The Green Bay Packers are 12 official practices, one scrimmage and one preseason game into 2018 training camp.

Here are five players trending in the wrong direction through the first three weeks of camp:

DB Quinten Rollins

It’s going to be hard to forget Rollins getting beat so badly to the inside for a big play on the first drive last Thursday night. The rep was terrible from start to finish, especially from a technique standpoint, and he got beat by a fourth-string receiver. Rollins also mishandled a punt – costing the Packers 12 yards in field position – and he did nothing of note at safety, his new position. There’s a mountain of evidence suggesting Rollins can’t play cornerback. He needs to start making noise at safety and on special teams if he’s going to stick around.

OL Jason Spriggs

His regression didn’t start this summer; the former second-round pick has been trending in the wrong direction since at least last August, when he bombed during the 2017 preseason. Throw in two major injuries – including a dislocated kneecap – a difficult adjustment period handling extra weight put on during the offseason and a mystery benching before the Packers’ first preseason game, and Spriggs’ future in Green Bay is now on shaky ground. He was good enough in the second half last Thursday night, but who cares if Spriggs can block fourth-string edge rushers? The Packers need to know if he can handle starting-quality players. Beating out Byron Bell as the top backup at right tackle shouldn’t be this hard.

WR Trevor Davis

Davis has one thing going for him: No player has taken advantage of the available reps at punt and kick returner. In fact, all challengers have struggled, especially on punt return. Davis was one of the most productive returners in the NFL last season, but he’s missed a ton of time this offseason due to a hamstring injury, and the healthy receivers – like Jake Kumerow and the three rookies – are impressing. The former fifth-round pick needs to get back on the field as soon as possible or risk falling even more behind. The Packers can find someone else to catch punts and return kicks.

OL Byron Bell

The problem festering with Bell: His best position is at guard, where the Packers are currently flush with options, and he simply isn’t good enough in pass protection to consistently handle the responsibilities of playing tackle in the Packers offense. The Titans beat him for six pressures, including a quarterback hit that resulted in a turnover. Bell wasn’t even facing Tennessee’s best rushers. Maybe, if Spriggs crumbles, the Packers will have no choice but to keep Bell, but that’s looking more and more like a worst-case scenario.

S Josh Jones

The assumption to start camp was that Jones, last year’s second-round pick, would replace Morgan Burnett as one of the starting safeties opposite Ha Ha Clinton-Dix. It didn’t happen. Kentrell Brice took the job and has kept it, even while battling back from an ankle injury. Jones wasn’t even the first safety off the bench last Thursday night. That title belonged to Jermaine Whitehead, who has received snaps during camp with the first-team defense. Last year, Jones flashed intriguing athleticism as a hybrid safety/linebacker. Now, he’s struggling to find a single role for Mike Pettine.