The Green Bay Packers received four compensatory picks in the 2018 NFL draft on Friday.

Recent history suggests the Packers are more than capable of finding impact players with their extra picks.

Green Bay’s highest compensatory pick this season will be in the fourth-round. The Packers have not received a third-round compensatory pick since the 2014 draft.

With that pick, Green Bay selected tight end Richard Rodgers at No. 98 overall. Rodgers enters free agency this offseason after four seasons with 120 catches for 1,166 yards and 13 touchdowns in 63 games.

In terms of fourth-round compensatory picks, the Packers had found plenty of success, including four selections as defensive starters last season.

Cornerback Davon House was selected 131st overall in the 2011 draft. He has played 52 games in Green Bay with three interceptions, 33 passes defended and 121 tackles.

Defensive tackle Mike Daniels is arguably Green Bay’s best selection with a compensatory pick on the current roster. Daniels was taken 132nd overall and has played 92 games with 27 sacks, 148 tackles, and one touchdown. Daniels was named to his first Pro Bowl this last season and has been named to NFL Network’s Top 100 players in 2016 and 2017.

For as great of a selection Daniels was, Green Bay also had the next compensatory pick and the result ended up being the complete opposite with the selection of safety Jerron McMillan with pick No. 133.

McMillan was a rare cut of a high draft pick in his second season. Former general manager Ted Thompson released McMillan during the 2013 season after poor play with 29 tackles and one interception.

In 2016, the Packers had two fourth-round compensatory picks that have produced in the last two seasons.

Linebacker Blake Martinez was selected with pick No. 131 and went from a rotational player his rookie season to a league leader in tackles last season. Martinez was in a three-way tie for the NFL lead in tackles with 144 in 2017 and will be looked upon to produce again in 2018.

Six picks later, the Packers selected defensive lineman Dean Lowry at 137th overall. Lowry also made a second-year jump in 2017, starting 11 games with 18 tackles, two sacks and a 62-yard fumble return for a touchdown.

Former Packers guard Josh Sitton was a fourth-round compensatory selection in the 2008 draft and could be the best compensatory selection ever made by Thompson. Sitton played eight seasons in Green Bay, becoming an All-Pro and Pro Bowl guard before his release after the 2016 preseason.

After the fourth-round, the Packers have not found much success.

In the fifth-round, Green Bay has selected defensive end Josh Boyd in 2013 and wide receiver Jared Abbredaris in 2014. Both players did not play three full seasons and Abbredaris just announced his retirement from football this past season.

Tight end Kennard Backman and defensive lineman Christian Ringo were sixth-round compensatory pick for the Packers in the 2015 draft. Backman played just seven games in 2015 with no catches, while Ringo recorded two tackles in eight games.

The Packers do not have any compensatory picks in the seventh-round and have not had any since the 2012 draft. Green Bay selected offensive tackle Andrew Datko and quarterback B.J. Coleman with both compensatory picks that year.