As a Brutal Winter Struck Green Bay, Jordan Love and His Wife Quietly Stepped In
45,000 meals. Not a single headline—until now.
As Green Bay families endured the brutal winter of 2025-26, marked by sub-zero temperatures, skyrocketing heating bills, and grocery costs that forced impossible choices, Packers quarterback Jordan Love and his wife Ronika quietly became the lifeline no one knew about.
No press conferences. No social media posts. No photo opportunities.
Only the families struggling through Wisconsin’s harsh winter—those juggling $400 heating bills and wondering how to feed their children—knew the truth behind the 45,000 hot meals, fresh milk, and produce boxes that appeared at their doorsteps each morning between November and February.
Inside each box was a simple handwritten message: “Green Bay, you matter. — A friend”

The Silent Operation
Throughout four months, Jordan and Ronika personally sponsored 500 meals daily, partnering with Paul’s Pantry, St. John’s Homeless Shelter, and the NEW Community Shelter. Estimated cost: $225,000 from their personal funds—not sponsorships, not the NFL, but from a 25-year-old quarterback who couldn’t stand watching his neighbors go hungry.
“There are parents here who stay up at night worrying about keeping the heat on and feeding their kids,” Jordan reportedly told a close friend. “If we can ease that burden, even just a little, that means more to us than any trophy.”
When local news stations discovered the program in December, the Loves declined interviews. When nonprofits wanted to publicly thank them, they asked to remain anonymous. When the Packers’ PR team suggested social media posts, they firmly refused.
“This isn’t about us,” Ronika told one coordinator. “It’s about the families.”
More Than Just Food
Marcus Thompson, a warehouse worker on Green Bay’s east side, saw his heating bill jump from $180 to $420 this winter. “We were choosing between keeping the house warm and putting enough food on the table,” he said. “Then these boxes started showing up. Hot meals. Fresh vegetables. Milk for the kids.”
Thompson didn’t learn until January that the meals came from Jordan Love.
“Jordan Love brought hope to our whole block, and most people didn’t even know it,” he said, his voice breaking. “He’s out there every Sunday fighting for wins, and we’re screaming at our TVs. And the whole time, he’s been feeding our families.”
Sarah Martinez, a single mother working as a nursing assistant, shared similar emotions: “I was picking up extra shifts just to cover heating, which meant less time with my kids. These meals gave me my evenings back. I could actually be a mom again.”
The Ripple Effect

Local nonprofits report that the Loves’ generosity sparked something unexpected: families who received meals began volunteering to help others.
“People who were struggling themselves suddenly wanted to give back,” said Pastor David Chen of Green Bay Community Church. “One woman told me, ‘Someone helped me when I needed it most. I have to pass it forward.’ That’s the Jordan Love effect—it’s contagious.”
Since the story quietly emerged through grateful families rather than promotion, neighbors have stepped forward to contribute. Local restaurants pledged surplus meals. Grocery stores offered discounted produce. Residents are sponsoring meals for those in need.
“Jordan and Ronika didn’t just feed 45,000 meals,” said Jennifer Walsh, director of Paul’s Pantry. “They fed a movement.”
A Pattern of Quiet Giving
Those close to the Love family say this fits perfectly with who Jordan is off camera. Since establishing his Hands of 10ve Foundation in May 2024, Love has donated over 1,300 pairs of cleats to 26 youth football teams, hosted holiday shopping sprees with $300 gift cards per child, organized coat drives, and run youth camps—rarely seeking publicity.
“Jordan doesn’t do charity for PR,” said one Packers staff member. “He does it because it genuinely bothers him when people are struggling.”
The contrast is striking: while many athletes leverage charitable work for brand building, Love spent $225,000 feeding his community while actively avoiding credit. He orchestrated this entire operation while navigating intense scrutiny as Aaron Rodgers’ successor, leading the Packers to the playoffs, and facing weekly criticism.
Every Sunday, some Green Bay residents screamed at their TVs when Love threw an incompletion—completely unaware they were eating meals he’d paid for.
“I yelled at my TV when Jordan threw that interception against the Vikings,” Thompson admitted. “And that whole time, he was feeding my family. That’s the thing—he never wanted us to know.”
Why It Matters

When reached for comment, the Loves declined to be interviewed. “Jordan and Ronika prefer to keep their charitable work private,” a statement read. “They encourage others to get involved with local organizations making a difference in our community.”
That response is quintessentially Jordan Love—deflecting credit, elevating others, keeping focus on the work rather than the worker.
For the families who now know the truth about those daily deliveries marked “Green Bay, you matter,” the sentiment has taken on new meaning. Jordan Love matters to Green Bay—not just because he’s the quarterback, but because when the city needed someone to care, he did. Quietly. Consistently. Without asking for anything in return.
For one brutal Wisconsin winter, it’s the kind of compassion that literally kept families warm, fed, and hopeful—even when they didn’t know who to thank.
Now they do. And they won’t forget.