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Green Bay Packers special teams coach Rich Bisaccia resigned under overwhelming pressure stemming from the missed kick by Brandon McManus

Green Bay, Wisconsin – January 12, 2026

The Green Bay Packers entered the offseason expecting tough decisions, but few anticipated how quickly the reckoning would arrive. Just days after a crushing Wild Card loss to the Chicago Bears, special teams coordinator Rich Bisaccia has stepped down, sources confirmed, amid overwhelming pressure following the missed kicks that defined the team’s abrupt playoff exit.
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The breaking point came in the 31–27 defeat at Soldier Field, where the Packers squandered a 21–3 halftime lead. Rookie quarterback Caleb Williams led Chicago’s late surge, but it was Green Bay’s unraveling on special teams that shifted the narrative from missed opportunity to organizational failure.

At the center of that collapse was kicker Brandon McManus, whose missed field goals from 55 and 44 yards, along with a failed extra point, left seven points on the field. In a game decided by four, those misses became impossible to ignore, both inside the locker room and across the fan base.

McManus was released within hours of the loss, but the fallout did not stop there. As the coach responsible for the unit, Bisaccia found himself carrying the weight of a season-long problem that once again surfaced at the worst possible moment. By Monday, the pressure had grown too heavy to withstand.

Bisaccia joined the Packers in 2022 with a reputation as a stabilizer, tasked with fixing a long-standing weakness under head coach Matt LaFleur. While there were incremental improvements, special teams remained near the bottom of league rankings, plagued by missed kicks, coverage breakdowns, and costly errors in critical games.

According to sources close to the situation, Bisaccia chose to resign rather than prolong the distraction. The decision was framed internally as an acknowledgment that trust had eroded. For a veteran coach with decades of experience, the moment marked a quiet but painful end to his tenure in Green Bay.

For the Packers, Bisaccia’s departure signals more than a coaching change. It reflects an organization confronting its most persistent flaw with urgency. After another season ended by special teams failures, Green Bay is sending a clear message: the margin for error is gone, and accountability now begins where the collapse did.

Joe Kent Opposes Trump’s Military Campaign in Iran: Supporters Believe He’s "Switching Sides" and Leaving Trump’s Loyal Faction Behind
Washington, D.C. – In a shocking move for U.S. politics, Joe Kent, former Director of the National Counterterrorism Center (NCTC), publicly opposed President Donald Trump’s military campaign against Iran. Kent, a veteran with 11 deployments and a longtime supporter of Trump, resigned on March 17, 2026, posting his resignation letter on social media platform X, declaring that he “could no longer support the ongoing war in Iran with a clear conscience.” In his resignation letter, Kent wrote: “Iran does not pose an imminent threat to our nation, and it is clear that we initiated this war under pressure from Israel and their powerful lobby groups in the U.S.” He accused Israeli officials and U.S. media of engaging in a “disinformation campaign” designed to deceive Trump into escalating the conflict. Kent called on Trump to “reverse course” and emphasized that Middle Eastern wars had “taken the precious lives of American patriots and undermined the prosperity of our country.” As a prominent figure in the MAGA (Make America Great Again) movement, Kent, who had run unsuccessfully for Congress twice, has maintained strong support from the isolationist "America First" faction — those who oppose military intervention abroad. His resignation has been described as the “first major defection” from the Trump administration, according to sources like The Atlantic, Politico, and Time. Reactions from Kent’s supporters and the conservative base reveal a deep divide. Some of his followers see this as a sign that he is “arranging to switch sides,” moving from supporting Trump to joining the anti-war camp, potentially aligning with voices like Tucker Carlson, Candace Owens, or Marjorie Taylor Greene. Greene immediately spoke out in Kent’s defense: “They’ll try to smear Joe Kent and discredit him. Don’t believe the lies! Joe is a true American hero, having deployed 11 times, and he’s the husband of a Gold Star wife.” Carlson called Kent “the bravest man I know,” while Owens and several other MAGA influencers widely shared Kent’s resignation letter, seeing it as a “wake-up call” for Trump about being “duped” by the Israeli lobby. However, Trump and his loyalists responded harshly. The president called Kent “very weak on security” and said, “It’s a good thing he’s gone because he thinks Iran isn’t a threat.” Many Republican lawmakers and Trump allies dismissed Kent’s accusations, arguing that he was spreading “antisemitic tropes” and did not represent the majority of the MAGA movement. This incident highlights a growing rift within the Trump coalition: between the isolationist “America First” faction, which opposes war for America’s benefit, and those supporting strong military action against Iran. With the Iran war entering its third week, Kent’s resignation could mark the beginning of a larger wave of dissent, particularly as figures like Tulsi Gabbard (Director of National Intelligence) remain silent. Joe Kent, a former Green Beret and the widower of fallen servicewoman Shannon, who was killed in Syria in 2019, had long been seen as a symbol of loyalty to Trump. Now, his decision represents not only the loss of an important position but also a warning signal to the White House: even the most loyal supporters have their limits when it comes to the lives and interests of the nation. The story is still developing. Will Kent become a leading voice for the anti-war movement within MAGA, or will he remain an isolated case? Trump’s supporters are watching closely.