FLORHAM PARK — The New York Jets spent 2025 watching opposing quarterbacks play pitch-and-catch without fear. After a historically bad season where the defense recorded zero interceptions—the first time an NFL team has done so since 1933—General Manager Darren Mougey decided enough was enough. On Monday, a league document confirmed that the Jets might have just landed the biggest bargain of the 2026 free agency cycle.
The NFL’s Performance-Pay King
According to NFL Network’s Mike Garafolo, Jets newcomer Nahshon Wright officially topped the league’s performance-based pay list for the 2025 season. Wright took home an extra $1.44 million in supplemental wages, nearly doubling his base salary from last year. The payout is the league’s way of rewarding players who drastically outplay their contracts—and Wright didn’t just outplay his; he shattered expectations.
Wright’s 2025 campaign with the Chicago Bears was the definition of a breakout. He didn’t just occupy a spot on the depth chart; he became the focal point of a unit that led the league in turnovers. His final stat line read like a Madden career mode: 80 total tackles, 11 passes defensed, and five interceptions, including a 74-yard pick-six. When you add his three fumble recoveries and two forced fumbles, Wright’s nine total takeaways were more than the entire Jets roster combined last season.
A “Prove-It” Deal for a Takeaway Machine
Despite the elite production, the Jets managed to secure Wright on a one-year “prove-it” contract worth up to $5.5 million on March 10th. For a team that surrendered 36 passing touchdowns last fall, the move is a low-risk, high-reward gamble. Wright enters a locker room that looks nothing like the one that ended the 2025 season. He is part of a massive secondary overhaul that includes five-time Pro Bowler Minkah Fitzpatrick, who arrived via trade from Miami earlier this month.
The defensive front is also undergoing a total transformation. With veteran Demario Davis returning for a second stint and the addition of pass rushers Joseph Ossai and Kingsley Enagbare, the Jets are clearly prioritising veteran discipline and ball-hawking instincts. The goal is simple: make life miserable for AFC East quarterbacks who had it far too easy last year.
“I saw the zero in the interception column for this team last year, and it didn’t make sense to me. I’m here to make sure that never happens again. Whether it’s $1 million or $10 million, I’m playing like my hair is on fire.”
— Nahshon Wright, New York Jets Cornerback
The Road to 2026
The Jets aren’t done yet. While the defensive signings have dominated the headlines, the trade for Geno Smith signals a “win-now” window that requires the defense to be elite immediately. New York still holds the No. 2 overall pick in the upcoming NFL Draft, where many experts expect them to add even more teeth to the defensive line with Ohio State’s Arvell Reese. If Wright can replicate his Chicago form in the Big Apple, that $5.5 million price tag will look like the steal of the decade by November.

