News
Hosted on MSN28d
Green Bay Packers: Mark Murphy To Retire as Team’s Winningest President in Super Bowl EraJuly 25, at the Green Bay Packers‘ annual shareholders’ meeting, Mark Murphy will retire as team president after 17 full seasons at the position. He will celebrate his 70th birthday 12 days ...
Ed Policy, who will become Packers boss in July, promises to continue what works. Also, reader wants to know how to get ...
Mark Murphy may have just given away the Packers' Day 2 draft plan live on air. While Packers fans were elated to finally see the team add a wide receiver in the first round, there's still a ...
Green Bay Packers president Mark Murphy offered little about a potential trade with the New York Jets for quarterback Aaron Rodgers, saying Tuesday "there's really nothing" to say.
Former Orange mayor and Councilmember Mark A. Murphy, affectionately dubbed “Mr. Orange,” died at his home in Orange on Friday evening, Dec. 13, city officials said.
Murphy answered, “They go to emeritus status when they turn 70. Since I am a member of the board, the policy applies to me and I will retire on July 13, 2025, when I turn 70.
Though there hasn’t been an official NFL announcement regarding the team selected for HBO’s “Hard Knocks,” Packers President and CEO Mark Murphy may have revealed a hint.
Mark Murphy Was Not the Packers’ 1st Choice. When former Packers president Bob Harlan retired in 2006, Murphy was not the original choice to replace him.
As he prepares to take over an iconic franchise, incoming Packers president Ed Policy sat down with NBC 26 to discuss his ...
GREEN BAY – To Mark Murphy, being a member of the Green Bay Packers organization is about stewardship, whether you are at the top or bottom of the organization. Murphy, who's been at the top for ...
Outgoing Green Bay Packers president and CEO Mark Murphy said he feels "regret" for winning only one Super Bowl during his tenure, which began in early 2008 and ends in July, but he's "confident ...
Mark Murphy of the Green Bay Packers speaks with owner Jerry Jones of the Dallas Cowboys prior to the NFC wild-card playoff game at AT&T Stadium on Jan. 14, 2024, in Arlington, Texas.
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results