As the world grieves the passing of Hulk Hogan, few moments hit as hard as what happened today at Lambeau Field.
Packers star Josh Jacobs — known for his power on the field — quietly broke down as he walked past the bronze statue of the wrestling legend now draped in silence.
No press conference. No rehearsed words. Just a whisper, choked by emotion:
“He was my childhood… my hero… the reason I believed in strength.”

For a man built on grit, the tear that traced his cheek said more than a thousand touchdowns ever could.
The stadium — usually echoing with chants and roars — stood still.
No music.
No movement.
Just the sound of the wind brushing past a legend carved in bronze… and the invisible weight of loss on everyone who stopped to look up and remember.
In a powerful gesture of respect, the Green Bay Packers have unveiled a quiet corner beneath the statue — a sacred section of the stands now set aside for reflection and remembrance.
No banners. No shouting. Just fans… and memories.
Already, tributes are piling up — handwritten notes, old wrestling belts, tiny American flags, and yellow foam fingers stained with time and tears.
“He gave us something to believe in when the world felt heavy,” one fan wrote.
“He wasn’t just muscle — he was meaning.”
A hero in the ring. A symbol far beyond it.
Today, strength means something quieter… and somehow, far deeper.
As the world grieves the passing of Hulk Hogan, few moments hit as hard as what happened today at Lambeau Field.
Packers star Josh Jacobs — known for his power on the field — quietly broke down as he walked past the bronze statue of the wrestling legend now draped in silence.
No press conference. No rehearsed words. Just a whisper, choked by emotion:
“He was my childhood… my hero… the reason I believed in strength.”
For a man built on grit, the tear that traced his cheek said more than a thousand touchdowns ever could.
The stadium — usually echoing with chants and roars — stood still.
No music.
No movement.
Just the sound of the wind brushing past a legend carved in bronze… and the invisible weight of loss on everyone who stopped to look up and remember.
In a powerful gesture of respect, the Green Bay Packers have unveiled a quiet corner beneath the statue — a sacred section of the stands now set aside for reflection and remembrance.
No banners. No shouting. Just fans… and memories.
Already, tributes are piling up — handwritten notes, old wrestling belts, tiny American flags, and yellow foam fingers stained with time and tears.
“He gave us something to believe in when the world felt heavy,” one fan wrote.
“He wasn’t just muscle — he was meaning.”
A hero in the ring. A symbol far beyond it.
Today, strength means something quieter… and somehow, far deeper.