The Green Bay Packers currently own the rights to the 14th overall pick in the first round of the 2018 draft.

The Washington Redskins, who just traded for Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Alex Smith, pick one spot ahead of the Packers at No. 13.

The recent shakeup could change the outlook of the draft. Quarterbacks are the most sought-after players, and now that the Redskins will presumably no longer be drafting a quarterback to replace Cousins, some interesting hypotheticals are cropping up.

According to Terez Paylor, who first broke the story, the Redskins will receive Smith in exchange for their third-round pick as well as Kendall Fuller. Many believe Fuller to be a promising young prospect.

Though a deal is in place for Smith, it can’t technically be finished until the new league year begins on March 14.

Either way, what was a flimsy situation in Washington looks more set at quarterback.

Further, the Redskins relinquished some value in the deal in order to maintain stability at quarterback. It’s possible that they will want to regain some of that on draft night.

Of the teams who draft in front of the Packers this year – the Browns (twice), Giants, Colts, Broncos, Jets, Buccaneers, Bears, Raiders, 49ers, Dolphins, Bengals and Redskins – only a handful have needs at quarterback.

As it stands, the top quarterbacks who could drive action at the top of the first round, in no particular order, are Josh Rosen, Sam Darnold, Baker Mayfield and Josh Allen.

The Browns will most assuredly take a quarterback at one of their spots; the Giants will likely select one as well.

NFL.com’s Chris Wesseling suggests the Broncos as the team most likely to land soon-to-be free agent Kirk Cousins based on fit and the team’s current financial structure.

Depending on where Cousins lands, the Packers could be impacted. It’s all hypothetical, but a run on quarterbacks early on Day 1 could alter the type of player who gets to 14.

Other quarterback-needy teams whose draft position falls behind the Packers include the Cardinals, Bills – who have back-to-back picks (Nos. 21 and 22) – and the Jaguars.

Provided the Broncos or the Jets land Cousins, and considering the Redskins now have a desire to recoup some draft losses via trade, some teams may want to jump into that No. 13 slot.

If Washington appears willing to sit on their pick (and they might: there are several quality cornerbacks with first-round grades who could supplant Kendall Fuller’s absence), Packers general manager Brian Gutekunst may become a popular phone call on Day 1 of the draft.

With quarterback set and several needs on the team, one of them being a pass rusher – a position that lacks (up to this point) multiple can’t-miss prospects – Gutekunst may consider dropping to No. 21 (Bills) or No. 29 (Jaguars).

Buffalo would likely need to give the Packers their second-round pick as well as swapping firsts.