Packers trade Colby Wooden for LB Zaire Franklin

The Green Bay Packers have traded defensive tackle Colby Wooden for former Indianapolis Colts off-ball linebacker Zaire Franklin, according to NFL Network’s Ian Rapoport. The Packers started Wooden as their starting nose tackle in 2025, following the trade of Kenny Clark to the Dallas Cowboys, after Wooden previously played a three-technique earlier in his Green Bay career.
Without Wooden, Green Bay is strongly expected to be in the nose tackle market, as they’ll look for his replacement. Wooden was on the final year of his rookie contract, going into the 2026 season.
Franklin has been solid in the past, but received a 38.4 grade from Pro Football Focus in 2025, ranking him as the 87th of 88 qualifying linebackers per the scouting service. He is set to make $6.24 million in base salary with $765,000 in per-game roster bonuses this year, meaning that the Packers are back over the salary cap after their previous move of converting Xavier McKinney’s salary into a bonus got them under the cap.
It was reported this week that the Packers were talking to agents of off-ball linebackers at the NFL scouting combine, which was interesting for a couple of reasons. First of all, the team doesn’t need to be in the off-ball linebacker market, if they weren’t going to let Quay Walker, their starting Mike, walk in free agency. Take this as a sign that Walker is going to hit the open market.
Update: NFL Network’s Tom Pelissero is now reporting that the Packers wanted to re-sign Walker but couldn’t come to contract terms. Walker is “expected to have a strong market,” according to Pelissero. ESPN projects that Walker will receive in the $14 million per year range, which should net the Packers a fourth-round compensatory pick, if Green Bay doesn’t offset the loss with a free agent signing.
Secondly, Green Bay is expected to transition to a 3-4 defense under Jonathan Gannon, based on comments from general manager Brian Gutekunst and the quarters-system tree mostly living out of a 3-4 league-wide. Needing a starting linebacker means that Edgerrin Cooper will likely stay in the Will linebacker role, which he’s played throughout his career. Ty’Ron Hopper is an undersized linebacker who can really only play the Will position at the NFL level. It looks like Hopper will be Cooper’s backup moving forward.
Franklin, a 2024 All-Pro, will likely start over Isaiah McDuffie, who should serve as the backup Mike linebacker on the depth chart. Under Joe Barry, the last time the Packers played a 3-4 defense, Green Bay usually kept just four off-ball linebackers on the gameday 48-man roster, compared to the five that Jeff Hafley’s 4-3 defense typically carried.
Unless the team ships out one of their backups, this is probably going to be the four-man unit that the Packers carry in 2026.
Update: Sports Illustrated’s Bill Huber is now reporting that the Packers have re-signed Nick Niemann, a core special teamer, for the 2026 season.
- 2026
- $6.24 million salary (will guarantee on Week 1, if he makes the team as a vested veteran)
- $765,000 in per-game roster bonuses
- $7 million cap charge in 2026
- 2027
- $8.24 million salary
- $765,000 in per-game roster bonuses
- $9 million cap charge in 2027
There are no remaining guarantees on Franklin’s deal. The only money that can be guaranteed is his salary, which is true of any vested veteran who is on the 53-man roster in Week 1. Essentially, the Packers are on the hook for that $6.24 million salary if he makes the final roster, but they can release him with a $0 cap charge if things don’t work out this summer.
Zaire Franklin PFF Grades
- 2018: 53.9 (193 snaps played)
- 2019: 61.3 (2)
- 2020: 69.3 (86)
- 2021: 71.3 (201)
- 2022: 57.0 (1,136)
- 2023: 60.9 (1,090)
- 2024: 61.0 (1,157)
- 2025: 38.4 (1,112)
As you can see, there was a clear drop-off for Franklin in 2025. I’m sure the Packers are hoping that he bounces back to his previous performance.
For a point of reference, Gannon was with the Colts from 2018, when Indianapolis drafted Franklin, to 2020.
Zaire Franklin Passer Rating Allowed – NFL Pro
- 2018: 103.4 (80 coverage snaps)
- 2019: N/A
- 2020: 108.3 (28)
- 2021: 55.6 (77)
- 2022: 90.0 (565)
- 2023: 97.3 (556)
- 2024: 92.8 (565)
- 2025: 103.1 (551)
For perspective, Quay Walker allowed a 105.6 rating in 2025 and Edgerrin Cooper allowed a 95.2 rating. In 2024, those numbers were 100.9 and 57.1, respectively.
Packers Nose Tackle Snaps — 2025
- Colby Wooden: 312 snaps (now a Colt)
- Karl Brooks: 97 (mostly in pressure packages)
- Nazir Stackhouse: 88
- Devonte Wyatt: 47 (mostly in pressure packages)
- Warren Brinson: 37
- Jordon Riley: 36
- Quinton Bohanna: 34 (no longer on roster)
- Jonathan Ford: 30 (2026 free agent)
Nose tackle has now clearly moved into the Packers’ number one need going into the new league year.




