🚨 PACKERS OFFENSE HIDING A MASSIVE SECRET? MATT LAFLEUR’S 2025 GAME PLAN MAY HAVE JUST BEEN EXPOSED 🚨

While most Green Bay Packers fans are spending the offseason debating Jordan Love, wide receivers, and potential roster moves, a deep dive into Matt LaFleur’s offense may have revealed something much bigger. And honestly, if the numbers are telling the truth, the Packers are quietly becoming one of the most predictable — and dangerous — offenses in the NFL.
At first glance, Green Bay’s offensive philosophy seems simple. But when analysts started digging through the data from the 2025 season, a clear pattern emerged. The Packers overwhelmingly relied on 11 personnel, using one running back, one tight end, and three wide receivers on more than half of their offensive snaps. In fact, over 55% of Green Bay’s offense came from that formation alone.
That’s not a coincidence.
That’s an identity.
And honestly?
It tells us exactly what Matt LaFleur wants this offense to become.
For years, many fans have begged the Packers to use a traditional fullback more often. Others have called for heavier formations and old-school smashmouth football. The numbers show LaFleur has little interest in that approach. Green Bay used 21 personnel — formations featuring a fullback and running back together — on only a tiny percentage of snaps.
In other words?
The fullback isn’t coming back.

At least not anytime soon.
Instead, LaFleur continues leaning toward the modern version of the Shanahan system, a scheme heavily influenced by Sean McVay’s philosophy. The goal isn’t simply to overpower defenses. It’s to spread them out, force mismatches, create confusion, and attack weaknesses before opponents can react.
And honestly?
It makes perfect sense when you look at the roster.
Jordan Love operates best when he can quickly identify defensive looks before the snap. The Packers have invested heavily in athletic tight ends and versatile receivers. Their offensive weapons are built for space. They’re built for movement. They’re built for modern football.
That’s why the heavy reliance on three-receiver sets shouldn’t surprise anyone.
But here’s where things get interesting.
The Packers also used 12 personnel at a very high rate, featuring one running back and two tight ends on nearly a third of their offensive snaps. That’s a significant number and may reveal exactly why Green Bay remains so committed to its tight end room.
The offense isn’t choosing between speed and power.
It’s trying to create both.
One play can look like a run-heavy formation.
The next play can suddenly spread the field and attack through the air.
That’s the beauty of LaFleur’s system.

Everything is designed to look similar before the snap while creating completely different problems after it.
And honestly?
That’s what makes this offense so difficult to defend when it’s operating at its highest level.
The bigger takeaway from all of this may be what it says about the future.
The Packers aren’t building an offense around one superstar receiver.
They’re building an offense around flexibility.
They want multiple tight ends.
Multiple receivers.
Multiple rushing threats.
Multiple answers for every defensive look.
It’s a philosophy that explains many of Brian Gutekunst’s roster decisions over the last several years.
And if Jordan Love continues developing, it could make Green Bay one of the most dangerous offenses in the NFC.
Because while everyone else is focusing on individual players, Matt LaFleur appears focused on something much larger.
Creating an offense that can attack defenses from every possible angle.
The numbers don’t lie.
The Packers know exactly who they want to be.
And the rest of the NFL may soon find out just how dangerous that identity can become.