Jason Wilde

Jason Wilde, host of ESPN Wisconsin's Wilde & Tausch, is in his 25th season covering the Green Bay Packers, having written for ESPN.com, ESPN Wisconsin, the Wisconsin State Journal, and now The Athletic. Any time Jason joins any ESPN Wisconsin program, yo

  1. Jason Wilde: 155 Wins, No Super Bowl — Why the Packers Still Haven’t Broken Through

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    Jason Wilde: 155 Wins, No Super Bowl — Why the Packers Still Haven’t Broken Through

    The Packers’ 155 wins since 2011 Zero Super Bowl appearances NFC Championship failures Brian Gutekunst’s offseason uncertainty The salary cap “credit card” flexibility Whether Green Bay is truly close 📌 Based strictly on the Jason Wilde segment from 021326 JGC Hour 1 021326 JGC Hour 1 🎧 Jen, Gabe & Chewy — Jason Wilde Segment (021326) 🎙️ Podcast Title Options (SEO Optimized for Packers Growth) 🏆 BEST OVERALL (RECOMMENDED) “Jason Wilde: 155 Wins, No Super Bowl — Why the Packers Still Haven’t Broken Through” 🔥 Strong Alternates “Jason Wilde on the Packers’ Super Bowl Drought Since 2011” “Four NFC Title Games, Zero Rings — Jason Wilde Explains the Gap” “Jason Wilde: What’s Actually Holding the Packers Back?” “Winning Isn’t Enough — Jason Wilde on the Packers’ Ceiling” “Jason Wilde Breaks Down the Packers’ 14-Year Super Bowl Frustration” 📱 Short / Apple-Friendly Option “Jason Wilde on Why the Packers Haven’t Returned to the Super Bowl” 📝 Full Podcast Description (Jason Wilde Only) The Green Bay Packers have won 155 regular-season games since 2011 — fourth most in the NFL. They have also made zero Super Bowl appearances during that span. In this candid conversation on Jen, Gabe & Chewy, ESPN Wisconsin reporter Jason Wilde breaks down why that gap exists — and why it’s more complicated than blaming one coach, one quarterback, or one roster flaw. 021326 JGC Hour 1 🏈 It’s Not a Failure — It’s a Pattern Wilde revisits the Packers’ NFC Championship losses in 2014, 2016, 2019, and 2020, explaining that each collapse had a different cause: Defensive breakdowns Special teams disasters Offensive stagnation Roster imbalance Green Bay hasn’t lacked talent. They’ve lacked alignment. As Wilde puts it, the Packers have been good — just not complete at the right moments. 🧠 The Sam Darnold Contrast Wilde uses Seattle’s recent Super Bowl win as an example of how balance wins championships. Sam Darnold didn’t carry Seattle. He avoided mistakes while the roster around him executed. The Packers, by contrast, have rarely had: Elite offense Top-tier defense Functional special teams All peaking simultaneously. 💰 The Cap “Credit Card” Question The discussion then turns to the offseason. While Brian Gutekunst insists the Packers have the flexibility to “do what they want,” Wilde admits something unusual: He doesn’t have a clear read on what the plan actually is. Questions remain: What happens with Rashan Gary? Is Elgton Jenkins truly gone? How many 2022 draft picks walk? Are they really committed to keeping Romeo Doubs? The “credit card” flexibility exists — but using it requires conviction. ⚖️ The Bottom Line The Packers aren’t dysfunctional. They aren’t rebuilding. They aren’t far away. But they also haven’t been complete enough to finish. Winning 10–13 games a year is impressive. Winning in January is different. And until Green Bay solves that balance problem — roster construction, late-game execution, and offseason decisiveness — 2011 will continue to loom large. 🎧 A clear-eyed, thoughtful breakdown of the Packers’ Super Bowl drought and what still separates them from finishing the job — with Jason Wilde on Jen, Gabe & Chewy.

    14 min
  2. Jason Wilde: Packers Draft Disaster, Offensive Line Holes & Why 2025 Is a Real Concern

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    Jason Wilde: Packers Draft Disaster, Offensive Line Holes & Why 2025 Is a Real Concern

    ESPN Wisconsin reporter Jason Wilde joins Jen, Gabe & Chewy with a sobering breakdown of where the Green Bay Packers actually stand — and it starts with a draft class that ranked dead last in the NFL according to NFL.com. Wilde doesn’t sugarcoat it. When you grade the 2025 draft class strictly on rookie-year contributions, a D+ and 32nd overall ranking is hard to argue against. 📉 The Draft Reality The class included: Matthew Golden Anthony Belton Savion Williams Barron Sorrell Warren Brinson Micah Robinson John Williams And while there’s still long-term upside, Wilde admits that based on impact alone, the criticism is fair. He goes further — suggesting that when you zoom out and evaluate multiple Brian Gutekunst draft classes, the narrative that he’s one of the NFL’s elite drafters becomes harder to defend. 🧱 The Offensive Line Problem (Again) The bigger concern for Wilde isn’t just the draft — it’s the offensive line depth crisis brewing in Green Bay. With: Elgton Jenkins likely gone Josh Myers gone Rasheed Walker likely leaving Limited veteran replacements Wilde walks through a hypothetical Week 1 depth chart and admits it doesn’t inspire confidence. He draws a sharp comparison to earlier seasons when the Packers neglected O-line replenishment and paid for it later. The pattern feels familiar — and dangerous. 🧠 “You Can’t Have It Both Ways” Wilde pushes back on the front office messaging that everything is fine while simultaneously acknowledging the team needs to improve. If the Packers truly believe: They’re close They drafted well They developed talent properly Then why are so many foundational pieces walking out the door? As Wilde puts it bluntly: Both things can’t be true. 🏁 The Bottom Line Jason Wilde’s takeaway is measured but clear: The draft hasn’t produced immediate impact. The offensive line depth is thin. Letting developed players walk contradicts the “draft and develop” philosophy. The Packers aren’t doomed — but they are far less stable than optimistic messaging suggests. And if the offensive line collapses, none of the other improvements will matter. 🎧 A candid, grounded look at Packers roster construction, draft evaluation, and why the trenches may define 2026 — with Jason Wilde on Jen, Gabe & Chewy.

    19 min
  3. Jason Wilde: The Packers’ Offensive Line Is the Biggest Threat to a Super Bowl Run

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    Jason Wilde: The Packers’ Offensive Line Is the Biggest Threat to a Super Bowl Run

    ESPN Wisconsin reporter Jason Wilde joins Jen, Gabe & Chewy for a blunt, detailed breakdown of what he believes is the Green Bay Packers’ most urgent and self-inflicted problem: the offensive line. 021026 Jason on JGC Wilde explains why, despite optimism from the front office, the Packers enter the offseason with more questions than answers up front — and why those questions directly threaten Jordan Love’s development and the team’s Super Bowl aspirations. 🏈 “They blew up a top-10 offensive line” Wilde lays out the core issue clearly: The Packers entered last season with a top-10 offensive line, then chose to dismantle it. In his view, that decision: Was unnecessary Was avoidable And has now created multiple holes instead of one Letting Josh Myers walk for a modest contract, overspending for Aaron Banks, and moving Elgton Jenkins out of position all compounded the problem — and now Green Bay is staring at an offseason with no clear center, shaky guard play, and depth concerns everywhere. 🧠 Youth obsession vs reality Wilde takes direct issue with Brian Gutekunst’s dismissal of age concerns, especially the idea that turning 30 is some sort of hard cutoff. He points out: Offensive linemen age better than almost any position Productive veterans are still valuable Development only matters if you actually retain the players you develop To Wilde, the contradiction is glaring: If your philosophy is development, why are you letting developed players walk? 🔄 Trust erosion and ripple effects Wilde explains why offensive line instability affects everything: Play-calling becomes conservative Quarterbacks rush decisions Game plans shrink under pressure He references the playoff loss to the Bears, where Jordan Love went from protected to overwhelmed — a swing Wilde believes directly contributed to the collapse. 🧱 No plan, no margin for error As Wilde walks through a hypothetical starting lineup, the concern only grows: Jordan Morgan at left tackle Aaron Banks at guard Jacob Monk at center Anthony Belton at guard Zach Tom returning from patellar tendon surgery In Wilde’s words, that’s not a championship offensive line — it’s a hope-and-pray lineup with no margin for injuries or regression. ⚖️ The bottom line Jason Wilde’s conclusion is blunt: The Packers created this problem themselves They dismissed affordable veteran solutions And now must solve multiple issues with limited resources Unless Green Bay adjusts its philosophy and re-embraces experience, Wilde believes the same offensive failures will repeat — regardless of how talented Jordan Love becomes. 🎧 A candid, critical, and deeply informed breakdown of the Packers’ offensive line philosophy — and why it may be the single biggest obstacle between Green Bay and another Super Bowl — with Jason Wilde on Jen, Gabe & Chewy. Green Bay Packers, Jason Wilde, Packers offensive line, Jordan Love protection, Brian Gutekunst, Packers roster philosophy, Packers youth movement, Elgton Jenkins, Josh Myers, Packers offseason needs, Packers Super Bowl window, ESPN Milwaukee, Jen Gabe and Chewy

    19 min

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Jason Wilde, host of ESPN Wisconsin's Wilde & Tausch, is in his 25th season covering the Green Bay Packers, having written for ESPN.com, ESPN Wisconsin, the Wisconsin State Journal, and now The Athletic. Any time Jason joins any ESPN Wisconsin program, yo

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