GREEN BAY, WI — In the tunnel leading to the field—footsteps echoing, kickoff minutes away—Micah Parsons and Aaron Rodgers crossed paths. It was brief, but “very meaningful,” Parsons said afterward. “
I was surprised by how much he still loves Green Bay,” he admitted. “He didn’t come to rehash the past; he came to pass something forward.”
Rodgers stood in black and gold, helmet in hand; Parsons wore Packers green and gold, tape wrapped tight around his forearms. Amid the flow of players, they stopped for a few quiet minutes.
Rodgers (softly): “This place raised me. Mr. Rodgers’ neighborhood was never just mine—it belongs to Green Bay. Take care of it in your way.”
Parsons: “I’ll do everything I can, sir. Honestly, I didn’t realize you still… loved this place that much.”
Rodgers (smiling): “That feeling never leaves. This is your team now. Bring the highest standard to the field—every week, every snap.”
Parsons said Rodgers didn’t talk about trophies or records; he talked about
standard—how to practice, how to keep a locker room together, how to bounce back from a third-quarter mistake and decide the game in the fourth.
Rodgers: “You and
Jordan Love have a real window. The noise will always be there—just keep tempo, keep the standard, and don’t let the big moments slip.”
Parsons: “He told me, ‘Don’t chase the lights; chase the work.’ I think that was his way of handing me a piece of Green Bay.”
Parsons admitted he expected Rodgers to keep his distance. “He’s on a different journey now,” Parsons said. “But when he told me, ‘Tell the fans I never really left in my heart,
’ I understood how deep that love runs.”
As they parted, Rodgers rested a hand on Parsons’ shoulder: “When they look at No. 11 (hypothetical), they should see Green Bay’s spirit.
Not just sacks or pressures—the standard. Be its keeper.”
Parsons jogged back toward the tunnel, nodding to teammates. He didn’t bring up stats—though his first six games in Green Bay already speak loudly. “He reminded me of something simple,” Parsons said. “
The standard is what we choose every day. If possible, I want fans to feel that from Mr. Rodgers’ neighborhood to Mr. Parsons’ block party isn’t a replacement—it’s a handoff.”
Parsons (closing): “I’ll protect what he called ‘the neighborhood’—with discipline, relentless pressure on the quarterback, and respect for this jersey. Green Bay is home.”

