The Green Bay Packers have bet big on Christian Watson’s ceiling, as the former second-round pick agreed to a four-year, $110.5 million contract extension. The deal averages $27.625 million annually and keeps Watson in Green Bay through 2030.
Given Watson’s talent, the commitment makes sense. However, due to his injury history, the reaction from around the league was predictably divided.
Christian Watson’s Injury History Fuels Debate About His Value
Watson has been Green Bay’s most dynamic downfield weapon since the Packers selected him 34th overall out of North Dakota State in 2022. When healthy, he has arguably been one of the most explosive receivers in football. He led the team with seven touchdown catches as a rookie, and his 17.5 yards per reception in 2025 ranked third in the NFL.
The problem has always been his availability. Watson played just nine games in 2023 due to recurring hamstring issues. He appeared in 15 games in 2024 and posted 29 catches for 620 yards, ranking second in the league with 21.4 yards per catch, but tore his ACL in Week 18 against the Chicago Bears. That injury cost him the first seven games of the 2025 season, and he still hasn’t played a full 17-game slate in his four-year career.
Watson’s return was impressive when it came. In 10 games last season, he recorded 35 catches for 611 yards and six touchdowns, earning a career-high 61.1 receiving yards per game and generating 80-plus yards four times. According to PFSN’s WR Impact Metric, he posted an impact score of 86.2 last season, ranking sixth in the league.
The talent and production per game have never been the concern. Durability has, and at $27.5 million per year, that concern carries real financial weight.
“Oh wow. I’m shocked he got this much money,” Kaleb Blanton wrote on X.
“Holy overpay,” Barstool’s Steven Cheah said about Watson’s new contract. “His best season was his rookie year in 2022. He has missed 20 games in 4 years and has never had more than 620 yards in a season.”
Overpay isn’t even the word https://t.co/uijuYINgMV
— BearsShowYo (@BearsShowYo) June 4, 2026
“Zay Flowers is LOVING this news,” Josh Berman wrote on X, as he believes the Ravens wideout will now get an even bigger extension.
“That’s serious money,” former NFL QB Chase Daniel said. “Talent isn’t the issue….staying healthy has been. He’s already missed 20+ games in the NFL. Best ability is availability.”
Jordan Addison is going to get a BAG. https://t.co/thhCIKKprG
— Jason Harmon (@JasonHarmonNFL) June 4, 2026
“I think this is a great deal for Watson,” Marcus Mosher said. “If George Pickens wanted a deal like this, Dallas would do it in a heart beat. Very reasonable.”
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However, not everyone criticized the Packers’ decision to pay Watson. “When he is healthy, he’s outstanding,” Dan Orlovsky said on X.
Interesting decision for the Packers with Watson. I doubt he would get remotely close to that number in free agency, but when he is healthy he is super effective within the Packers system. Given Packers dont really do guarantees past the signing bonus and my expectation would be…
— Jason_OTC (@Jason_OTC) June 4, 2026
Watson’s extension caps an offseason that reshaped the Packers’ receiving room. Romeo Doubs, who led the team with 85 targets in 2025, signed a four-year, $68 million deal with the New England Patriots in free agency. Dontayvion Wicks, who was third on the team with 46 targets, was traded to the Philadelphia Eagles for a pair of Day 3 draft picks.
Green Bay replaced that production by doubling down on the talent already in the building, extending both Watson and Jayden Reed, who signed a three-year, $50.25 million deal in April.
The receiving trio of Watson, Reed, and 2025 first-round pick Matthew Golden now forms the core of the passing attack heading into 2026. And with Josh Jacobs’ availability in serious question following his recent arrest on multiple charges, the Packers may need Jordan Love to carry even more of the offensive burden.
That could be a good thing because Love is paid like a franchise cornerstone and has proven multiple times that the investment was justified. If the Packers are going to reach a Super Bowl, it will be because of Love, and rather than forcibly running the ball every time, head coach Matt LaFleur needs to rely on his superstar quarterback and let him run the show.

