100 Days of Mocks: Packers Trade Rodgers, Get Extra Pick in 33rd Team Mock

In The 33rd Team’s latest mock draft, the Green Bay Packers traded Aaron Rodgers to the New York Jets and received the 13th overall pick.
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GREEN BAY, Wis. – In a new mock draft by The 33rd Team, the football site that lists several former NFL executives and players among its ranks, the Green Bay Packers traded quarterback Aaron Rodgers to the New York Jets for a first-round pick.

The Packers used that pick, the 13th overall, on Ohio State offensive tackle Dawand Jones, a two-year starting right tackle who earned some All-American accolades in 2022, when he allowed zero sacks and only five pressures in 419 pass-protecting snaps, according to Pro Football Focus.

“The Jets and Packers will have to work out some contract details, but the Jets give up at least this year’s first-round NFL Draft pick for Aaron Rodgers,” the authors wrote. “This gives the Jets a chance to make a run at a Super Bowl with their talented roster. Green Bay uses the pick to inject more youth into the offensive line and protect Jordan Love’s blind side.”

Jones wouldn’t protect Love’s blind side as the right tackle but he’d move mountains in the run game. He measured 6-foot-8 and a hulking 375 pounds at the Senior Bowl.

Jones, as noted by SI.com’s NFL Draft Bible, “has a ridiculous frame, measuring in at 6-foot-8 with 11 3/8-inch hands, 36 5/8-inch arms, and an 89 1/2-inch wingspan, which is the longest wingspan in Senior Bowl history. Those measurements alone will put him in the conversation to be a first-round pick in the 2023 NFL Draft.”

Jones’ wingspan would be normal for a person who stands 7-foot-5.

“When I saw him with his shirt up at practice, he looked like he had some abs, incredible for an offensive tackle his size,” The 33rd Team’s Rick Spielman, the former Minnesota Vikings general manager, said in a Senior Bowl winners-and-losers story. “And he moved well, too. In the one-on-ones, he really stood out to me. He was so big, the pass rushers had a difficult time getting around him. He proved he’s not just a pass-pro guy, too; I thought he showed well in the run game.”

He’s got nimble feet, the byproduct of his basketball background. He was good enough in that sport to be first-team all-Indiana and earn some offers from Mid-American Conference schools. He even considered dabbling in that sport at Ohio State.

“I just had to take my business from basketball and push it to football and make that dream the same dream,” said Jones, who was merely 21 inches at birth but was wearing size-10 shoes at age 10. “I used to say I wanted the NBA. So I just switched that to the NFL. All that’s changed. I just let it go out the window.”

With Green Bay’s own pick at No. 15, Love got a sure-handed target in the passing game.

Click here for the full mock.

100 Days of Mocks

Starting Jan. 17, when there were 100 days until the start of the NFL Draft, we started our mock-worthy goal of 100 mock drafts in 100 days. Here’s the 100-day-countdown series.

100 days: First-round quarterback?

99 days: Trading for outside linebacker

98 days: Stud tight end

97 days: This pick would break a long drought

96 days: NFL.com’s Daniel Jeremiah goes back to Georgia

95 days: Two firsts if Rodgers is traded

94 days: College Football News mocks Mayer

93 days: Safety first for Bucky Brooks in NFL.com mock

92 days: Kiper takes a tight end

91 days: Three defensive backs in seven-round mock

90 days: Playmaking cornerback at PFF

89 days: A “Eureka!” moment in two-round mock

88 days: Sorry, vacation day.

87 days: Packers trade back, get extra second-rounder

86 days: Tight end in NFL Draft Bible Mock

85 days: PFF picks a pass rusher

More Packers Offseason News

Latest odds for Aaron Rodgers and Jets, Raiders, 49ers

Packers must consider Aaron Rodgers’ big-game failures

What does Tom Brady’s retirement mean for Aaron Rodgers’ future?

Aaron Rodgers on timeline, trade rumors

Fresh odds for Aaron Rodgers’ 2023 team revealed

How does official salary cap number impact Packers?

Rookie class builds solid foundation

If Packers need tight end, strong draft class awaits

Ghosts of contracts past continue to haunt Packers

Malice, gratitude and a potential trade of Aaron Rodgers

Ranking potential Aaron Rodgers trade destinations

Packer Central’s 2022 season awards


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Bill Huber
BILL HUBER

Bill Huber, who has covered the Green Bay Packers since 2008, is the publisher of Packers On SI, a Sports Illustrated channel. E-mail: packwriter2002@yahoo.com History: Huber took over Packer Central in August 2019. Twitter: https://twitter.com/BillHuberNFL Background: Huber graduated from the University of Wisconsin-Whitewater, where he played on the football team, in 1995. He worked in newspapers in Reedsburg, Wisconsin Dells and Shawano before working at The Green Bay News-Chronicle and Green Bay Press-Gazette from 1998 through 2008. With The News-Chronicle, he won several awards for his commentaries and page design. In 2008, he took over as editor of Packer Report Magazine, which was founded by Hall of Fame linebacker Ray Nitschke, and PackerReport.com. In 2019, he took over the new Sports Illustrated site Packer Central, which he has grown into one of the largest sites in the Sports Illustrated Media Group.