to play well this season to stick around in Green Bay in 2027. Nixon and Valentine are both entering contract years, and there is little in terms of developmental depth behind them. Bullard might be the long-term option in the slot, but there's a good chance the Packers will need two new starters on the perimeter (plus accompanying depth) as soon as the 2027 season. A draft pick is desperately needed.
Very good. There is a short-term need for competition and depth and a long-term need for starters. Given the depth chart and contract situations, the Packers are all but guaranteed to take at least one corner in the draft, and a double dip (or even triple dip) is possible if the board falls right. This position needs an upgrade for 2026 and stability past this year, and adding a couple of four-year rookie contracts from what looks like a talented pool of incoming corners is the best way to do it. The Packers not leaving the draft with at least one cornerback would be shocking.
Good. Dane Brugler of The Athletic has 34 cornerbacks in the class with a draftable grade, and many are good fits for the Packers in terms of size and athleticism benchmarks. While the consensus board doesn't align nicely for the Packers to find a corner at No. 52 overall, there appears to be a big group of possible targets in the third- to sixth-round range. Don't fret if the Packers don't start the draft with a corner because there's a good chance one will arrive later on Day 2 or at some point on Day 3.
Last cornerback drafted: Micah Robinson, seventh round, 2025
This article originally appeared on Packers Wire: Packers draft preview: Double dip possible at CB as rebuild begins