In the win over the New York Giants, it felt like at least one Green Bay Packers player was dropping out of the game per drive, even if they later returned to action. Let’s take a look at the Packers’ snap counts from Week 11 to make sense of the team’s depth chart, as we got a good amount of information from all the changes that happened to the team due to injury.

Jordan Love: 44 snapsMalik Willis: 7

Love missed a half-series against the Giants this week with an injury to his left shoulder. After the game, Love said the injury was “manageable” but “not fun.” He cleared the X-rays, though, and came back to finish the game.

Emanuel Wilson: 36Josh Jacobs: 11Chris Brooks: 5 (15 SPT)

After the first touchdown drive, the one where Love was injured, starting running back Josh Jacobs went to the locker room with a knee injury. By halftime, he was ruled out of the game entirely.

Even with Jacobs out of the mix, Chris Brooks only played five offensive snaps in the game, including a carry for eight yards and an elite blocking performance on the Savion Williams 33-yard reception. Free him.

Christian Watson: 41Romeo Doubs: 39 (2 SPT)Dontayvion Wicks: 29Matthew Golden: 17Savion Williams: 2 (4 SPT)CB Bo Melton: 1 (10 SPT)

Speaking of Savion, he only played two snaps in this game, but made it count with the long catch on third and ten. Bo Melton only got on the field once on offense, a 17-yard carry. Last week, 22 of Melton’s 25 offensive snaps came in the second half. This week, there was no bump up after halftime.

Dontayvion Wicks out-snapped Matthew Golden here, but I wouldn’t make too much of it. Golden, like Williams, came into the weekend listed as questionable on the Packers’ final injury report of the week. Also, head coach Matt LaFleur gave us a nothing burger on why Malik Heath didn’t travel with the team this week.

John FitzPatrick: 32Josh Whyle: 19 (5 SPT)Luke Musgrave: 18

Last week, Luke Musgrave looked like the Tucker Kraft replacement, coming in to play 77 percent of the offense’s snaps against the Philadelphia Eagles. This week, though, he was the third tight end in the rotation, a brutal indication of what the Packers think of the former second-round pick.

In the second half against the Giants, John FitzPatrick played 16 snaps, Josh Whyle played 11 and Musgrave played only 2. It’s never been more over.

Sean Rhyan: 51 (3 SPT)Jordan Morgan: 51 (3 SPT)Aaron Banks: 51 (3 SPT)Rasheed Walker: 51 (3 SPT)Zach Tom: 48 (3 SPT)Darian Kinnard: 8 (3 SPT)Anthony Belton: 0 (3 SPT)

Since Week 4, Darian Kinnard has been the Packers’ backup right tackle, leaving Anthony Belton to serve exclusively as the team’s backup left tackle. When Zach Tom missed three snaps against the Giants, Kinnard took those reps. He also played five more snaps in Green Bay’s six-offensive-line sets, which they only started last week.

Jacob Monk was also up for this game, but didn’t even get on the field goal unit. He was the only player in this game who didn’t take a single snap.

Micah Parsons: 59Rashan Gary: 38Kingsley Enagbare: 38 (8 SPT)Barryn Sorrell: 11Arron Mosby: 0 (17 SPT)

Against the Eagles, Kingsley Enagbare played only five fewer snaps than Rashan Gary on defense. In this game, Gary and Enagbare split time on defense, with Enagbare also playing eight snaps on special teams. The Packers just aren’t getting their money’s worth on Gary right now. If things don’t change, don’t be surprised if the team trades him this offseason.

Shoutout to Arron Mosby for playing 17 snaps on special teams, only one fewer than team-leader Isaiah McDuffie this week. Mosby went down with an apparent shoulder injury on a kickoff, but returned to the field for the next kickoff. He, along with Kristian Welch, is one of the two special-teams-only type of players that the Packers actually roster on their 48-man gameday roster (beyond the kicker, punter and long snapper).

Colby Wooden: 46 (3 SPT)Karl Brooks: 37 (7 SPT)Devonte Wyatt: 32 (3 SPT)Nazir Stackhouse: 13Warren Brinson: 5 (3 SPT)

For the second week in a row, the Packers rostered five defensive tackles on their gameday roster. Usually, when both Nazir Stackhouse and Warren Brinson are on the roster together, Brinson out-snaps Stackhouse (has been true when they’ve carried four or five at the position). This week, that changed with Stackhouse nearly tripling Brinson’s defensive snaps. I’ll have to look at how Stackhouse did later this week.

Edgerrin Cooper: 68 (3 SPT)Isaiah McDuffie: 50 (18 SPT)Quay Walker: 36 (2 SPT)Ty’Ron Hopper: 12 (16 SPT)Kristian Welch: 0 (14 SPT)

Quay Walker left the game with a stinger, which pushed Isaiah McDuffie from the third-linebacker role to playing Mike linebacker. Then, Ty’Ron Hopper stepped in as the team’s third linebacker.

Carrington Valentine: 67Keisean Nixon: 67 (3 SPT)Kamal Hadden: 0 (6 SPT)

Here’s one reason why Bo Melton doesn’t play a lot of offense right now: The team has only had four cornerbacks going into game, following the injury to Nate Hobbs. Over the last two weeks, Kamal Hadden has been reintroduced to special teams. Earlier on in the year, Hadden was making the gameday roster, but was not seeing snaps on either defense (still hasn’t played a regular-season NFL rep) or on special teams.

Xavier McKinney: 69 (8 SPT)Evan Williams: 64 (9 SPT)Javon Bullard: 45 (7 SPT)Kitan Oladapo: 1 (10 SPT)Zayne Anderson: 1 (15 SPT)

The Packers played their prevent defense on the final snap of the game, which featured Kitan Oladapo in as the second slot (opposite of Javon Bullard) and Zayne Anderson as the third safety (with Xavier McKinney and Evan Williams). Until Hobbs comes back, assume that Oladapo is one play away from playing in the slot if Bullard does go down. When given the chance over the last two seasons (including the preseason), Green Bay has played Anderson over Oladapo at the safety position, too.