Tom Clements is stepping down as the Green Bay Packers quarterbacks’ coach after a 25-year NFL career in which he worked with Hall of Famer Brett Favre and four-time MVP Aaron Rodgers.
Green Bay Packers coach Matt LaFleur revealed on Tuesday that long-time quarterback coach Tom Clements — who coached three generations of Packers quarterbacks — is retiring from professional football.
Only one coach has been a constant for the Green Bay Packers across Brett Favre's, Aaron Rodgers' and Jordan Love's respective tenures as the franchise's starting quarterback: quarterbacks coach Tom Clements.
Former Green Bay Packers quarterbacks coach Luke Getsy is on track to rejoin the Packers' coaching staff, according to ESPN's Rob Demovsky. The post Green Bay Packers Expected to Make Major Coaching Hire appeared first on Heavy Sports.
The Green Bay Packers are in the process of adjusting and finalizing the coaching staff for the 2025 season. On offense, the biggest change will be with the quarterbacks coach, since Tom Clements retired.
Longtime Packers offensive assistant Tom Clements is retiring, Matt LaFleur revealed to the media on Tuesday morning. “Man, it’s been such a cool ride with him the past few years,” LaFleur said regarding Clements,
Tom Clements is a legend in Green Bay, and that's for good reasons. Clements has been a long-time NFL quarterbacks coach and assistant who has played a role in developing some of the greatest quarterbacks the NFL has ever seen.
Packers quarterbacks coach Tom Clements, who served under two head coaches and tutored Brett Favre, Aaron Rodgers and Jordan Love, has retired.
GREEN BAY, Wis. — Tom Clements is stepping down as the Green Bay Packers quarterbacks’ coach after a 25-year NFL career in which he worked with Hall of Famer Brett Favre and four-time MVP ...
The NFL hiring cycle is in full swing, and it looks like the Packers are going to keep their coaching staff intact.
General manager Brian Gutekunst said he thinks it's time for the Packers to start competing for championships in 2025.
Green Bay Packers coach Matt LaFleur used the second of Jordan Love 's three interceptions in their NFC wild-card playoff loss to the Philadelphia Eagles to illustrate why the offensive issues they experienced at times in Year 2 of Love's tenure weren't all on the quarterback. On the play, Love threw the ball right to Eagles linebacker Zack Baun.