FLORHAM PARK, N.Y. — The New York Jets enter the 2026 NFL Draft with the No. 2 overall pick and a clear mandate: find a cornerstone. After a grueling three-win season that exposed gaps on both sides of the ball, Head Coach Aaron Glenn leads a front office armed with nine total selections, including four of the first 44 picks. The action kicks off Thursday, April 23, in Pittsburgh, where the Jets look to wash away the salt of a disappointing 2025 campaign.
The Hunt for an Edge: Arvell Reese vs. David Bailey
Trading Jermaine Johnson II to the Titans left a crater in the Jets’ defensive front. With the second pick, the choice likely boils down to two titans. Arvell Reese (Ohio State) is the fan favorite. At 6-foot-4 and 241 pounds, Reese blazed a 4.46-second 40-yard dash at the Combine. He offers the kind of twitchy, explosive ceiling Glenn loves. On the other side sits David Bailey (Texas Tech), the refined technician who led the FBS with 14.5 sacks last year. While Bailey is the “safe” bet, Reese has the higher floor and the violent hands to dominate on day one.
The Jets aren’t just looking at the line. Rumors swirled this week after the team met with Notre Dame’s Jeremiyah Love for breakfast. Pairing Love with Breece Hall would create a nightmare for defensive coordinators, but using the No. 2 pick on a running back in 2026 remains a bold, risky play. Most insiders expect the Jets to stick to the trenches or the perimeter.
Finding a Partner for Garrett Wilson
The No. 16 overall pick, acquired from the Colts, is the prime spot to fix the league’s thinnest receiving corps. Outside of Garrett Wilson, the depth chart is a ghost town. Carnell Tate (Ohio State) or Jordyn Tyson (Arizona State) could be the answer. Tate is a polished route runner with 875 yards and nine scores last season. If the Jets want a vertical threat, Tyson averaged over 14 yards per catch before a collarbone injury slowed his momentum. Adding a legitimate WR2 isn’t a luxury; it’s a requirement if the Jets want to see 2026 success.
“We aren’t looking for projects. We are looking for hunters. This draft has the specific type of violence we need to re-establish our identity on defense. We have two picks in the top 20—we have to hit.”
— Aaron Glenn, New York Jets Head Coach
The Quarterback Question: Is Geno the Bridge?
Geno Smith arrived via trade to provide stability, but he isn’t the long-term solution. The 2026 class has talent, but many scouts believe the 2027 group is the real jackpot. This leaves the Jets in a bind. Do they take Ty Simpson (Alabama) at Pick 33 if he slides? Simpson has the pocket presence the Jets have lacked since the Zach Wilson era ended in flames. Taking a quarterback in Round 2 allows the team to build the roster first, providing a soft landing for a rookie in 2027 if Simpson isn’t the guy.

