Green Bay, Wisconsin — Even though it was only voluntary workouts, the lights at Lambeau Field stayed on well into the night.
While most players had already gone home after the voluntary offseason session, one lone figure remained on the far practice field: rookie wide receiver Matthew Golden.
Sweat soaked through his practice jersey as he continuously caught passes in the cool spring mist, long after the official session had ended.
Head coach Matt LaFleur, after returning to his office to review film from the day’s voluntary practice, witnessed the scene and stood silent for several minutes.
“I’ve coached a lot of players in my career, but not everyone has that kind of fire,” LaFleur shared. “He doesn’t just want to participate — he wants to build something special for the Packers.”

When LaFleur asked Golden why he was still out there practicing so late during the voluntary period, the rookie wide receiver smiled and replied simply: “Coach, if I don’t do more than everyone else, I’ll never become who I want to be.”
That short answer left a deep impression on LaFleur.
“I’ve seen that look before,” the head coach continued. “That’s the exact look I saw in the best young Packers players. It’s not the look of a future star — it’s the look of a warrior who doesn’t want to miss even the smallest detail.”
During the preparation for the 2026 season through these voluntary offseason workouts, Matthew Golden has quickly become a name mentioned often thanks to his habit of staying late after nearly every session.
He reviews every catch on his tablet, takes detailed notes, and shows up the next morning earlier than most veterans. Teammates say that sometimes at 6 a.m. when they arrive, Golden is already there — headphones on, cap pulled low, notebook full of notes.
The story of Golden’s late-night workouts quickly spread among insiders and Packers fans.
“That’s what gives me chills,” a longtime fan posted online. “No one is forcing him to stay. These are voluntary workouts, yet Matthew still chooses to do extra because he believes in the Packers Way.”
On social media, the hashtag #FaithInGolden quickly became a trending topic among Green Bay fans, turning into a symbol of new hope for the franchise.
For Matt LaFleur — who has led the Packers for many years — the image of Golden working alone under the lights of Lambeau Field carries special meaning.
“That’s the exact spirit this organization was built on,” LaFleur said slowly. “When you see a young player voluntarily sacrificing his time to perfect himself during the offseason — you know this team is building something real.”
In that quiet late-night moment at Lambeau Field, as the passes flew in and Matthew Golden caught the ball cleanly in the darkness, people didn’t just see a rookie working hard.
They were witnessing the future of the Green Bay Packers being built — one voluntary catch at a time.