The National Football League, especially at this time of year, is like one of the storybook compendiums you probably read as a kid. Lurking behind that iconic shield are all kind of bedtime tales and they run the full gamut. Draft weekend brought us heartwarming stories galore and every now and then the league throws up quirky nuggets, like players getting paid in Bitcoin or trying bizarre diets or flossing their teeth during games (hereâs to you, Cam Newton). Then there are the blockbusters, the mega moves, when big names grab the leverage conferred by their stardom and take it for a spin, up against the monumental might of multi-billion dollar franchises that theyâve previously tried to win for. Right now, there is a unicorn in the room and it all orbits around Aaron Rodgers. It is, simply put, every type of story you could ever wish for.  Rodgersâ rumblings with the Green Bay Packers have all the clickbait quirk and fascinating weirdness imaginable. Howâs âNFL star uses TV game show to strengthen his negotiating forceâ for an eye-popping headline? And yeah, it is also a heavyweight monster, featuring an all-time great bristling with indignant fury. I canât tell you how it ends. Iâd love to, believe me, because selfishly Iâm desperate to know myself. But I do know that this is a drama of epic proportions and I can offer only one piece of advice: believe that itâs real, this strange old saga, every bit of it. Rodgers is mad. He wants everyone to know heâs mad. Heâs mad at the Packers and, as the leagueâs reigning MVP, heâs poised to become one of the most sought-after players in the sport. Thatâs if you, and a couple of enterprising GMs, can get your heads around the thought that he might have played his final game for Green Bay and, indeed, it is time to begin making that mental connection. For Rodgers, who previously wanted a contract extension but now seems most intent on a move, has leverage. And, believe it or not, much of it comes from the potential he could give up his football career to stand before the Jeopardy! cameras as host, his head topped by some expensively slick hair product instead of a cheese-colored helmet.  Last weekâs flurry of news and speculation hit during the early part of the draft and the discussion surrounding it wonât end any time soon. Rodgers, it seems, is so frustrated with how things are in Green Bay that he no longer wants to be a part of the franchise he joined in 2005. âAaron told the Packers he doesnât want to return,â according to FOX Sportsâ Jay Glazer. âItâs more than a contract deal, I think heâs pretty strongly convicted that he doesnât want to go back to the Packers.â Per Trey Wingo, host of FOX Sportsâ Draft Watch Party, Packers officials told Rodgers they would trade him in the offseason but then reversed on that line of thinking. âItâs been a bleep show between them ever since,â Wingo tweeted. Speaking of shows, there is the remarkable oddity of how the Jeopardy! piece has become part of this plot. Honestly, it feels strange to even write about how it is connected, but it is. With two years remaining on his deal, Rodgersâ only real shot at getting the Packers to move him to one of his preferred destinations (all West Coast-based according to multiple reports) would be if he could convince them he would otherwise retire and leave them with no return on their prime asset.  If he does step away from the gridiron, he would have to hand back $11.5 million to the team and another $11.5 million if he was still retired a year later. Never going to happen, right? Unless ⊠retirement came with the Jeopardy! gig and the option to still make a ton of money while doing something he clearly loves. Alex Trebek made $10 million per year and asked the questions (actually the answers) for nearly four decades. While Rodgers previously desired an extension that would keep him playing in Green Bay well into his 40s, now he has options and, if he wanted to borrow from Tom Brady and seek success elsewhere, the potential for opportunity. There is still a lot to unpack, despite that the Rodgers-Packers affair has been a bona fide talking point for a long time now. You have to feel for Jordan Love, whose 2020 drafting gets mentioned as the widening of the rift every time, through no fault of his own. You have to wonder about the Packersâ decision-making, all the way from their decade-long refusal to draft first round offensive help, to the Love pick, to Brian Gutekunstâs GM strategizing, to head coach Matt LaFleur not going for it on fourth down in the NFC Championship and never seeing the ball again. âThis is the Packers in a nutshell: Their complete and utter lack of urgency on that fourth down mirrors their complete and utter lack of urgency in roster construction,â wrote The Ringerâs Danny Heifetz. âAnd their complete and utter lack of communication with Rodgers in that moment mirrors their complete and utter lack of communication with him about plans for the future.â  Now, we must consider, comes the chance for a different kind of future. Would it be beyond the realms of possibility that Rodgers works things out with the Packers and sticks around there, and that the organization comes to its senses? Of course not. But a lot of other things are in play too, including the wildest one of all. âItâs an eccentric twist:,â wrote the Wall Street Journalâs Jason Gay. âAn NFL player possibly walking away at the height of his powers to tell a panel of borderline geniuses they have their Roman history and Nordic geography tangled. It would make Aaron Rodgers unlike any other quarterback to ever play the game. Of course, heâs pretty much that already, which is why this is such a thing.â Rodgersâ ongoing biopic is a different kind of story, laced with drama and truly unique. Until it all plays out and probably even afterwards, it is one heck of a game, and, in its own right, one heck of a show.  Hereâs what others have said … Greg Jennings, FOX Sports: âThe Packers didn’t get what Aaron wants. They’re just throwing salt on the wound… This is how they operate.â Nick Wright, First Things First: âThis is very simple for the Green Bay Packers â on one hand you have someone who is irreplaceable and the second best QB in the world, and on the other hand you have just a guy. … You choose option A over option B 100 times out of 100.â Shannon Sharpe, Undisputed: âIt’s going to get messy. I knew this when the Packers told him ‘Don’t be the problem’ and selected a QB. I don’t see how they can make this thing work. Once you ruffle his feathers, Rodgers won’t forget.â |