One thing was certain coming out of Family Night – Moore and the other young receivers are ready for the preseason to begin next Thursday night against the Tennessee Titans.

"I'm going to grind, put my head down and keep pushing," Moore said. "We'll see what happens. We have the preseason games coming up. We'll keep it rolling."

Extra work: Left tackle David Bakhtiari exited Saturday night's practice with an ankle injury, freeing a few unexpected reps for third-year tackle Kyle Murphy.

Murphy, who had been working at right tackle with the starters, shifted over the to left side after Bakhtiari's injury and finished there during the Packers' final two-minute period.

Murphy made two spot starts at left tackle for Bakhtiari last season and was settling in prior to suffering a season-ending foot injury. He returned in time for the offseason program and has been working at both tackle spots throughout the spring and summer.

"It's always priceless getting those game reps, especially with (Aaron Rodgers) back there," said Murphy, a former sixth-round pick in 2016. "Not that you should approach a game differently than you do just a normal practice or whatever, but it's different under the lights on the big stage against good competition. So I think that was huge for my growth and development as a player. I feel better this year, more comfortable because of that."

Right tackle Bryan Bulaga returned to practice Friday before taking a planned rest day during Family Night. Murphy, Jason Spriggs and veteran Byron Bell have all rotated at the two tackle positions throughout the first week of camp.

Meanwhile, the Packers are hoping for the best for Bakhtiari.

"That's my boy. I don't want to see him get hurt, banged up or anything," left guard Lane Taylor said. "Hope he's OK. I feel like it'll be all right. So we'll see (Sunday)."

What a night: Marcedes Lewis has seen a lot during his 12-year NFL career, but still never has experienced anything quite like Family Night.

After all, it's not every day more than 64,000 file into a stadium to watch practice.

"Man, that was something different. I don't know what this is," said Lewis, smiling. "I've never been a part of anything like this; a stadium packed like this just for a practice. I can't wait until the season starts."

Quarterback DeShone Kizer, in his first season in Green Bay, likened the experience to his time at the University of Notre Dame.

"The football tradition here is very similar to Notre Dame's in the sense that there's 70,000 people who are there to watch the game," Kizer said. "They're not there for jumping in pools or whatever these different stadiums have. They're there to watch football. They're there to support their Packers."