
#80 WR · Green Bay Packers
1 transaction this offseason
Height
6'4"
Weight
218 lbs
Age
25
College
Nebraska
Draft
Undrafted
Experience
0 yrs
WR Rank
#291 / 295
Grade Isaiah Neyor
Your grade joins the crowd-sourced Fan Verdict.
On the field, Isaiah Neyor grades out as a poor WR for Green Bay Packers (F Performance). That places him 291st of 295 graded wide receivers. Against that production, his deal reads as a slight overpay on the Contract Value Index (D) — the team is paying below what the play would command. The public read is negative (D Sentiment), drawn from current news and social signal rather than the box score. As a prospect, expect these grades to move quickly as a real sample builds.
Total Value
$885K
AAV
$885K/yr
Isaiah Neyor's contract earns a D Contract Value Index, with the AAV sitting where the comparable-tier deals tend to settle. At $885K per year, this reserve/future deal carries minimal financial commitment and reflects a front office decision to take a flyer on a raw, developmental prospect—exactly the right pricing for a player whose 2025 season netted only three games and whose performance grade mirrors that marginal involvement. The media narrative aligns squarely with the contract tier: Neyor is a long shot to crack the 53-man roster, his path forward runs almost entirely through injury attrition in a crowded wide receiver room, and his Nebraska pedigree plus straight-line speed generate only mild intrigue rather than genuine confidence in his NFL ceiling. At 25 years old and still in his rookie season, Neyor remains a pure developmental bet—the kind of reserve/future signing that costs almost nothing to keep around and risks even less if he fails to survive camp. Green Bay's recent personnel activity (signing a cornerback, cutting a quarterback, focusing on other positional needs) suggests no internal momentum building around Neyor, and the downward sentiment trend confirms the broader NFL view: this is a long shot trying to earn his spot, not a prospect the organization is banking on. The contract structure itself is sound—minimal commitment for maximum flexibility—but the grade reflects that Neyor has done almost nothing to justify roster investment beyond the speculative stage.
Other same-position deals the Contract Value Index also places in the D band — a quick read on where Isaiah's contract sits relative to comparable money.
Among wide receivers on the Green Bay Packers, Isaiah Neyor's output grades to a F performance level. The 25-year-old is in his rookie season after going undrafted, and his 2025 campaign provides little evidence of NFL-ready production: he appeared in just three games, all of them reserve or emergency elevations born from injury attrition rather than earned opportunities. Neyor's calling card—straight-line speed and burst off the line, traits that drew mild intrigue from his Nebraska pedigree—has not yet translated into meaningful impact at the professional level, and the minimal counting stats across those three appearances confirm he remains a developmental long shot rather than a legitimate contributor to a playoff-contending roster. His role has been exclusively that of a practice-squad depth piece and emergency fill-in, with no path to consistent snaps or production targets visible in the current Packers scheme or depth chart. The media narrative is unsparing: this is a reserve/future contract situation, the least committal deal type available, and Neyor's only realistic avenue to a 53-man roster runs almost entirely through training camp survival and injury luck rather than through competitive performance or forced relevance. With Green Bay's recent offseason activity focused on signing cornerbacks and a receiver (Christian Watson) earlier this offseason, there is zero momentum or front-office investment signaling confidence in Neyor as a near-term answer, leaving him in the uncomfortable position of a long shot trying to carve out a path in a crowded and competitive wide receiver room.
Isaiah Neyor ranks 291st of 295 graded wide receivers by performance. That slots Isaiah between Jalen Royals (F) just ahead and Myles Price (F) just behind.
Graded higher
Jalen RoyalsKansas City ChiefsFKe'shawn WilliamsCincinnati BengalsFIhmir Smith-MarsetteArizona CardinalsFGraded lower
Myles PriceMinnesota VikingsThe public narrative around Isaiah Neyor sits at a D sentiment grade and is trending further downward, reflecting just how marginal his standing in the NFL genuinely is right now. The media framing is about as low-stakes as it gets — this is a reserve/future contract situation for a raw, undrafted speedster whose Nebraska pedigree and straight-line burst generate mild intrigue but zero guarantees, and the consensus is clear that Neyor's path to a 53-man roster runs almost entirely through the injury report rather than earned standing. That framing aligns uncomfortably well with his D+ performance grade, which reflects a player who appeared in just three games in the 2025 season — three games that produced minimal impact and confirmed he remains a developmental long shot rather than a legitimate contributor. The headline sequence tells the whole story: a reserve/future signing followed by a pair of elevations born from necessity when Green Bay lost other receivers to injury, including a wild-card elevation against the Bears that speaks more to roster attrition than to Neyor forcing his way into the picture. With the Packers still 127 days from the 2026 regular season opener and Green Bay's recent offseason activity focused almost entirely on other positional needs, there is no momentum building around Neyor — the narrative today is that of a long shot trying to survive a crowded wide receiver room in training camp, and that verdict is unlikely to change without a dramatic shift in the preseason.
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Isaiah Neyor is a player on a rookie-scale contract listed at WR for the Green Bay Packers. FanVerdicts covers every NFL player, team, GM, and transaction — and puts your verdict on all of it. Sign in to cast your Fan Verdict on Isaiah Neyor, see where the crowd lands, and argue the call. FanVerdicts also brings its own read — performance, sentiment, and Contract Value Index — as one honest input alongside the crowd's. Where FanVerdicts has weighed in so far: Contract Value Index D, Performance F, Sentiment D.
The crowd's Fan Verdict moves in real time as fans vote on this profile. FanVerdicts' own read updates as new data lands — performance recalculates when NFL game stats post, sentiment shifts with media coverage and fan discussion, and the Contract Value Index recomputes when contract terms change. Contract details below show the structure (years, total value, average annual value, guarantees) behind the Contract Value Index read.
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