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With Agreement Addressing Issues In Hand, Rodgers Reports For Camp
After a lengthy offseason standoff, Aaron Rodgers is back with the Pack.

Rodgers and the Green Bay Packers are in the final stages of a reworked deal to bring him back for the 2021 season. Rodgers had been seeking significant say in his future in the new contract, and according to ESPN's Adam Schefter, the QB will have a voice in the matter in 2022 and 2023.

With that agreement in place, Rodgers arrived at Lambeau Field on Tuesday morning, around 8:30 a.m. local time.

Per Schefter, the deal would include a void year for 2023, an adjustment of his contract this year and a review of the situation following the 2021 season. The agreement also would have "mechanisms" in place for addressing Rodgers' many concerns with the team and how it is currently being run.

It's possible the agreement will set up one final season with Rodgers and the Packers before a trade out of Green Bay in 2022. It also leaves the door open for the two sides to get on the same page over the next year and agree to a brand new deal before the 2022 season, setting the stage for Rodgers to finish his career in Green Bay.

As USA Today notes, both sides get something.

Not only will the MVP be playing at least one more season in Green Bay, but the alteration to his contract will provide the team with much-needed salary cap space entering this season. And the option to trade Rodgers after 2021 – while getting back significant draft capital and transitioning to the Jordan Love era -- remains in place.

For Rodgers, the new deal provides a significant incentive for the team to improve in the areas he sees fit and some level of freedom regarding his football future following the 2021 season.

If nothing else, the deal provides time. Time for wounds to heal, and changes to be made, and evaluation from both sides.

Beyond that, as NFL.com reports, Rodgers' rift even resulted recently in teammate Davante Adams, who is in the final year of his deal in Green Bay, breaking off long-term contract extension talks with the club, a sign of how questions about Rodgers' future rippled across the roster and the rest of the league. After news broke of Adams' development, both Rodgers and Adams posted photos of Bulls legends Michael Jordan and Scottie Pippen on their Instagram stories, signaling that the two were headed for a "Last Dance" together.

NFL.com's Jeremy Bergman went on to note that football-wise, Rodgers was absent for all of the Packers' offseason program, ceding snaps and the spotlight to Love, who is entering his second season in Green Bay but his first full training camp after the COVID-19 pandemic waylaid most rookies' preparation in 2020. Love told reporters after one particularly fine practice, "I've got to get myself ready to play." Just in case Rodgers wasn't there for the start of the 2021 season, Love knew he had to be the guy.

Now it looks like Love's leap to starter-dom may be delayed at least one year.