Green Bay Packers Bringing in 3 Players for Workouts

Dallas Cowboys cornerback Rashard Robinson for a loss in the third quarter of a Week 14 NFL football game, Sunday, Dec.

The Green Bay Packers’ 90-man roster is currently at full capacity, and training camp is now just days away as veterans are to report to camp on July 27th, and the first practice will take place the following day, on July 28th.

As Tom reported on Thursday afternoon, this coming Monday, the Green Bay Packers will have Tommy Stevens in for a workout as a tight end, and joining him are defensive back Rashard Robinson and nose tackle Sterling Johnson.

Tommy Stevens was a seventh-round pick by the New Orleans Saints in the 2020 NFL Draft out of Mississippi State, and he actually played quarterback in college.

Over his college career, Stevens would complete 60 percent of his 202 passes for 1,459 yards at 7.2 yards per catch with 15 touchdowns to six interceptions.

Stevens was unable to stick with New Orleans and wound up in Carolina, where he saw minimal action in Week 17, rushing the ball four times for 24 yards.

Rashard Robinson was a fourth-round pick by the San Francisco 49ers in the 2016 NFL Draft.

Over his career, he has taken 1,312 regular-season snaps and has allowed a completion rate of 56.5 percent on 108 targets, coming away with two interceptions and 11 pass breakups.

During this past season with Dallas, he would appear in only four games and gave up 10 completions on 13 targets at 9.1 yards per catch with no pass breakups, but Robinson did record both of his career interceptions.

I recently wrote that the Green Bay Packers should look to add to their interior defensive line room; not that I had Sterling Johnson in mind, but he would add some depth this summer.

During his collegiate career, which spanned five seasons and a bulk of his playing time came over those final two years with the Chanticleers, Johnson saw nearly 1,100 snaps and recorded 75 tackles, 17 of which were for a loss, along with 49 pressures, eight sacks, and 45 stops–or plays that result in a loss for the offense.

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