FOOTBALL GREEN BAY — To be accurate, the point of the question was supposed to be about Dontayvion Wicks, whose 65-yard touchdown catch in Saturday's preseason opener had given the Green Bay Packers' starting offense the rest of the afternoon off after just three plays from scrimmage. But the inquiry was prefaced by a reference to the seemingly constant offseason talk about the unique dynamic of the Packers' wide receiver group, where none of their young-but-talented pass catchers could rightly claim the No. 1 spot atop the depth chart in a given week.

And once coach Matt LaFleur heard that phrase — "No. 1 receiver" — well, the conversation turned. Quickly.

"I want to vomit every time I hear 'No. 1 receiver,' to be honest with you," LaFleur said Monday, two days after his team's 23-10 win over the Cleveland Browns. "It drives me crazy.

That's something that you guys talk about." "I want to vomit every time I hear 'No. 1 receiver,' to be honest with you.

It drives me crazy. That's something that you guys talk about." Matt LaFleur, green Bay Packers coach The topic certainly has been talked about a lot, both as the offseason program was beginning and after the offseason had come to an end.

And with good reason. The Packers' top four wideouts — Romeo Doubs, Christian Watson, Jayden Reed and Wicks — are all among the NFL's most gifted up-and-coming young receivers. From game to game, there's no way of knowing which one will be quarterback Jordan Love's top target.

Reed .