Cleveland Browns owner Jimmy Haslam will consult with former Green Bay Packers general manager and Hall of Famer Ron Wolf at the end of the season, according to ESPN Cleveland and multiple media reports.

Wolf, 76, retired from full-time work in the NFL in 2001 after 38 years in the league. He started in 1963 as a scout for the Raiders, followed by a stint with the Buccaneers before returning to Oakland, where he helped build two Super Bowl-winning teams.

Named Packers general manager in 1991, Wolf hired coach Mike Holmgren and traded for quarterback Brett Favre. Those moves helped the Packers win Super Bowl XXXI in the 1996 season.

Wolf was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame earlier this year.

This would not be Wolf's first experience with the Browns. He was hired by the team in 2004 as a personnel specialist but left four months later after a rift developed between him and then-coach Butch Davis. Wolf later recommended to then-owner Randy Lerner that the Browns hire Holmgren as team president.

It's unclear what, if any, moves the Browns will make in the offseason, though general manager Ray Farmer and coach Mike Pettine could be on the hot seat as the team enters its final game of the season with a 3-12 record.