The Packers have competed in the National Football League (NFL) since 1921, two years after their original founding by Curly Lambeau and George Whitney Calhoun.
[1] They are members of the North Division of the National Football Conference (NFC) and play their home games at Lambeau Field in central Wisconsin.
[5] Individually, Packers passing statistical leaders are dominated by two quarterbacks: Brett Favre and Aaron Rodgers.
[6] Under Favre and Rodgers from 1992 to 2022, Sterling Sharpe, Donald Driver and Davante Adams set almost every Packers receiving record.
They also own the second highest winning percentage (behind the Dallas Cowboys) and have won the second most playoff games (behind the San Francisco 49ers and tied with New England Patriots).
At 18 seasons on the active roster,
Aaron Rodgers
is the most tenured player in Packers' history.
Brett Favre
holds almost every career passing record for the Packers.
Donald Driver
holds the Packers record for most career receptions and receiving yards.
Bobby Dillon
has held the Packers' record for most interceptions in a career since 1959.
Mason Crosby
(uniform #2) scored the most points of any Packers' player, while also holding most career kicking records.
Aaron Rodgers
holds a number of single-season passing records for the Packers, including completions, yards and touchdowns.
Davante Adams
set the Packers' single-season receiving records for completions, yards and touchdowns over a two-season period.
Blake Martinez
set the Packers' single-season record for most tackles in 2019 with 203.
Randall Cobb
set the record for the longest kick return at 108 yards in the first game of his NFL career.
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Paul Hornung
scored 33 points in one game in 1965, a Packers' record.
Matt Flynn
tied the Packers' record for most single-game passing yards (480) and touchdowns (6) in the same game in 2012.
Billy Howton
had 257 receiving yards in a 1956 game, the Packers' record for a single-game.
Don Hutson
set numerous NFL records in the 1940s that still stand today.