The Green Bay Packers have struggled on and off of the field in the past couple of seasons. Off of the field, the Packers saw a significant drop in the team's profit.

According to ESPN, the Packers dropped 98-percent in profits in the latest fiscal year. This is due to losing games, missing the playoffs, and fewer people buying items from the team shops.

In addition, the Packers also had a spending spree in free agency where they signed Preston Smith, Za'Darius Smith, and Adrian Amos. Add this to Aaron Rodgers' lucrative extension and that's a hefty bill.

The Packers also hired Matt LaFleur to replace Mike McCarthy as the head coach in 2019. Winning can solve everything and the profits would probably increase if Green Bay returned to being a contender once again. The Packers team president Mark Murphy realizes winning could get them back on track financially.

“If we can get back to the playoffs and get to the Super Bowl, that always helps,” Murphy said. “We have a policy regarding our season-ticket pricing. We want to be just below the league average. We don't want everything to be on the backs of our season-ticket holders.”

It's been two seasons since the Packers have been in the postseason and they haven't been in a Super Bowl since they won in 2010. With Rodgers under center, the Packers' window of relevancy is still open. LaFleur will just need to get the team on the same page and win more games.

If LaFleur can lead Green Bay out of mediocrity, the Packers should return to being a profitable organization in the coming seasons.