Here’s what we know about new Green Bay Packers coach Matt LaFleur’s inaugural coaching staff:

Offensive coordinator – Out: Joe Philbin. In: Nathaniel Hackett. Under Hackett in 2017, Jacksonville reached the AFC Championship Game. That team ranked fifth in scoring with 26.1 points per game, sixth in total offense, first in rushing and second in the red zone. In 2018, Hackett was fired after Jacksonville started 3-8 while averaging only 17.9 points per game. He obviously has inherited a better quarterback than Blake Bortles.

Quarterbacks – Out: Frank Cignetti. In: Luke Getsy. After Aaron Rodgers rallied the Packers past the Dallas Cowboys in the 2016 playoffs, he called receivers coach Getsy “an unsung hero for us.” Getsy is back as quarterbacks coach; the team made that news official on Tuesday. Getsy, who will turn 35 in February, spent the 2014 through 2017 seasons with the Packers, the first two years as offensive quality control before taking over as receivers coach for his final two seasons. He left after the 2017 season to serve as Mississippi State’s offensive coordinator and wide receivers coach. Regardless, LaFleur will be a major voice in the QB room “Certainly, I want to be in that quarterback room as much as possible and the goal is to be there all the time. I realize as the head coach there’s going to be things that come up that you have to take care of, but I entrust that he and I have the same vision for the quarterback and we’ll be on the same page.”

Running backs – Retained: Ben Sirmans. Under Sirmans, Aaron Jones led the NFL with 5.47 yards per carry while Jones (one) and Jamaal Williams (zero) fumbled only once in 307 touches. During Sirmans' three seasons in charge of the backfield, Green Bay led the NFL with an average of 4.66 yards per carry, including an average of 5.01 yards per carry in 2018 (No. 2 in the NFL), which was the second-best mark in team history. He joined the Packers after spending the 2012 through 2015 seasons as the running backs coach for the St. Louis Rams.

Wide receivers – Out: David Raih. In: Alvis Whitted. The 44-year-old Whitted was the receivers coach at Colorado State the past seven seasons. During that time, Whitted helped Rashard Higgins and Michael Gallup become Biletnikoff Award finalists. Along with Preston Williams this season, Whitted coached three All-American receivers. A seventh-round draft pick by Jacksonville in 1998, he played nine NFL seasons with the Jaguars and Raiders, finishing his career with 74 catches for 1,030 yards.

Tight ends – Out: Brian Angelichio. In: Justin Outten. Outten started his NFL coaching career as an offensive intern with the Falcons in 2016, when LaFleur was in his second season there as quarterbacks coach. Outten spent the last two years as an offensive assistant, focusing on the offensive line. Before Outten joined the Falcons, he was at Houston's Spring Westfield High School as the assistant head coach/offensive coordinator/offensive line coach from 2008 through 2016. He was a starting center at Syracuse. He has no experience with tight ends but does know the zone scheme that LaFleur will be installing.

Offensive line – Out: James Campen. In: Adam Stenavich. Stenavich, a native of Marshfield, Wis., spent time on the Packers practice squad more than 10 years ago. He just completed his second season as the assistant line coach with the 49ers. He comes well-schooled in the zone-blocking scheme that LaFleur intends to run with the Packers. Left tackle David Bakhtiari was given a ringing endorsement of Stenavich from 49ers left tackle Joe Staley. Stenavich has big shoes to fill. Campen was the team’s longest-tenured coach but was allowed to interview with the Browns, for which he will be line coach and associate head coach – a big step forward in his career. Under his watch, former fourth-round pick Bakhtiari became a three-time All-Pro and former fifth-round pick Corey Linsley blossomed into one of the better centers in the league. Prior to that, he helped turn former fourth-round picks Josh Sitton and T.J. Lang into arguably the best guard tandem in the NFL.

Assistant offensive line – Out: Jeff Blasko. In: TBA. Blasko followed Campen to Cleveland. “Jeff, he’s extremely intelligent,” Campen said late in the season. “I’ve never really been around a guy that can watch tape and hit it so quick. At times, I’m on one play he’s on play five and he’s got the answers three, four already put together. So, he’s very, very sharp. I’ve never worked with somebody like that. As far as what he’d done for the room you can ask the players what’s true for them. I give him equal time in the room and boy he turns it up. He’s a fine football coach. I’ve enjoyed it very much out of him. He’s a good guy and a loyal sucker now, boy. He’s loyal as they come. He’s a good football coach.”

Run-game coordinator – Out: Campen. In: TBA. LaFleur might not have this position on his staff.

Pass-game coordinator – Out: Jim Hostler. In: TBA. Hostler joined Carolina as receivers coach. LaFleur might not have this position on his staff.

Defensive coordinator – Retained: Mike Pettine. This was a key move for LaFleur – just as it was a key move for Bears coach Matt Nagy to retain Vic Fangio as coordinator when Nagy was hired last year. Keeping Pettine will allow LaFleur to focus on the offense and other big-picture items while leaving the defense in the hands of a proven coach who has the support of his players. The defense, however, was only marginally better under Pettine.

“The foundation is the hardest thing to get right, and I feel that a lot of it has been built,” Pettine said before the final game. “We’ve made a lot of mistakes, I think we learned – especially me personally. I’ve learned a lot of cases of what not to do versus what to do. But when you just look at Year 2 as you look forward to it, the nice part about it is you reap the rewards of having already – if you have the bulk of your players back and the bulk of your coaching staff back, that Year 1 is not so hectic of, ‘We’ve got to coach the coaches and now we’ve got to put a playbook together.’ Everything is being built essentially from scratch, and you start Year 2 well ahead of where you would have been in Year 1. So, of course, naturally, most people would want to feel like, ‘Hey, I started something, I want to finish it.’”

Defensive line – Retained: Jerry Montgomery. An assistant in his first three seasons, Montgomery briefly left for Texas A&M, only to return to replace Mike Trgovac for last season. His starting trio, including Pro Bowler Mike Daniels and rising star Kenny Clark, wound up on injured reserve. “We wanted to be here and that was important to us and my family and myself,” Montgomery said before the final game. “So, absolutely, don’t regret it one bit. Glad I had the opportunity to coach these guys. Hopefully, I can continue to coach them. If not, I’ll have another room somewhere else and I’ll have those guys playing well, too”

Outside linebackers – Out: Winston Moss. In: Mike Smith. Smith spent the last three seasons with the Kansas City Chiefs, first as the assistant defensive line coach in 2016 and 2017 and then coaching outside linebackers last season. In 2018, Smith coached Dee Ford, who was selected to his first Pro Bowl after tying for the NFL lead with seven forced fumbles and tying for No. 2 among NFL linebackers with a career-high 13 sacks. He was Pettine's outside linebackers coach with the New York Jets in 2012. One jarring stat speaks to his potential impact.

Inside linebackers – Out: Patrick Graham. In: Kirk Olivadotti. Nothing is official on Graham, though he reportedly will be the defensive coordinator in Miami under new coach Brian Flores. The Packers have replaced him with Olivadotti. He focused on the inside linebackers in Washington’s 3-4 defense the past five seasons. His father, Tom Olivadotti, was the defensive coordinator of the Miami Dolphins from 1987 through 1995.

Cornerbacks – Out: Joe Whitt. In: Nobody. Whitt was officially the passing-game coordinator but his positional focus for most of a decade-long tenure with the team was on the cornerbacks. In fact, he was the team’s longest-tenured defensive coach. The Packers’ pass defense had gone from strength to weakness the past three seasons. From 2009 through 2015, the Packers were No. 2 in opponent passer rating (78.9) and No. 1 in a wide margin in interceptions (148). Despite major personnel additions, the Packers were last in the league in passer rating (99.5) and 25th in interceptions (35) the last three seasons. Whitt quickly landed in Cleveland.

Safeties – Nobody, though Jason Simmons served as secondary coach last season.

Under LaFleur, instead of having defined position coaches, Simmons was promoted from secondary coach to defensive backs coach and Ryan Downard was promoted from defensive quality-control coach to assistant defensive backs coach.

Secondary – This will be Year 9 with the team for Simmons. He joined the team as a coaching administrator in 2011 and was assistant special teams coach from 2015 through 2017 before moving to defense for 2018. Before coaching, he played for 10 years in the NFL as a defensive back and special-teams player. A fifth-round pick by the Pittsburgh Steelers in 1998, Simmons played 121 games for the Steelers and Houston Texans from 1998 through 2007.

Assistant secondary – This will be Year 2 for Downard. He came to Green Bay after working at Bowling Green for two seasons, serving as safeties coach in 2017 and director of football operations in 2016. In 2014 and 2015, Downard was a defensive coaching assistant with the Cleveland Browns, assisting with the defensive line in 2014 and the defensive backs in 2015. Downard played defensive back at Eastern Michigan, where he was second in the country with six interceptions as a freshman in 2007.

Defensive quality control – Promoted: Ryan Downard. In: Wendel Davis and Christian Parker. From 2016 through 2018, Davis worked as a defensive graduate assistant at Georgia. He was set to become co-defensive coordinator and linebackers coach at the University of Incarnate Word. Davis was a two-year starting linebacker at Arkansas, where he recorded 164 tackles from 2006 through 2009. He was a team captain as a senior. Parker spent last season as a defensive analyst at Texas A&M. In 2017, he was cornerbacks coach at William & Mary. Parker played wide receiver and cornerback at Richmond, and was part of Colonial Athletic Association championship teams in 2009 and 2012.

Run-game coordinator – Graham. LaFleur might not have this position on his staff.

Pass-game coordinator – Whitt. LaFleur might not have this position on his staff.

Special teams coordinator – Out: Ron Zook. In: Shawn Mennenga. Mennenga spent last season as the special teams coordinator at Vanderbilt. Prior to that, he was the assistant in Cleveland under highly regarded coordinator Chris Tabor. Mennenga spent two years on the staff of then-Browns coach Mike Pettine, who was retained as defensive coordinator by LaFleur. The firing of Zook was the first move made by LaFleur. The decision probably was simple. According to the Packer Report Special Teams Rankings, the Packers finished with the worst kicking game in the NFL. In our six years of compiling our rankings, only two teams fielded worse special teams, based on the five-category cumulative ranking. The Packers were the only team to finish 20th or worse in all five categories (net punting for and against, starting field position on kickoffs/kickoff returns, and field-goal percentage).

Assistant special teams – Retained: Maurice Drayton was named to this role last year after serving as the assistant in Indianapolis in 2016 and 2017. Drayton was the assistant head coach/defensive coordinator/cornerbacks coach at The Citadel in 2014 and 2015, where he played defensive back from 1994 through 1998. Among other jobs: defensive coordinator for the Seinajoki (Finland) Crocodiles of the European Football League in 2006 and an assistant coach with the Charleston Swamp Foxes of arenafootball2 from 2000 through 2002.