The Green Bay Packers were riding high and looked like the best team in the NFL after two weeks, so much so that players started voicing ambitions of going undefeated.
After falling to 2-1-1 following a 40-40 tie on “Sunday Night Football” against the Dallas Cowboys, the vibes aren’t quite as high, and one assistant coach recently got called out for the performance of his underperforming group.
“The Packers special teams unit currently ranks 30th in the entire league. … Rich Bisaccia is the highest paid special teams coach … it’s time to move on,” TitletownTalks wrote on X.
The Packers special teams unit currently ranks 30th in the entire league.
Being “a great locker room guy” doesn’t cut it anymore. We’re losing games because of how bad the special teams unit is.
Rich Bisaccia is the HIGHEST PAID special teams coach… it’s time to move on. pic.twitter.com/d4Kc5BWOhk
— TitletownTalks (@TitleTownTalks) September 29, 2025
Against Dallas, Green Bay had a blocked extra point run back for a two-point conversion by the Cowboys, and the Packers allowed KaVontae Turpin to gain 175 yards on six kickoff returns.
In a Week 3 loss to the Cleveland Browns, the Packers had a potential game-winning field goal blocked.
Head coach Matt LaFleur’s decision to extend Bisaccia’s contract this offseason has not paid off, as his unit has contributed to a loss and a tie over the past two weeks and is proving to be a liability.
These are the kinds of mistakes that don’t ruffle feathers when a team is blowing out its opponents, but in close games like these, special teams miscues leave the door open for devastating results.
The Packers are giving away points, and that needs to be cleaned up immediately.