gold star for USAHOF
Arriving to Green Bay in 1965, Carroll Dale would help the Packers immediately as the team would win the next three titles, the 1965 NFL Championship and Super Bowls I & II.  Dale would be a three time Pro Bowl selection (1968-1970) and had 5,422 Receiving Yards as a Packer.  Green Bay inducted Dale into their Hall of Fame in 1979.
Lynn Dickey was never a Pro Bowl selection however he was an effective starting Quarterback for the Green Bay Packer for nine seasons.  Dickey was not surrounded with the best talent around him but he did manage to throw for the most yards and touchdowns in 1983 and for 21,369 Yards overall.  The Packers would induct Dickey into their Hall of Fame in 1982.
Johnny “Blood” McNally had two productive runs with the Green Bay Packers (he played for five teams in total) and would help them win four NFL Championships.  Playing Halfback, the versatile McNally would be a member of the NFL 1930’s All-Decade Team and was inducted into the Hall of Fame in the first class of 1963 and Green Bay's first Hall of Fame class in 1970.
John Brockington made an immediate impact with the Green Bay Packers winning the Offensive Rookie of the Year Award.  Brockington’s first three seasons saw him rush for over 1,000 Yards but his powerful style caught up to him and his next three years saw a decline in his production.  Still, he had over 6,000 Yards from Scrimmage for the Packers with 32 Touchdowns.

Brockington entered the Packers Hall of Fame in 1984.
Sandwiched between his two stays as an Oakland Raider, future Hall of Fame Defensive Back, Charles Woodson gave the Green Bay Packers seven good years.  Woodson would help the Packers win Super Bowl XLV and was a two time First Team All Pro as a Packer.  In those two years, he would lead the NFL in Interceptions.

Woodson entered the Packers Hall of Fame and the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 2021
Fred “Fuzzy” Thurston is one of the few players to have six championships in the National Football League, winning an additional title in Baltimore along with the five he captured as a Packer.  The native of Wisconsin would be named a First Team All-Pro in 1961.  He entered the Packers Hall of Fame as part of the class of 1975.
While John Anderson may never made the Pro Bowl, he was one of the most consistent players of his day and was also thought of as one of the most complete.  Anderson would three times be named the Packers Defensive Player of the Year and the Pro Football Hall of Fame named him to the Second Team of the 1980’s.  The Packers would also induct Anderson to their Hall of Fame in 1998.
Considered to be one of the first truly great Guards of the game, Mike Michalske would earn the honor of being the first Offensive Guard to make the Pro Football Hall of Fame.  Michalske would make an immediate impact for the Packers after his three-year stint with the football version of the New York Yankees and he would win three NFL Championships and three First Team All-Pros in those first three years.

Michalske was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame as part of their second class in 1964 and was chosen as part of the inaugural Packers Hall of Fame class in 1970.
The move to Center paid dividends for both Frank Winters and the Green Bay Packers, who they signed after six uneventful seasons in Cleveland, New York (G) and Cleveland.  Winters would start 141 games for the Packers and would make the 1996 Pro Bowl roster.  This would prove to be a pretty good career for a player who was nicknamed “Old Bag of Donuts”.

The Packers elected Winters to their Hall of Fame in 2008.

36. Max McGee

Max McGee is best known for being one of the stars of Super Bowl I catching seven passes for 138 Yards and 2 Touchdowns...an outstanding feat considering he was allegedly hungover at the time!
The 2010 NFL Offensive Lineman of the Year, Josh Sitton played the first eight years of his 11-year career with the Green Bay Packers.

A Fourth Round Pick from Central Florida, Sitton was named the starting Right Guard in his second season (2009) until he switched to Left Guard in 2013.  Sitton went to three Pro Bowls with Green Bay, one at Left and two at Right, and he was part of Green Bay's Super Bowl XLV Championship Team.  Sitton was surprisingly released before the 2016 season, and he signed with the division rival, Chicago, where he went to two more Pro Bowls.
Cal Hubbard fell in love with the small city of Green Bay when he played a road game there with the New York Giants and the story was that he demanded to be traded there and threatened retirement if it didn’t happen.  It did happen, and Hubbard was a major reason that Green Bay won the NFL Championship in 1929, 1930 and 1931.  Hubbard was also a three-time First Team All-Pro as a Packer and went into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in the first ever class in 1963.  He also was part of Green Bay's inaugural Hall of Fame class in 1970.
Starting 160 of his 165 games at Left Tackle, Chad Clifton was one of the more underappreciated Offensive Lineman for a decade.  Protecting Brett Favre and Aaron Rodgers, Clifton was a two-time Pro Bowl selection and would help the Packers win Super Bowl XLV.

Green Bay inducted Clifton to their Hall of Fame in 2016.
The career of Sterling Sharpe was not long, lasting only seven years as he was forced out of the game due to a severe neck injury.  However in those seven campaigns, Sharpe would lead the league in Receptions three times and tallied over 8,000 Yards.  Sharpe, who was also a three-time First Team All-Pro, would accomplish the rare Wide Receiver “Triple Crown” when in 1992 he led the NFL in Receptions, Receiving Yards, and Receiving Touchdowns.

The Packers elected Sharpe into their Hall of Fame in 2002.
Another member of the Packers Super Bowl winning I and II Championship teams, Gale Gillingham was one of the young stars for Vince Lombardi’s team.  After the Super Bowl wins, the team did go into decline, but Gillingham’s play actually improved and he was named to five Pro Bowls and two First Team All-Pros.

Green Bay elected Gillingham to their Hall of Fame in 1982.
In 1941, Clarke Hinkle retired as the NFL’s all time leading rusher, and though that number been surpassed by many, the near 4,000 Yards he ran for was a very astonishing feat for the 1930’s.  Hinkle, who would make the Pro Football Hall of Fame and 75th Anniversary Team was also four time First Team All Pro and would lead the NFL in Field Goals made late in his career twice.

Hinkle entered the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1964, the second year of its exstence, and in 1972, he coincidentally was part of Green Bay's second Hall of Fame Class.

From the legendary Matthews family, Clay Matthews III became a perfect fit for Lambeau Field.  

Matthews was a star Linebacker since the moment he began, earning a Pro Bowl selection in his rookie year and making five more since.  Matthews has excelled at pass rushing and whenever you watch a game that featured Green Bay it is likely that Matthews was all over the screen.  

A First Team All-Pro in 2010, Matthews III was the runner-up for the Defensive Player of the Year, with the PFWA naming him as their DPOY.

Matthews played a large part in Green Bay’s success in the 2010s, leading them to a Super Bowl in the aforementioned 2010 campaign.  He finished his career with a final year with the Rams, and had 91.5 Sacks with 130 Tackles for Loss over his career.

Bobby Dillon’s career spanned only eight years, but they were all spent with the Green Bay Packers.  The 94 games he put on the cleats with Green Bay were more than enough for him to set (and still hold) the franchise record for interceptions.  Dillon would also be named a First Team All-Pro in four of the eight seasons he played.  
A true jack of all trades, Arnie Herber took a strange trip to football stardom.  Herber, a native of Green Bay who only played two years of college football was working as the clubhouse’s handyman and received a tryout from Curly Lambeau, who saw something in the kid, and boy was he right!
Another member on this list who has won five championships with the Packers, Linebacker, Dave Robinson was a senior nominee who would get into the Hall of Fame in 2013.  Robinson would play predominantly at Left Linebacker and like so many Packers he poured it on the bigger the game was.  Robinson was a three-time Pro Bowl selection, and in the 1967 game, he would win the MVP Award.  He is also a member of the 1960s All-Decade Team.

In 1982, Robinson was chosen for the Packers Hall of Fame and the Pro Football Hall of Fame called his name in 2013.