RSS Jets Team Notes

ESPN rates the Jets at the bottom of the NFL heading into the offseason

imagn-27826316.jpg

Dec 14, 2025; Jacksonville, Florida, USA;New York Jets head coach Aaron Glenn stands on the sideline against the Jacksonville Jaguars at EverBank Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Travis Register-Imagn Images | Travis Register-Imagn Images

Now that the Super Bowl is over, ESPN has compiled early power rankings for 2026. It should come as no surprise that the Jets rank very low at 31st overall.

31. New York Jets

Offseason in three words:
Start over (again)

Very few positives came out of coach Aaron Glenn’s first season (3-14), so the Jets are resetting in key areas — two new coordinators and (probably) a new quarterback. Glenn overhauled his staff (10 departures), creating the perception of a dysfunctional team starting from square one. The positives: four of the top 44 picks in the draft and about $80 million in cap room, per OverTheCap.com. The question is, will the Jets use the resources wisely? — Rich Cimini

Only the Cleveland Browns ranked lower than the Jets.

The talk of starting over says it all. We are entering year two of Aaron Glenn’s tenure as head coach, but the Jets aren’t any closer to being a good team than they were this time last year. In fact, you could make a good case they are now further away.

It is going to take a lot of work to get this team into working order this offseason. The Jets have resources, but they must be used wisely.

Source: https://www.ganggreennation.com/new...-bottom-of-the-nfl-heading-into-the-offseason
 
Jets finalize their 2026 coaching staff with hiring of veteran coach to manage quarterbacks

imagn-26141263.jpg

Cleveland Browns quarterback Shedeur Sanders (12) works with quarterbacks coach Bill Musgrave during NFL rookie minicamp at the Cleveland Browns training facility on Friday, May 9, 2025, in Berea, Ohio. | Jeff Lange / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

The Jets have announced the last of their coaching hires for 2026.

We've filled out our offensive coaching staff.

— New York Jets (@nyjets) February 10, 2026

Of these, Ryan as passing game coordinator is the most significant. This hire was reported over the weekend. The hiring of Roberts as tight ends coach was similarly reported over the weekend.

Among the previously unknown hires, Musgrave’s is the noteworthy one. That is mainly because he will be working with the team’s quarterbacks in 2026. We don’t know which players will be under center for the Jets in the upcoming season. It is plausible, perhaps even likely, that the team completely overhauls its quarterback room and brings back none of the signal callers from 2025.

Musgrave is a long-time coach in the NFL and at major colleges. He has been an offensive coordinator for six teams in the NFL. He also has worked for seven teams with the quarterback coach title (occasionally doing both jobs at the same time).

Source: https://www.ganggreennation.com/new...iring-of-veteran-coach-to-manage-quarterbacks
 
New York Jets Flight Connections 02/11/26

imagn-25022543.jpg

Dec 15, 2024; Jacksonville, Florida, USA; New York Jets wide receiver Garrett Wilson (5), offensive linebacker John Simpson (76), tight end Jeremy Ruckert (89), and offensive linebacker Olu Fashanu (74) celebrate a touchdown against the Jacksonville Jaguars during the first quarter at EverBank Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Morgan Tencza-Imagn Images | Morgan Tencza-Imagn Images

Good morning Gang Green Nation!

Here are your links to your New York Jets this glorious Wednesday in February:

Eric Allen – Jets Finalize Offensive Coaching Staff with Six Additions

Randy Lange – Jets Offensive Roster Overview | New Coordinator Added, QB Remains a Work in Progress

Field Yates – 2026 NFL mock draft: Yates’ first-round pick predictions

Ben Solak – How QB-needy NFL teams can approach the bad offseason market

Christian Arnold – Sam Darnold has message for Jets fans after winning Super Bowl 2026 with Seahawks

Ryan Dunleavy – Jets find new QBs coach in Bill Musgrave — without clarity of who he’ll lead

Nick Wojton – 3 Jets takeaways from Seahawks’ Super Bowl 60 win vs. Patriots

Nick Wojton – Ranking all 32 NFL teams (including Jets) by 2026 strength of schedule

Justin Melo – Jets may already have succession plan in place at OC

Connor Byrne – Cardinals Will Look To Trade Kyler Murray

Cecil Merkerson III – Jets target Caleb Downs as defensive chess piece in 2026 NFL Draft

Matt Sullivan – Jets surprisingly dubbed as best landing spot for Cowboys’ George Pickens

Michael Kaskey-Blomain – New York Jets named top landing spot for Super Bowl 60 MVP

Matt Sullivan – Jets predicted by ESPN to win trade sweepstakes for $230 million Pro Bowl QB

Matt Sullivan – ESPN analyst would be ‘surprised’ if Jets trade for $212 million QB

Billy Heyen – Jets know what a trade for QB Kyler Murray could cost them

Glenn Naughton – Aaron Glenn Goes big on Experience With Coaching Staff v2.0

Charlie Baduini – Jets starter unlikely to return after fractured relationship with coaching staff

Justin Fried – Sam Darnold’s heartfelt message to Jets fans will make you emotional

Mike Luciano – Jets move one step closer to shocking Derek Carr move with latest coaching hire

Charlie Baduini – Connor Rogers’ latest mock draft will have Jets fans pumped about the offseason

Charlie Baduini – Jets’ veteran QB option with ties to Frank Reich expected to be released

The Lead Staff – The Jets Must Fix Their Broken Defense in The 2026 Offseason

Mike Roberts – Yes, the Jets Should Pursue Four-Time Pro Bowl Quarterback

Michael Zimmelman – Jets Could Pursue Un-Retired QB Derek Carr

Benedetto Vitale – Sam Darnold thanks Jets fans for support in Super Bowl journey

Benjamin Adducchio – Jets adding veteran, former Browns QB coach to staff

Colin Loughran – NFL rumors: Will Jets push for Kyler Murray trade amid disastrous QB situation?

Here are your missed connections from yesterday.

Source: https://www.ganggreennation.com/new-york-jets-news/91647/new-york-jets-flight-connections-02-11-26
 
Lessons from the Super Bowl Champions

imagn-28190856.jpg

Feb 8, 2026; Santa Clara, CA, USA; Seattle Seahawks head coach Mike MacDonald celebrates with quarterback Sam Darnold (14) after defeating the New England Patriots in Super Bowl LX at Levi's Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Kyle Terada-Imagn Images | Kyle Terada-Imagn Images

The 2025 NFL season has officially wrapped up. While Jets fans endured a week-to-week horror show, the year ended on a somewhat sweet note as the Seahawks dismantled the Jets’ arch-rival New England Patriots in the Super Bowl.

Sure, it was bittersweet watching Sam Darnold finally accomplish what many hoped he would eight years ago in New York. But at the end of the day, the consensus was clear: anyone but the Patriots.

Now, as the Jets head into another critical offseason, it’s worth taking a step back and looking at what they might learn from Seattle’s incredible season and Super Bowl run.


Lesson 1: Defense still matters… a lot​


A popular sentiment over the last few years is that today’s NFL is all about offense. While that’s true to an extent, the importance of defense feels like it’s been oddly minimized.

Seattle’s defense absolutely dominated what was considered an elite New England offense led by an MVP-caliber quarterback. And this wasn’t a one-off performance. Seattle’s defense overwhelmed teams all season long, finishing #1 in EPA per play allowed and #1 in DVOA.

This also marks the second straight year that the top defense in DVOA has won the Super Bowl (Philadelphia did it in 2024). Zooming out even further, the trend becomes hard to ignore. Throughout the 2020s, every Super Bowl winner but one (the 2022 Chiefs, who fielded a historically great offense) ranked inside the top seven defensively by DVOA. Every championship defense was at least above average. And outside of Brady- or Mahomes-led teams, you have to go back more than a decade to find a Super Bowl winner without a top-five defense.

This isn’t an argument that defense matters more than offense. You almost certainly need to be good at both. But elite defenses have pushed back hard in recent years and have outright taken over seasons.

What makes Seattle especially interesting is that they don’t rely on overwhelming star power. Instead, they’re loaded with very good defensive players across the roster. Which brings us to the next lesson….


Lesson 2: Defense can rebuild… quickly​


Not long ago, Seattle’s defense looked uncomfortably familiar to one we just watched as Jets fans.

Before the Mike Macdonald hire, this Seahawks unit (still coasting on the long-gone Legion of Boom reputation) was flat-out bad. In 2023, the defense bottomed out, finishing 30th in EPA/play allowed and 28th in DVOA. They played a lot of young players and no matter how you slice it, they stunk.

Then came Macdonald.

In 2024, Seattle jumped to 10th in DVOA and 10th in EPA/play allowed. One year later, they had become one of the most dominant defensive units the league has seen in recent memory.

Macdonald deserves plenty of credit, but the turnaround wasn’t entirely just about coaching. Seattle made a series of sharp personnel decisions that added up quickly.

Devon Witherspoon blossomed into a star early, but they smartly supplemented around him. Julian Love was a Giants cast-off signed to a modest two-year, $12 million deal who steadily improved. Tyrice Knight was a 4th-round pick in 2024. Nick Emmanwori came via the 2nd round in 2025. Players like Coby Bryant (4th round, 2022) and Boye Mafe (2nd round, 2022) took real steps forward after being merely average to mediocre early on. A solid veteran addition like DeMarcus Lawrence paid dividends.

This was very much a sum-of-its-parts defense. Not built around three or four superstars, but stocked with depth through the draft and free agency. Once Macdonald took over play-calling, the younger talent flourished.

While the Jets are still searching for an answer at quarterback, they do have draft capital and cap space. Seattle’s blueprint shows that pouring resources into depth (rather than chasing a couple of splashy names) can completely flip a defense in a hurry.


Lesson 3: A QB’s surroundings matter immensely if you don’t have an elite one​


This is a lesson the Jets seem determined to ignore.

To be clear, Sam Darnold has improved since leaving New York. He’s more consistent and more comfortable. But some of the narrative around his breakout is overblown. Darnold has always been a talented quarterback who desperately needed help.

He wasn’t the engine of this Seahawks team. He finished 3rd in interceptions and 18th in Total QBR. He was good enough though and then the supporting cast did the heavy lifting.

Jaxon Smith-Njigba exploded into a bonafide elite receiver. The offensive line ranked 12th in pass-block win rate and 8th in run-block win rate, widely viewed as a well-above-average unit. Seattle built legitimate depth at pass catcher, finishing #2 in the league in PFF receiving grades as a team. They paired that with two strong running backs who combined for the top PFF rushing grade in the league. And all of this was guided by a good play-caller.

For two straight seasons now, we’ve seen flawed quarterbacks pilot strong offenses because of the talent around them.

If you don’t have an elite quarterback, the formula is clear: protect him with a strong offensive line, give him quality receivers, back him up with a great defense to control game scripts, and hire a play-caller who knows what he’s doing. You’ll be more than fine.

For the first time in years, the Jets might actually be positioned to attempt this approach. They have foundational offensive linemen and Garrett Wilson. The question is whether they’ll finally show the patience and discipline to build around that core.


Conclusion​


Seattle’s Super Bowl win should be a clear lesson for the Jets as they head into another offseason.

Championship teams aren’t always built by chasing the biggest name in free agency. By attacking roster depth through smart drafting, calculated free-agent signings, and quality coaching, teams can win even without the traditional star-studded profile of past champions.

Now we wait to see if the Jets learn anything at all.

Source: https://www.ganggreennation.com/new-york-jets-analysis/91634/lessons-from-the-super-bowl-champions
 
Jets Reacts Survey: Does the new coaching staff make you more confident?

imagn-27864142.jpg

Dec 21, 2025; New Orleans, Louisiana, USA; New York Jets head coach Aaron Glenn during warm ups before the game against the New Orleans Saints at Caesars Superdome. Mandatory Credit: Stephen Lew-Imagn Images | Stephen Lew-Imagn Images

Welcome to SB Nation Reacts, a survey of fans across the NFL. Throughout the year we ask questions of the most plugged-in Jets fans and fans across the country. Sign up here to participate in the weekly emailed surveys.

Aaron Glenn’s first season did not go according to plan as the Jets stumbled to a 3-14 record. Glenn kept his job despite the team’s struggles. The same was not true of most of his coaching staff. The head coach made widespread changes to the staff. The Jets parted ways with both coordinators and numerous key position coaches.

A new staff is in place, anchored by new coordinators Frank Reich and Brian Duker.

How do you feel about these changes by the Jets? Do you feel more confident in the team after these changes? We ask in our SB Nation Reacts survey this week. Vote in the poll below, and we will bring you the results later in the week.

Source: https://www.ganggreennation.com/new...he-new-coaching-staff-make-you-more-confident
 
New York Jets Flight Connections 02/12/26

imagn-27933571.jpg

Jan 4, 2026; Orchard Park, New York, USA; Buffalo Bills quarterback Mitchell Trubisky (11) passes the ball under pressure from New York Jets defensive tackle Jowon Briggs (91) during the third quarter at Highmark Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Gregory Fisher-Imagn Images | Gregory Fisher-Imagn Images

Good morning Gang Green Nation! The NFL offseason is underway. For now, it’s a bit of a dead period. Free agency is still almost a month away. The 2026 NFL draft is more than two months away. The only thing of much note in the next few weeks is the NFL combine, which is scheduled to begin in 11 days. In the meantime, we wait. And peruse endless mock drafts and fake trade proposals that will never happen. Ah well, there’s always curling.

Here are your links to your New York Jets this glorious Thursday in February:

Jack Bell – Jets Defensive Roster Overview | Rookies Azareye’h Thomas, Malachi Moore and Kiko Mauigoa Will Only Get Better

Associated Press – Ex-Jets LB Darron Lee jailed without bond on murder charge

Bridget Hyland – Sam Darnold has a message for Jets fans after Super Bowl win

Patrick Reilly – Ex-Jets first rounder Darron Lee could face death penalty as grisly new details revealed about girlfriend’s murder

Connor Hughes – 5 free agents Jets could target during 2026 offseason

Justin Melo – If the Jets trade for Cardinals QB Kyler Murray, it will be before this key date

Nick Wojton – Who is a breakout candidate for the Jets in 2026?

Justin Melo – Jets add veteran QB coach to complete coaching staff on offense

Justin Melo – Jets’ potential top free agent target to sign has strong Aaron Glenn ties

Connor Byrne – Jets Hire Bill Musgrave As QBs Coach

Jonathan Jones – 2026 NFL franchise tag primer: What we’re hearing on top candidates and early tag decisions

Ryan Wilson – Wilson’s 2026 NFL Draft Big Board: Top 125 rankings with few answers at QB but franchise talent elsewhere

Bryan Ysabel – Who Was the First Quarterback the NY Jets Drafted?

Charlie Baduini – Jets preparing for complicated offensive line decision this offseason

Charlie Baduini – Jets may have only one realistic option to keep Breece Hall this offseason

Mike Luciano – Latest free agency projection matches Jets to a pair of Aaron Glenn’s old Lions

Michael Zimmelman – Colts Free Agent WR Is a Perfect Fit for Jets Offense

Malik Brown – Jets pass on QB for defense in new ESPN mock draft

Here are your missed connections from yesterday.

Source: https://www.ganggreennation.com/new-york-jets-news/91655/new-york-jets-flight-connections-02-12-26
 
Four Jets players have contracts voiding today

imagn-25022528.jpg

Dec 15, 2024; Jacksonville, Florida, USA; New York Jets offensive linebacker John Simpson (76) before the game against the Jacksonville Jaguars at EverBank Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Morgan Tencza-Imagn Images | Morgan Tencza-Imagn Images

Four Jets players will see their contracts void today.

The contracts of four #Jets players are set to void today, leaving behind a combined $13.375M of dead cap for the upcoming season.

S Andre Cisco
LB Quincy Williams
QB Tyrod Taylor
G John Simpson

— Spotrac (@spotrac) February 13, 2026

Teams sometimes structure deals that void on a certain date.

Simpson, for example, signed what was nominally a five year contract in the 2024 offseason, but it was written with a clause to automatically void after year two. Because this contract was for five years on paper, the Jets were able to pay Simpson $12 million the last two years but only be charged $7.7 million against the salary cap. The other $4.3 million in charges was pushed to the last three years of the deal.

Voiding a contract essentially means the player is automatically cut on a certain date. Thus the entire $4.3 million bill becomes due on the Jets salary cap in 2026.

The process works the similarly way for these other players.

Void years have become a common mechanism for NFL teams to kick salary cap hits for players down the road. When used effectively, they can help good teams keep important players. When used ineffectively…well…you can just look at the Jets’ salary cap ledger from the last few years to tell you all you need to know.

Source: https://www.ganggreennation.com/new...our-jets-players-have-contracts-voiding-today
 
Woody Johnson invents a new way to try and weasel his way out of being accountable

imagn-24545259.jpg

Oct 20, 2024; Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA; New York Jets owner Woody Johnson arrives for a game against the Pittsburgh Steelers at Acrisure Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Barry Reeger-Imagn Images | Barry Reeger-Imagn Images

The NFL Players Association has annually asked its players to grade their team on numerous categories. These categories include the quality of the locker room, the quality of the training staff, and the quality of the weight room among others.

Another of the categories is owner quality. A year ago, Jets owner Woody Johnson was the only of the league’s owners to receive an F grade from his players.

After a disastrous season where Johnson was the driving force behind some of the most destructive moves, fans might hope the owner would be self-reflective and vow to improve. Johnson went in another direction, calling the grade “totally bogus.”

He proceeded to take things a step further, pushing for the abolition of these report cards.

In this endeavor, Johnson has evidently succeeded.

Sources: The NFL informed all 32 teams today in a memo that it prevailed in its grievance vs. the NFLPA and its “team report cards.” An arbitrator determined that the NFLPA’s conduct violated the CBA and ordered it to stop making public any future report cards. pic.twitter.com/mss5WUQjhF

— Adam Schefter (@AdamSchefter) February 13, 2026
This is a win for Woody Johnson. You may recall that Johnson, panned by his players in the 2024 report card, said the NFLPA report cards are "totally bogus." https://t.co/Ush0aRSzRX

— Rich Cimini (@RichCimini) February 13, 2026

This report card had been around for years, and Johnson took no interest until he received the F grade a year ago.

If Johnson put half as much effort into actually improving the team as he did in trying to block the NFLPA from releasing grades that make him look bad, the Jets might not be the league’s least successful franchise.

In any event, Johnson should savor his success. It isn’t often he actually has any sort of success on anything NFL related.

Source: https://www.ganggreennation.com/new...y-and-weasel-his-way-out-of-being-accountable
 
Chloe Kim, Woody Johnson, Vince Lombardi, and the pursuit of excellence

imagn-28220788.jpg

Feb 12, 2026; Livigno, Italy; Chloe Kim of the United States celebrates her silver medal in the women's halfpipe final during the Milano Cortina 2026 Olympic Winter Games at Livigno Snow Park. Mandatory Credit: Nathan Ray Seebeck-Imagn Images | Nathan Ray Seebeck-Imagn Images

This is Chloe Kim.

gettyimages-2261138002.jpg

She is a 25 year old Olympic snowboarder.

This is Woody Johnson.

NFL: New York Jets at Miami Dolphins

He’s the 78 year old owner of the New York Jets.

On the surface it doesn’t seem like these two have much in common. That would be an understatement.

Like I’m sure many of you I have been watching the Winter Olympics a lot over the last week despite not knowing much about the sports I’m watching other than ice hockey. Watching people perform athletic feats at high speed on snow and/or ice is very exciting even if I’m not entirely sure what is going on.

Chloe Kim’s story caught my eye. She competed in the women’s snowboarding halfpipe event at the Olympics. Kim was seeking a third consecutive gold medal. She won her first Olympic gold eight years ago in Pyeongchang, South Korea. Four years later she repeated at the 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing, China.

Kim fell short in her attempt to win a third consecutive Olympic gold medal in 2026. Instead she took home silver with a second place finish.

Reading about her story and her reaction to losing got me thinking.

It wasn’t clear that Chloe Kim would even be able to compete in the Olympics after dislocating her shoulder in January. She missed critical training time. Kim had only two weeks to prepare for the Olympics and needed to wear a shoulder brace during her competition.

The competition came. Kim finished second.

She then said the following.

“I think, for so long, I won events doing the same run over and over and over again,” Kim said. “I think seeing this new shift in progression has inspired me to push my limits and try things I’ve never done before.”

She also thanked her peers for pushing her, stating, “I just want to say to the entire women’s field: Thank you so much for giving me that opportunity. Because if they didn’t push me, I wouldn’t have been able to see how far I could go as a snowboarder.”
gettyimages-84094242.jpg

This is Vince Lombardi. He is widely regarded as the greatest coach in the history of professional football. Lombardi won five NFL championships and 73 percent of his games in ten years leading Green Bay (for nine) and Washington (for one).

The most quoted line of Lombardi’s career was, “Winning isn’t everything. It’s the only thing.”

Through the last sixty years, that quote has been used to emphasize the importance of victory.

What many people don’t realize is Lombardi meant something different. Late in his life he lamented the following to Jerry Izenberg, a legendary sports writer who spent his career working in the New York area.

He told me one day, “I wish to hell I’d never said that.” I said, “Well, don’t you believe it?” He said, “What I believe is, if you go out on a football field Sunday, or any other endeavor in life, and you leave every fiber of what you have on that field, when the game finally ends, then you’ve won, and to me that tells a lot more than the final score. And I never made that clear.”

On the surface, you probably wouldn’t say Lombardi has much in common with Kim or Johnson. If you had to choose, you might say he has more in common with Johnson since they occupy the same league in the same sport.

I think, however, it’s easy to see how Kim’s performance in the Olympics embodies Lombardi’s message.

Look I’m not going to pretend to be an expert on snowboarding. An evergreen joke of mine watching the Winter Olympics is how every few minutes something like this happens:

(Winter Olympics athlete does something in a competition.)

Me: Wow, that was incredible.

NBC Annoncer: What a colossal blunder.


But I would have to say that in context Chloe Kim winning a silver medal fighting through an injury that cut short her ability to train and perhaps impacted her performance was incredibly impressive.

More than that, I look at the way she praised her competitors for upping their respective games. Kim stated that her competition has improved tremendously, and that has pushed her to become better. It’s entirely possible that Kim is performance at a higher level now than she was when winning gold eight and four years ago.

A few days ago I would have told you that I’m enjoying the Winter Olympics for the reason I stated above.

People moving fast on ice/snow = exciting.

That’s surely part of it. So is generally wanting to support the athletes representing our country.

I think there’s something else to it, though. These events are a rare oasis from how toxic our sports landscape has become.

I genuinely hate the First Take-ization of sports culture today. The analysis of every major event has to be condensed into outrage either over a high profile player messing up, a coach making a bad decision, or an official blowing a call.

Take the AFC Championship Game. Did Sean Payton make the wrong decision passing up a field goal that would have put his team up 10-0 in the second quarter by going for it on a fourth day? I can understand why someone might argue that. (I can also understand the case for going for it.)

You can disagree with Payton’s decision. You can even say it was a factor in the team losing. Did it really deserve 80 percent of the attention in days following the game to explain why Denver lost? In a championship game decided by a field goal, there are lots of reasons one team won and the other lost. The Broncos had a backup quarterback playing who made major errors. Denver missed two subsequent field goals in the game. A major snowstorm arrived in the second half that had a major impact on game conditions. In a situation that wasn’t completely dissimilar, New England went for it on a fourth down later in the game and was awarded a first down on a questionable spot.

These are but some of the reasons New England won. Railing about Payton nonstop generates outrage and attention, though.

What’s nice about these Olympics sports is our resident hot take artists don’t care enough to grace us with rants about athletes coming up small and settling for silver.

We can instead celebrate Chloe Kim pushing herself to the limit and finishing second.

The truth is nobody can win all the time, even the best of the best. Tom Brady lost three Super Bowl. LeBron James has lost in the NBA Finals six times. Sidney Crosby lost his first time in the Stanley Cup Final. Novak Djokovic has lost 14 Grand Slam Finals.

Even the all-time greats who didn’t lose in the championship round lack unblemished records. Joe Montana famously won all four of his Super Bowls, but he lost three times as the starting quarterback in the conference championship round. Michael Jordan might have been 6-0 in the NBA Finals, but before any of those he suffered a pair of bitter losses to the hated Detroit Pistons in the Eastern Conference Finals.

Bill Russell is the greatest winner in American team sports history. He won 11 times in NBA Finals. He did, however, lose in 1958 to the St. Louis Hawks. Russell battled through an ankle injury but was too compromised to lead his team to victory.

I’m sure if ESPN covered Olympic snowboarding the way it covers professional football, we would be subject to wall-to-wall panels screaming at each other about Kim falling short this time and debating whether her Olympic window is closed.

It’s better that we don’t have that. The greats don’t always win, but they do give it their all seeking victory. It was true of Russell back in 1958. It was true of Kim this week. If that’s good enough for Vince Lombardi, it should be good enough for the rest of us.

That brings us to Woody Johnson. Players and coaches aren’t the only ones who should be relentlessly pursuing greatness. In professional sports, the owner must set the standard.

Each year the NFL Players Association asks players to grade their team in numerous areas. The areas subject to grading are the quality of the locker room, training staff, weight room, dining area, travel arrangements, and other matters.

The grades have traditionally been publicized.

The grades don’t predict how successful a franchise will be on the field. A year ago the Miami Dolphins came away as the highest graded team in the league. The Kansas City Chiefs finished 26th, mainly driven by the team’s outdated facilities. If you have to choose between a nice locker room or Patrick Mahomes, you’re going to choose Mahomes every time. A great quarterback leads to more wins than a great facility of a great cafeteria.

Still, these report cards have use. The players are directly telling their teams ways they can improve. For the Chiefs 26th was an improvement over the previous year when they finished 31st. Kansas City’s organization took criticism from the previous year to heart and implemented some of the changes recommended by the players.

It drew a great deal of attention a year ago when Jets players were the only team in the league to give their owner an F grade on the report card.

  • Owner Woody Johnson’s average rating for perceived willingness to invest in the facilities is 5.58 out of 10 from Jets players, a ranking of 32 out of 32 owners in the league.
  • The players feel that Johnson does not contribute to a positive team culture, a rank of 32 out of 32.
  • The players feel that Johnson is somewhat committed to building a competitive team, a rank of 31 of the 32 NFL owners.

It isn’t hard to see why players felt that way. Johnson’s erratic and hands on management style led the Jets to disaster in 2024 as the team stumbled to an embarrassing 5-12 record.

You might think a losing season would cause the owner to do some serious self-reflection and vow to change for the better, committing to pursue victory. After all, the 2024 season wasn’t just a one off. It was the fourteenth straight year the Jets had missed the Playoffs.

Johnson went in the opposite direction. He called the grade “bogus.” His players told him they need him to be better. He scoffed at their feedback.

Woody eventually took things a step further,reportedly spearheading an effort to make the NFLPA suppress the grades. Yes, Woody Johnson’s response to constructive criticism in the face of failure isn’t to think hard about how he can improve. It’s to prevent the criticism from being publicized.

The Jets’ owner apparently was victorious in this endeavor as yesterday reports surfaced that an arbitrator ruled that the NFLPA cannot make the results of future report cards public.

Woody Johnson has never shied away from publicly criticizing a player he feels is underperforming. Evidently owners are allowed to rip players who don’t perform well, but player complaints about owners can never see the light of day.

Whether or not the results of the NFLPA’s report cards are released to the public, the problems with Johnson’s management remain. This is not a man with a single-minded focus on doing everything he personally can to help his team win. He is focused on stifling criticism and deflecting blame to others when things go wrong.

There is an old saying that a broken clock is right twice a day. For the most part, the First Take-ization of our sports media leads to unfair narratives. Great athletes and great teams get roasted when they don’t deserve it. Just think back to this past NFL season. How many times did a show on ESPN ask what was wrong with the Chiefs? Has Andy Reid run out of magic? Has Patrick Mahomes declined? Is the title window closed?

The reality is that it’s really hard to stay at the top year after year after year. We really should have asked how it was possible the Chiefs were able to make the AFC Championship Game seven straight times before finally having a bad year.

Occasionally, though, First Take and its numerous knockoffs get it right. Woody Johnson truly deserves the outrage that comes his way. He does everything the wrong way and then gets indignant when anybody points it out. There is no focus on winning or fixing what is wrong with his team. There is only focus on evading blame and placing it on others.

Chloe Kim might not have won gold in Milan, but her response to defeat shows why she is one of the biggest winners in sports.

Woody Johnson has run the NFL’s least successful franchise of the last decade and a half, and his response to defeat shows why he’s the biggest loser in sports.

If Coach Lombardi was still with us, I bet he’d agree.

Source: https://www.ganggreennation.com/new...-vince-lombardi-and-the-pursuit-of-excellence
 
New York Jets Flight Connections 02/14/26

imagn-21398054.jpg

Sep 11, 2023; East Rutherford, New Jersey, USA; New York Jets owner Woody Johnson on the field before the game against the Buffalo Bills at MetLife Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Vincent Carchietta-Imagn Images

Happy Saturday, Jets fans!

Below are your Jets links to start your weekend.

NY Jets – What are the Jets’ Biggest Needs Heading into the Offseason?

Ryan Dunleavy – Woody Johnson gets win with NFLPA report card ruling

Eric Allen – 10 Jets Defensive and 1 Special Teams Players Who Can Potentially Become Unrestricted Free Agents

Nick Faria – The next critical challenge that awaits the NY Jets

Michael Nania – Kyler Murray to the Jets? Why it should (and shouldn’t) happen

Robby Sabo – 4 New York Jets contracts hit void, adding $13.375M in dead cap

Robby Sabo – NY Jets’ Woody Johnson vindicated by report card ruling; ok, now what?

Nick Wojton – Full list of new hires as Aaron Glenn fills openings on Jets’ coaching staff

Nick Wojton – Report: Pending free agent QB Tyrod Taylor open to return to Jets

Zach Presnell – Jets Linked to $6 Million Veteran Lions LB in Free Agency

Charlie Baduini – Jets named best landing spot for 1,400-yard WR despite franchise tag rumors

Charlie Baduini – Jets go all-in on fixing their defense in Field Yates’ latest mock draft

Justin Fried – Jets latest Breece Hall dilemma could force unorthodox strategy

Justin Fried – Woody Johnson’s latest embarrassment reinforces harsh truth about Jets culture

Mike Luciano – Rumored Quincy Williams free agency scenario is what every Jets fan expected

Patrick McAvoy – Derek Carr’s Comments Aren’t What Jets Wanted to Hear

Patrick McAvoy – Jets Have Shot at Micah Parsons-Level Prospect at No. 2

Patrick McAvoy – Jets Top Free Agent Didn’t Even Play in 2025 Season

Patrick McAvoy – Jets’ Defense May Be Moving On From Familiar Piece

Zach Presnell – NFL Mock Draft: Jets Swing Round 1 Trade for Franchise QB

Zach Presnell – Jets Linked to Jaguars’ 7-Year Veteran Playmaker in Free Agency

Zach Presnell – Jets $15 Million Star Emerging as Free Agent Target for Commanders

Zach Presnell – Kirk Cousins, 4 Others Getting Buzz as Candidates for Jets QB Job

Mike Gianakos – Woody Johnson Played Key Role in NFLPA Team Report Card Ban

Joe Cox – 30 Touchdown QB’s Decision to Return to College Football Earns Resounding Approval

Paul Edsen Jr. – Derek Carr Breaks Silence on Jets Comeback Rumors Amid Buzz

Paul Edsen Jr. – Popular Jets Coach Lands New Job With Rival Dolphins

Paul Edsen Jr. – Jets Cowboys Trade Pitch for All-Pro WR Would Be a Disaster

Here are your missed connections from yesterday.

Have a great start to your weekend.

Source: https://www.ganggreennation.com/new-york-jets-news/91684/new-york-jets-flight-connections-02-14-26
 
New York Jets Flight Connections 02/15/26

imagn-5424118.jpg

Sep 21, 1986; E. Rutherford, NJ, USA; FILE PHOTO; New York Jets receiver Wesley Walker (85) celebrates with teammate Marty Lyons (93) during the game against the Miami Dolphins at Giants Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Imagn Images

Happy Sunday, Jets fans!

Here are your Jets links on this first Sunday since the NFL season ended.

Robby Sabo – The New York Jets on natural grass: A football love story

Connor Long – Why the NY Jets should steer clear of Derek Carr

Nick Faria – NY Jets’ salary cap outlook takes new turn with dead charges

Joe Blewett – NY Jets film review: Is WR Denzel Boston the pick at 16?

Steve Serby – 2026 NFL Mock Draft 2.0: Jets pass on QB

Patrick McAvoy – What Jets, Kyler Murray Trade Could Look Like

Patrick McAvoy – Micheal Clemons Rumor Shouldn’t Shock Jets Fans After Polarizing Stint

Zach Presnell – Packers Breakout QB Linked to Desperate Jets in Free Agency

Mike Gianakos – 2 Veteran Coaches Claim Frank Reich is Key to Jets’ Offensive Revival

Paul Edsen Jr. – Insider Reveals Massive Price Tag Jets Would Have to Pay Free Agent WR

Paul Edsen Jr. – Jets Expected to Be ‘Very Aggressive’ in QB Market: Insider

Paul Edsen Jr. – Jets All-Pro Predicted to Bolt in Free Agency to Reunite With Coach

Mike Luciano – 5 burning questions as the Jets prepare for the NFL Combine

Charlie Baduini – Resurfaced Aaron Glenn video may rule out Kyler Murray as Jets QB option

Charlie Baduini – Laughable 2026 re-draft has Jets passing on Armand Membou at No. 7

Justin Fried – Vilified Jets draft pick is likely counting down his final days in New York

Here are your missed connections from yesterday.

Have a great Sunday.

Source: https://www.ganggreennation.com/new-york-jets-news/91711/new-york-jets-flight-connections-02-15-26
 
New York Jets Flight Connections 02/13/26

imagn-25048142.jpg

Dec 22, 2024; East Rutherford, New Jersey, USA; A New York Jets fan wears a bag on his head during the fourth quarter against the Los Angeles Rams at MetLife Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Brad Penner-Imagn Images | Brad Penner-Imagn Images

Good morning Gang Green Nation!

Here are your links to your New York Jets this glorious Friday in February:

Eric Allen – Jets Complete Defensive Coaching Staff with Four Hires

Randy Lange – Noteworthy Sidebars from 5 of the Jets’ New Offensive Coaches

Randy Lange – Special Teams Roster Overview | All Systems Were Go, Many Ranked High

Chris Franklin – Browns’ Shedeur Sanders whispers emerging, again: ‘I hear the same thing you do’

Brian Costello – Aaron Glenn completes Jets coaching staff with four new hires

Justin Melo – Sam Darnold had the most heartwarming message for Jets fans

Craig Moffett – The quarterback the New York Jets should gamble on in 2026

Justin Melo – Could Derek Carr emerge as a QB option for the Jets this offseason?

Adam La Rose – Jets Expected To Be Aggressive During Free Agency

Vinnie Iyer – Kyler Murray trade rumors: Jets, Colts among 5 best fits, likely landing spots for Cardinals QB

Matt Sullivan – Jets expected to add more than one QB to amend Justin Fields disaster

Lou Scatiglia – 2026 NFL Predictions: These teams are already set up to fail big-time

Glenn Naughton – Three “Outside the box” Options for Jets With Second Pick

NFLcom – NFL combine: Full list of draft prospects invited to 2026 scouting event

Charlie Baduini – Aaron Glenn finalizes Jets’ defensive coaching staff with four new hires

Blair Yusko – Jets insider offers significant update on Nick Folk’s NFL future

Anthony Palacios – Jets Expected to Tag Former Second Rounder – Likely Lead to Trade

Here are your missed connections from yesterday.

Source: https://www.ganggreennation.com/new-york-jets-news/91664/new-york-jets-flight-connections-02-13-26
 
Ex-Jets Progress Report: Part 3 – NFC Offense

imagn-28212184.jpg

Feb 11, 2026; Seattle, WA, USA; Seattle Seahawks quarterback Sam Darnold (14) reacts during the Super Bowl LX parade. Mandatory Credit: Kevin Ng-Imagn Images | Kevin Ng-Imagn Images

Now that we are at the end of the season, it’s time to update you on former Jets players, how they fared during the 2025 season and their contractual status heading into next year. We are covering this in five parts. Having looked at offensive and defensive players from AFC teams last week, we will cover NFC teams this week before closing with a look at special teamers. We continue today with a review of ex-Jets offensive players who were on NFC teams in 2025.

As ever, this list is intended to be exhaustive, but if we missed anyone, let us know in the comments.

Commanders:

Ageless quarterback Josh Johnson got a chance to start two games for Washington, winning one. He passed and rushed for a touchdown as he completed 63 percent of his passes and had just under 400 yards overall, but did get intercepted twice.

Offensive lineman George Fant made four late season appearances but only played on special teams. He and Johnson are both out of contract.

Wide receiver Robbie Chosen made three appearances and caught five passes for 53 yards but was not retained.

Tight end Lawrence Cager was signed to a futures deal after the season. He had been elevated off the practice squad for one game, in which he played one snap.

Also: Running back Donovan Edwards was on the practice squad but ultimately got picked up by Miami and did not play.

Cowboys:

Running back Israel Abanikanda was on the practice squad during the season but did not play. He was retained on a futures deal though.

Eagles:

Wide receiver and return specialist Xavier Gipson made five appearances for the Eagles before ending up back with the Giants. He mostly played on special teams but did catch two short passes.

Tight end EJ Jenkins only played in two games in a special teams role off the practice squad but signed a futures deal after the season.

Giants:

Guard Greg Van Roten started every game for the Giants for the second year in a row but is now a free agent again. He only gave up three sacks and had three penalties.

Xavier Gipson had two stints with the Giants and made one appearance, albeit only on special teams. He remains under contract.

Packers:

Abanikanda and wide receiver Mecole Hardman were both on the practice squad after final cuts but were soon released.

Vikings:

Running back Xazavian Valladay was on Minnesota’s practice squad but has since been released. Quarterbacks John Wolford and Brett Rypien also each spent time with the Vikings but did not play and are now out of contract.

Bears:

The Bears didn’t have any ex-Jets players on offense all season.

Lions:

Wide receiver Kalif Raymond is now a free agent after a season where he had 289 receiving yards and a touchdown on 24 catches. He also rushed for 19 yards.

Guard Trystan Colon ultimately made 12 appearances with four starts but played under 200 offensive snaps overall. He is a pending free agent.

Tight end Anthony Firkser was a late-season pickup and made four starts in seven appearances. He caught eight passes for 53 yards. He is also out of contract.

Also: Tight end Kenny Yeboah was eventually released from injured reserve.

Bucs:

Guard Dan Feeney is a pending free agent having started the last 10 games of the season, during which he gave up four sacks but committed just one penalty.

Recently unretired quarterback Teddy Bridgewater saw some action as he completed eight of 15 passes for 62 yards but he is now out of contract.

Saints:

The Saints are another team who didn’t have any former Jets on offense this season.

Panthers:

The Panthers added quarterback Mike White to their practice squad and then the 53, but he didn’t play and wasn’t retained.

Falcons:

Atlanta had offensive tackle Carter Warren on their practice squad all year but he didn’t play and they didn’t retain him.

Rams:

Wide receiver Davante Adams made a huge impact with the Rams as he caught 14 touchdown passes to lead the league. However, he only caught 60 passes for 789 yards, his lowest output since 2015. He is signed through 2026.

Seahawks:

It was a triumphant postseason for quarterback Sam Darnold who led the Seahawks to a Super Bowl title by throwing five touchdowns with no interceptions in the playoffs. During the regular season, his production was lower than last year but he still had over 4,000 passing yards and 25 touchdowns with a career-best completion percentage of 68. He remains under contract.

Cardinals:

Wide receiver Greg Dortch started three games in 12 appearances and had 27 catches for 206 yards and three touchdowns. He also rushed for a score and contributed in the return game.

At running back, Bam Knight and Michael Carter combined to rack up over 1,000 yards from scrimmage although each averaged under four yards per carry. Knight made eight starts and scored five touchdowns while Carter only scored once in five starts but caught 33 passes.

Offensive tackle Kelvin Beachum saw plenty of playing time down the stretch as he started 11 games but he gave up five sacks and had seven penalties.

These four players are all out of contract, although Knight is only a restricted free agent.

49ers:

Quarterback Adrian Martinez finally made his NFL debut, although it was just for one snap – a kneeldown. He signed a futures deal after the season.

Also: Chosen was briefly on the practice squad too, before being released.

Check back here in a few days when we’ll be covering ex-Jets defensive players on NFC teams and how they performed in 2025…

Source: https://www.ganggreennation.com/new...73/ex-jets-progress-report-part-3-nfc-offense
 
New York Jets Flight Connections 02/16/26

imagn-27851168.jpg

Green Bay Packers cornerback Micah Robinson (26) pushes New York Jets running back Isaiah Davis (32) out of bounds a th the goal line during their football game on Saturday, August 9, 2025, at Lambeau Field in Green Bay, Wis. Wm. Glasheen USA TODAY NETWORK-Wisconsin | Wm. Glasheen/USA TODAY NETWORK-Wisconsin / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

Good morning Gang Green Nation! Happy Presidents Day. Enjoy the day off if you get one. The NFL Combine starts in just one week, and the free agency legal tampering period starts three weeks from today. It’s quiet for now, but things are about to heat up. With trades, free agency and the NFL draft the Jets are about to undergo a dramatic transformation that will likely end up turning over half or more of their 53 man roster from last season. With a coaching staff that recently underwent even more dramatic transformation, we are on the verge of a brand new Jets team. How much it improves over the mess we saw last year is the question.

Here are your links to your New York Jets this glorious Monday in February:

Rich Cimini – Inside New York Jets coach Aaron Glenn’s staff overhaul

Chris Franklin – Jets could ‘resurrect’ this player’s career if he becomes available, former NFL GM says

Chris Franklin – This 2-time Pro Bowl player’s trade value could be surprisingly low

Lucas Hutcherson – How Jets’ coaching changes will benefit the 2026 defense

Justin Melo – Should the Jets franchise tag RB Breece Hall?

Justin Melo – Trinidad Chambliss won’t be a Jets option in the 2026 NFL draft

Jaron Spor – Ty Simpson Predicted to Replace $40 Million QB in Latest Mock Draft

Matt Sullivan – Jets urged to re-sign former first-round OL who missed all of 2025 with injury

Glenn Naughton – Jets Backfield Full of Question Marks With FA Approaching

Justin Fried – Rex Ryan nearly joined Giants coaching staff in ultimate Jets betrayal

Charlie Baduini – The Jets’ ‘worst-case scenario’ for 2026 would be an absolute disaster

Justin Fried – Derek Carr’s comments indirectly rule Jets out as comeback option

Mike Luciano – Tyrod Taylor explains what makes him such a legendary backup quarterback

Christopher Hennessy – Jets’ 2026 NFL Mock Draft roundup post-Super Bowl as draft season ramps up

Here are your missed connections from yesterday.

Source: https://www.ganggreennation.com/new-york-jets-news/91724/new-york-jets-flight-connections-02-16-26
 
Jets fans like the new look coaching staff

imagn-27078505.jpg

Sep 13, 2025; Stanford, California, USA; Stanford Cardinal head coach Frank Reich stands on the field before the game against the Boston College Eagles at Stanford Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Darren Yamashita-Imagn Images | Darren Yamashita-Imagn Images

Last week we asked Jets fans in our SB Nation Reacts survey whether the new coaching hires the Jets made early in the offseason have increased their confidence level in the team.

Aaron Glenn made a striking number of changes to his staff at the end of his first season as Jets head coach. Over half of the coaches from his initial staff were replaced. These changes were not at the fringes either. The Jets parted ways with both their offensive and defensive coordinator along with their passing game coordinator. Key position coaches such as the quarterbacks coach and defensive line coach were also replaced.

It seems like the new staff will get some sort of honeymoon period. The majority of fans who voted in our poll say the new hires increased their confidence in the team heading into 2026.

NewYorkJets_1_021226.png

I think it’s fair to say that upgrading the talent level on the roster will be a more critical task for the Jets this offseason than changing the coaching staff. If the Jets don’t get better players in here, no coaching staff will be able to have much success.

Source: https://www.ganggreennation.com/new...39/jets-fans-like-the-new-look-coaching-staff
 
Would you make this proposed Jets trade for Kyler Murray?

imagn-27257028.jpg

Arizona Cardinals quarterback Kyler Murray (1) chats with teammate Michael Wilson (14) before their game against the Tennessee Titans at State Farm Stadium in Glendale on Oct. 5, 2025. | Joe Rondone/The Republic / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

The Jets have a massive need at the quarterback position heading into the offseason. Of the possible options, Kyler Murray is one of the biggest names on the market.

ESPN’s Bill Barnwell recently proposed the following trade to bring Murray to New York.

Jets get: QB Kyler Murray, 2026 sixth-round pick
Cardinals get: 2026 fourth-round pick

Midway through the 2025 season, it seemed clear that the Cardinals were out of the Kyler Murray business. His foot injury, which had been a week-to-week issue, suddenly escalated to the point where the 2019 No. 1 pick was placed on injured reserve and never returned. Jacoby Brissett played reasonably well in Murray’s absence and remains under contract in 2026. The Cardinals already changed coaching staffs this offseason, but whether to move on from the franchise quarterback is decided at the ownership level.

Arizona’s problem, as it tries to land a meaningful trade return for its quarterback, is that there aren’t many suitors for Murray because he will make more than $78 million in 2026 and 2027 combined before an opening to move on from his deal emerges in 2028. The Vikings aren’t in great salary cap shape. The Browns probably can’t afford to pay Murray and Deshaun Watson at the same time. The Falcons want to operate from under center. The Raiders are likely to draft a quarterback. The Colts will likely re-sign Daniel Jones. And Murray doesn’t seem like a good fit for what Mike McCarthy wants to do with the Steelers.

That leaves the Dolphins and Jets, who once fought as the final two suitors in a potential offseason trade for receiver Tyreek Hill; he chose to join Miami. It makes more sense for the Jets to push harder for Murray. The Dolphins just rebooted by firing Mike McDaniel, and they will spend 2026 getting out from Tua Tagovailoa’s deal. Those rebuilds can have quick turnarounds — the Broncos made the playoffs while they were still paying off Russell Wilson’s contract — but Miami doesn’t feel like it is a Murray-level QB away from competing for anything.

I think this trade is a very poor idea for the Jets.

If I believed Murray was likely to be a long-term or even medium-term solution for the Jets at quarterback, I might feel differently. However, my view is that the perception of Murray has always been better than the reality. He is a big name because he won the Heisman Trophy and college and was the number one overall pick in the NFL Draft.

In three of Murray’s last four seasons he has posted a QBR under 55, and he has been under 50 in two of the last three years. He is also a quarterback approaching 30 who relies on his speed and athleticism. Add in that he’s coming off a foot injury, and there are a lot of red flags.

On top of all of this, Murray’s contract is not favorable to an acquiring team. Unless it is amended, a new team would be looking at taking on around $60 million in guarantees.

If Murray was cut and became free to sign for cheap, I wouldn’t have a problem with the Jets being in the mix. However, I see too many red flags here for the Jets to part with an early fourth round pick, which contrary to popular opinion, does have value. That is currently the only projected pick the Jets own between 44 and 175. Even with a slate of extra early round picks, the Jets can’t afford to sit out the middle rounds of the Draft, where quality starters and role players are found for teams that know how to scout.

To me this whole idea seems like a case of pretending Murray is a better option than he really is for the sake of pretending you’ve solved a problem.

What do you think? Would you make this trade?

Source: https://www.ganggreennation.com/new...ake-this-proposed-jets-trade-for-kyler-murray
 
Jets Reacts Survey: What grade would you give Woody Johnson as Jets owner?

imagn-25278412.jpg

Jan 27, 2025; Florham Park, NJ, USA; New York Jets owner Woody Johnson speaks during an introductory press conference at Atlantic Health Jets Training Center. Mandatory Credit: John Jones-Imagn Images | John Jones-Imagn Images

Welcome to SB Nation Reacts, a survey of fans across the NFL. Throughout the year we ask questions of the most plugged-in Jets fans and fans across the country. Sign up here to participate in the weekly emailed surveys.

Jets owner Woody Johnson found himself in the headlines once again late last week. The NFLPA annually has players fill out a report card rating their team in numerous categories. One of the categories is ownership. Johnson was the only owner to receive an grade of F from his team’s players a year ago. Johnson’s response was to push for grades to no longer be made public. Johnson apparently will get his way.

We now won’t know how Jets players grade Woody Johnson, but we can find out how fans grade him. Vote this week in our SB Nation Reacts survey to tell us what you think of the owner’s job performance. Unlike the NFLPA, we are allowed to tell you the results, and we will do that in a few days.

Source: https://www.ganggreennation.com/gen...de-would-you-give-woody-johnson-as-jets-owner
 
Jets 2026 Offseason Blueprint

gettyimages-2252069980.jpg

JACKSONVILLE, FLORIDA - DECEMBER 14: Aaron Glenn of the New York Jets looks on against the Jacksonville Jaguars during the second half at EverBank Stadium on December 14, 2025 in Jacksonville, Florida. (Photo by Rich Storry/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Jets enter the 2026 offseason with something they haven’t had in a while… real flexibility. After a 3–14 season, they’re sitting on top tier draft capital, significant cap space, and a clear list of roster needs. That combination creates opportunity but only if it’s handled with discipline.

Too often, bad teams stay bad because they attack the offseason emotionally instead of structurally. They chase names in free agency, force draft picks at positions of need, and overpay at low-impact spots. Modern roster construction backed by analytics, contract trends, and hit rate data points to a better approach. Here’s a structured, value based plan for how the Jets should attack the 2026 offseason using the strengths of both free agency and the draft while prioritizing premium positions and surplus value.

Across the league, successful front offices follow a few consistent principles.

Premium positions are harder to find and more expensive to buy:

  • QB1
  • EDGE
  • OT
  • WR
  • CB
  • (sometimes elite interior DL)

These positions command the highest free agent salaries and guarantees. Drafting them early creates massive surplus value because rookie contracts are far cheaper than veteran deals for similar production.

Non premium positions are easier to fill with veterans or mid/late picks:

  • RB
  • TE
  • Interior OL (G/C)
  • LB (off ball)
  • S
  • Rotational IDL
  • QB2

Quarterback Reality: No Mendoza, No Clean Answer​


With Mendoza assumed off the board at Pick 1, the remaining QB class becomes a risk cluster rather than a conviction tier. That shifts the optimal strategy.

Instead of forcing QB at No. 2, the Jets should:

  • Add a bridge starter via free agency or trade
  • Keep draft flexibility
  • Only draft a QB if value aligns not out of desperation

Think: Jameis Winston archetype volatile but functional, capable of supporting evaluation and development while the roster improves.

Bridge QB goals:

  • Competent starter floor
  • Short-term contract (1–2 years)
  • No long guarantees
  • Doesn’t block a future QB pick

This is a stabilization move, not a franchise solution.

Core principle: Don’t force positions in the draft. Use Best Player Available, weighted by positional value and need.

Jets 2026 Needs (Ordered)

  1. QB (bridge starter required)
  2. EDGE1
  3. WR2
  4. RG
  5. LG
  6. IDL2
  7. WLB
  8. FS
  9. RB

The ordering matters but how each need gets filled matters more.

Free Agency Strengths​

  • Immediate starters
  • Known performance
  • Fast roster stabilization
  • Best for non premium positions

Free Agency Weaknesses​

  • Expensive at premium spots
  • Aging curves
  • Shorter peak windows
  • Overpay risk

Draft Strengths​

  • Cost controlled talent
  • Surplus value at premium positions
  • Long term upside
  • Cap flexibility

Draft Weaknesses​

  • Development time
  • Bust risk
  • Board uncertainty

The Jets should lean into each channel where it performs best.

Phase 1: Free Agency Plan (Set the Floor)​


The Jets should use cap space to lock down non premium starters and the bridge QB, not chase premium stars at inflated prices.

Bridge QB Primary FA/Trade Target​


Add a Cousins type veteran:

  • Aggressive thrower
  • Scheme fit arm talent
  • Acceptable volatility
  • Short contract window

This allows:

Flexibility for 2027 QB moves

Competitive offense in 2026

No forced QB reach at No. 2

Interior OL (RG, LG) Top FA Priority​


Interior line is exactly where free agency shines. The market is deeper, contracts are more reasonable, and performance is more stable year to year than tackle.

Plan: Sign 1–2 reliable veteran guards on 3–4 year deals. Stabilize protection and run blocking immediately.

WLB and FS Veteran Floor​


Linebacker and safety are classic value signing positions.

Plan: Add at least one veteran starter level player at each spot. Avoid top of market deals target scheme fits and consistency.

IDL2 Rotational Help​


Interior DL depth is widely available.

Plan: Add rotational pieces cheaply and avoid splash spending unless an unusual value appears.

RB Value Only​


Running back markets are always deep and affordable.

Plan: Cheap veteran or committee approach. Do not invest major cap or premium draft capital here.

Phase 2: Draft Plan Attack Premium Impact​


With QB no longer forced at No. 2, the draft becomes cleaner and more powerful.

Jets early capital:
Pick 2, Pick 16, Pick 33, Pick 44

Pick No. 2 EDGE or Elite Premium Talent​


Without a clean QB grade, this becomes a premium defender or playmaker pick.

Primary target:

  • EDGE1

Why:

  • Strong class strength
  • Premium positional impact
  • Massive rookie contract surplus vs veteran EDGE deals
  • Defensive cornerstone value

If EDGE is wiped unexpectedly:

  • Pivot to elite WR
  • Do not force QB2 tier prospect here

Picks (16 / 33 / 44) WR2 + EDGE + Premium BPA​


This is the sweet spot for:

  • WR2 opposite Garrett Wilson
  • Additional EDGE talent
  • Premium-position BPA fallers

WR rookie deals create huge surplus value compared to WR2 free agent contracts. Pairing a cost-controlled WR with Wilson is a cap-efficient offensive core move.

If premium board dries up:

  • Interior OL is the acceptable early non premium pivot due to strong hit rate history
  • Trade down rather than reach

Mid Rounds (3–5)​


Target:

  • LB
  • S
  • IDL
  • RB
  • TE
  • Developmental QB flyer only if value aligns

This is where non premium depth and role players are best sourced.

Late Rounds​


Traits, special teams, upside bets only.

Allocation Snapshot​


Free Agency Buys

  • Bridge QB
  • RG
  • LG
  • WLB
  • FS
  • IDL rotation
  • RB value

Draft Buys

  • EDGE1
  • WR2
  • Premium BPA
  • Defensive playmakers
  • Select mid-round support pieces

Source: https://www.ganggreennation.com/new-york-jets-analysis/91465/jets-2026-offseason-blueprint
 
New York Jets Flight Connections 02/19/26

imagn-27815647.jpg

Jacksonville Jaguars safety Andrew Wingard (42) tackles New York Jets wide receiver Adonai Mitchell (15) in the first quarter during an NFL football game at EverBank Stadium, Sunday, Dec. 14, 2025, in Jacksonville, Fla. [Doug Engle/Florida Times-Union] | Doug Engle/Florida Times-Union / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

Good morning Gang Green Nation!

Here are your links to your New York Jets this glorious Thursday in February:

Randy Lange – Jim Kelly Knows Longtime Friend Frank Reich Will Have Huge Impact as Jets OC

Aaron Schatz – 2026 NFL offseason: Players who need a change of scenery

Chris Franklin – Young QB won’t be traded: ‘I’ll walk naked’ if he is, insider says

Justin Melo – Jets could get creative with Breece Hall, franchise tag options

Justin Melo – Should the New York Jets pursue Bradley Chubb in NFL free agency?

Matt Sullivan – Jets expected to change their minds on a Tyrod Taylor reunion in 2026

Matt Sullivan – Jets expected to move on from brother of Quinnen Williams in free agency

Matt Sullivan – Jets get shaky $13 million contract projection on injury-prone offensive guard

Matt Sullivan – Jets get good news on Breece Hall amid $12.25 million contract benchmark

Pete Prisco – Prisco’s Top 100 NFL free agents for 2026: Market light on big-name talent, but some stars to be had

Tom Fornelli – Fornelli’s 2026 NFL mock draft 1.0: Two first-round QBs, surprise WR1 headline class light on elite talent

Mike Renner – Who are the top offensive prospects entering the 2026 NFL combine? Top 5 by position

Charlie Baduini – Jets trade idea lands former Pro Bowl QB for Day 3 pick swap

Lior Lampert – Adonai Mitchell opens up about Jets handling of midseason trade

Here are your missed connections from yesterday.

Source: https://www.ganggreennation.com/new-york-jets-news/91788/new-york-jets-flight-connections-02-19-26
 
Ex-Jets Progress Report: Part 5 – Special Teams

imagn-27666207.jpg

Nov 23, 2025; Glendale, Arizona, USA; Arizona Cardinals wide receiver Greg Dortch (4) celebrates after scoring a touchdown during the fourth quarter against the Jacksonville Jaguars at State Farm Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Joe Camporeale-Imagn Images | Joe Camporeale-Imagn Images

Now that the offseason is here, we’ve been updating you on former Jets players and how they fared elsewhere in 2025. Having looked at offensive and defensive players over the past few weeks, we’ll be concluding with a look at special teamers today.

As ever, this list is intended to be exhaustive, but if we missed anyone, let us know in the comments.

Kickers

Cairo Santos, Bears

Santos missed five field goals in 2025 but hit a game winner against the Vikings. He made all 39 of his extra point attempts including one that sent a game to overtime but his longest field goal was only 54 yards.

Chase McLaughlin, Bucs

McLaughlin missed six field goals, but he finished strong and only missed one extra point all year. He had game-winners against the Jets and Seahawks and a successful 65-yarder.

Jason Myers, Seahawks

Myers missed seven field goals in 2025 but was perfect on 48 extra points. He then made all 19 of his kicks in the postseason. He had game-winners against the Cardinals and Colts but missed a 61-yard game-winner in a loss to the Rams.

Spencer Shrader, Colts

Shrader won the Colts job and made a game-winner over the Broncos (after his long miss had been negated by a leverage penalty). He missed his first ever kick the following week and then got injured in week five and spent the rest of the season on injured reserve.

Riley Patterson, Dolphins

Patterson ended up holding down the Miami job all season as they opted to leave Jason Sanders on injured reserve. He had one game-winner for them, against Washington. In all, he made 27 of 29 field goals and 34 of 35 extra points.

Eddy Pineiro, 49ers

While he missed some time due to injuries, it was a successful season for Santos, who led the NFL in field goal percentage after making 28 of 29 attempts. Ex-Jets actually comprised four of the top five kickers in terms of field goal percentage in 2025, including Nick Folk who was obviously also a current Jet. He had game-winners over the Cardinals and Rams but did miss five extra points, including one in the playoffs.

Harrison Mevis, Rams

Mevis was a late season addition who did a solid job as he missed just one of 13 field goals in the regular season, while making all 39 of his extra points. He was also perfect on 15 postseason kicks. Mevis’ only miss was costly, though, as it was a 48-yarder with just over two minutes to go in a game the Rams ultimately lost by one in overtime to Seattle.

Greg Joseph, Raiders

Joseph did not play in 2025 but spent time on the Raiders’ practice squad. He was not retained.

Punters

Braden Mann, Eagles

Mann saw his gross numbers fall off a bit down the stretch but still ended up with a gross average of 49.9 yards per punt, which was good for 6th best in the NFL. His net dropped to 43.1 though, as his touchback percentage has been up in the past two years.

Thomas Morstead, 49ers

Morstead was one of the least effective punters in the NFL statistically. His 43.6 yards per punt gross average was his lowest since he left the Saints in 2020 and his net of 36.7 was his lowest since his rookie season.

Kai Kroeger, Saints

The undrafted rookie Kroeger was one of four NFL punters to have two punts blocked as he was slightly better than Morstead with a 44.8 yards per punt gross average and a 37.3 net.

Return Specialists

Braxton Berrios, Texans

Berrios missed some time due to injury, lost the punt return role to Jaylin Noel and ultimately only returned three kickoffs and three punts all season.

Kalif Raymond, Lions

Raymond had a 65-yard punt return for a touchdown but ended up with an average of just 7.5 yards per return. He averaged just under 27 yards on six kickoffs.

Greg Dortch, Cardinals

Dortch didn’t have a return of over 40 yards all year but was extremely consistent with a kickoff return average of over 26 yards per return and a career-high punt return average of 11.6.

Brandon Codrington, Bills

Codrington was let go by the Bills after losing his job and is now on a futures deal with the Texans. He averaged less than six yards per punt return with one fumble. Despite being slightly better on kickoffs with a 26.8 yards per return average, Ty Johnson ended up with that role.

Malachi Corley, Browns

Corley saw extensive work on kickoff returns and averaged 23.4 yards per return with a long of 37.

Raheem Mostert, Raiders

Mostert was leading the league for kickoff return average, but ended up in fourth place with a 29.3 yards per return average. He had two returns of over 50 yards in one game against the Jaguars.

Mecole Hardman, Bills

Hardman only saw brief action on returns with three total runbacks but did break one kickoff return for 61 yards.

Ty Johnson, Bills

Johnson took over from Codrington but his performance was unremarkable as he averaged less than 22 yards per return on 11 runbacks with a long of 31.

Xavier Gipson, Eagles

After being cut by the Jets, Gipson didn’t last long with Philadelphia as he fumbled on two of his 13 returns. He averaged 11 yards on punts and 25 on kickoffs. Gipson ended up with the Giants but did not return kicks with them.

Other Special Teams Contributors

The top ex-Jets special teams contributor in terms of kick coverage was definitely Chargers linebacker Del’Shawn Phillips, who led the league with 24 special teams tackles. This was twice as many as any other ex-Jet.

Seattle’s Chazz Surratt and Zaire Barnes of the Giants had 11 each, which Barnes’ teammate Neville Hewitt racked up 12. Washington’s Nick Bellore and Carolina’s Claud Cherelus were also productive.

Non-linebackers who have had some production include Chiefs wide receiver Jason Brownlee and Steelers safety Chuck Clark, with three and five tackles respectively.

Zach Triner was the only ex-Jets long snapper to see action as he played in one game with the Commanders having also been on Atlanta’s practice squad.

Finally, Browns defensive tackle Shelby Harris and Commanders defensive tackle Javon Kinlaw each blocked a field goal. However, the biggest blocked field goal of the season by an ex-Jets was the one by Leonard Taylor III that basically sent New England to the Super Bowl.

Source: https://www.ganggreennation.com/new.../ex-jets-progress-report-part-5-special-teams
 
Back
Top