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Mike Roemer/Associated Press

Scheme: West Coast

Starter: Jordy Nelson

NFL1000 Scores: 71.1/100

NFL1000 Position Rank: 12/155

Returning from a torn ACL, Jordy Nelson won the NFL's Comeback Player of the Year honors in 2016. He scored the second-most touchdowns of his career (14) and finished with more than 1,200 yards for the fourth time in his nine-year career. Nelson was able to pick right up where he left off in 2014.

Nelson doesn't have elite quickness or speed, but he's such a reliable target for Aaron Rodgers against any type of coverage. Nelson knows how to win off the line of scrimmage and possesses some of the best body control in the league. He knows how to work on the boundary and separate at the last second to create space.

As fantastic as he was in 2016, he seemed to tail off at the end of the year. He's still Rodgers' favorite target, and that will allow him to be productive again in 2017 at age 32. The Packers will eventually need to draft his replacement on the outside, but Nelson has a few quality years left in Green Bay.

Starter: Davante Adams

NFL1000 Scores: 67.6/100

NFL1000 Position Rank: 42/155

Adams became a full-time starter in 2016 after struggling in his first two years in the NFL. The third-year receiver out of Fresno State barely missed 1,000 receiving yards (997) but scored a career-high 12 times in 2016. In the first two years of his career, he struggled with the playbook, and you could see he was overthinking every move he made. But in 2016 his confidence was restored, and he was an important part of the Packers' late-season run.

What 2016 showed was that Adams does have talent. There are still parts of his game that need cleaning up, such as the maddening concentration drops and his ability to read coverages. But he can get open fairly easily and has the explosion to make plays after the catch. At just 24 years old, Adams has a bright future ahead of him.

Starter: Randall Cobb

NFL1000 Scores: 67.3/100

NFL1000 Position Rank:: 45/155

After a breakout season in 2014, Randall Cobb signed a four-year, $40 million contract. Since signing his contract, Cobb's play has fallen off in large part due to injuries that have limited him. In the past two seasons, he's failed to crack 900 receiving yards in each and has only scored 10 total touchdowns after scoring 12 in 2014.

Cobb turns 27 this year and needs to play drastically better in 2017 to stay in Green Bay. He's the 15th-highest-paid receiver in the league, but he's just a slot receiver for the Packers. Injuries hurt him in 2016 as he lacked explosiveness. He wasn't making plays after the catch and was no longer a dynamic weapon on offense. Instead, he looked like a plodding slot receiver. 2017 will be a big year for Randall Cobb, as he needs to show that he still has the burst to be an elite weapon out of the slot.

Backup: Geronimo Allison

NFL1000 Scores: Did not have enough snaps to qualify

As an undrafted free agent out of Illinois, Geronimo Allison caught 12 passes for 202 yards in his rookie year. Allison surpassed hype machine Jeff Janis on the depth chart and proved he has a future on the Packers offense going forward. His lack of speed will always limit him, but there's a chance he could develop into the Packers' third receiver down the road.

Backup: Jeff Janis

NFL1000 Scores: Did not have enough snaps to qualify

Despite all of the athleticism and offseason hype, Jeff Janis has failed to record 100 receiving yards in a season in his first three years of the NFL. He's not likely to develop into anything more than a special teams player throughout his career.

Team Need: 5/10

Potential Draft Fits: Zay Jones (East Carolina), Chad Hansen (Cal), JuJu Smith-Schuster (USC)