GREEN BAY — Whether the 20-photo montage Romeo Doubs posted on Instagram Thursday was meant as a digital farewell to his favorite teammates or simply a nostalgic look at his past four NFL seasons, only the Green Bay packers soon-to-be free-agent wide receiver can say for sure.

But less than a week after the Packers’ season-ending 31-27 NFC wild card playoff loss to the rival Chicago Bears — a game in which Doubs caught eight passes for 124 yards and a touchdown on 11 targets, and a game after which he sat in the visitors’ locker room at Soldier Field in full uniform contemplating what might’ve been his last time wearing the green and gold — it felt a lot like a goodbye.

With a challenging salary-cap situation, three other veteran wide receivers (Christian Watson, Jayden Reed and Dontayvion Wicks) under contract for 2026 with the team having selected a pair of wide receivers in last year’s NFL Draft — Matthew Golden in the first round and Savion Williams in the third — there may not be room on the roster for Doubs.

Which Doubs surely knew as he sat in that locker, reflecting.

“Come in as a young kid from Los Angeles. Didn’t expect to be in Green Bay,” Doubs said that night. ‘Just all the feels. That’s it.”

Asked what his time with the Packers had meant to him, Doubs replied, “It meant a lot. It meant a lot. I don’t really have the words right now.”

Doubs, a 2022 fourth-round pick out of Nevada, and Watson, a 2022 second-round pick from North Dakota State, are the Packers’ longest tenured wide receivers and spent one year with four-time NFL MVP quarterback Aaron Rodgers as their quarterback, then the past three with Jordan Love.

In his four seasons in Green Bay, Doubs has caught 202 passes for 2,424 yards and 21 touchdowns on 320 targets in 59 regular-season games (50 starts). Of his 202 receptions, 135 went for first downs.

Incredibly, over those 59 games, Doubs never had a 100-yard game. But postseason Romeo is a different story.

In four playoff games, he’s caught 20 passes for 371 yards and two touchdowns on 25 targets in four games (all starts) and 16 of his 20 catches have picked up first downs.

Incredibly, Doubs never had a 100-yard game in the regular season, but he had two of them in his four postseason games — six catches for 151 yards and a touchdown in a 2023 wild card win over at Dallas, and his 124-yard game against the Bears last Saturday night.

“I mean, he was the reason we were in that game,” Watson said of Doubs’ performance against the Bears. “I think he was the Romeo Doubs that I’ve known since the moment I was at the Senior Bowl with him. He’s just a dawg. He’s a competitor.

“Day-in and day-out, practice, every single day of the week, whatever we’re doing, he’s competing. I saw exactly what I knew Romeo Doubs was capable of.”

Added Love: “Him and Christian are those older guys, those guys you can lean on. They’re going to know what they’re doing every day and go out there and execute. That’s Rome. He shows up every day ready to work, handles his business and then you see the results on the field. I think he’s got some of the best hands I’ve ever seen. So it’s just a testament to all the work.”

While some fans may remember how Doubs no-showed for work early in the 2024 season and received a one-game suspension for conduct detrimental to the team, there were no indications this season that he was anything other than fully committed to the team and accepting of his role—heading into an uncertain future.

“I’ve grown tremendously,” Doubs said. “That’s just what this life is about, man.”