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David Bakhtiari brings raw competition to practice with WWE-style belt

GREEN BAY, Wis. -- David Bakhtiari marched into the Green Bay Packers training camp practice on Saturday like Brock Lesnar entered the ring -- with a WWE-style championship belt over his right shoulder.

When the two-hour, 39-minute practice -- the first of camp in full pads -- was over, the Pro Bowl left tackle had defended his title.

Or so he claimed.

The results might be subjective, but this is how NFL players amuse themselves during the monotony of camp. To guys like Bakhtiari and defensive tackle Mike Daniels, this isn’t contrived. It’s what can help lift the Packers from a team that’s a regular in the playoffs to one that’s back in the Super Bowl for the first time in seven years.

It’s also part of a budding practice-field rivalry between two of the Packers’ young stars. For a couple of years, Daniels has talked about ramping up the intensity level on the team, and Bakhtiari was happy to oblige.

“What he’s trying to do -- and I love it -- is that he’s trying to get the best out of everybody,” Daniels said. “He’s had a lot of success, he’s a Pro Bowler, an All-Pro and now he wants everyone else to come up to that level, too, and he knows the best way to get that out of people is by demanding great competition. He wants that free-agent rookie to come at him the same way Clay [Matthews] and Nick Perry would. That’s going to make him better and it’s going to make them better, and I love it.”

The belt goes to the side of the ball that wins the daily run-blocking drills. After a spirited session Saturday, Bakhtiari lifted the belt over his head and showed it off to the crowd like a proud champion.

“If Mike Daniels can win it -- if -- then he can walk it back and have it in his locker,” Bakhtiari said. “But so far he’s 0-1.”

Bakhtiari had the belt customized with Packers logos and said it will become a staple on the practice field during camp.

“I was bored in my offseason, so I bought a WWE heavyweight championship belt just to have a little more fun in the run-blocking stations,” Bakhtiari said. “I know it’s fun for the fans and everyone else to watch us hit in pads, but it sucks. So this just kind of helps us take our mind off it and add a little more competition, because the last thing we want is to be lethargic out there and have coach screaming at us and telling us to redo it again or any of that.”

Bakhtiari said when he got the idea this offseason, he texted Daniels a picture of it.

“He said, 'Mike, I just bought this, man. Let’s go,’” Daniels recalled. “I just sent him back a bunch of smiles, like, ‘Yes, sir!’ It’s great. It’s great. We need that.”