FLORHAM PARK, N.J. — The teardown is complete. Now comes the hard part. After a scorched-earth 2025 campaign that saw the departures of franchise cornerstones Sauce Gardner and Quinnen Williams, the New York Jets enter the 2026 offseason with two things they haven’t had in tandem for years: financial flexibility and a blank slate.
General Manager Darren Mougey sits on a gold mine of $79.7 million in salary cap space—the fourth-highest figure in the NFL. But that cash comes with a ghost. The Jets are also carrying nearly $90 million in dead money, a parting gift from the trades that sent Gardner and Williams packing. The mission for Mougey and Head Coach Aaron Glenn is clear: spend that cash to build a team that can actually score points.
The Quarterback Wasteland
You can’t buy a win in this league without a quarterback, and right now, the Jets’ cupboard is bare. The 2025 experiment with Justin Fields imploded spectacularly. After signing a two-year, $40 million deal, Fields lasted just nine starts before being benched, leaving the team with a $23 million cap hit for a player who likely won’t take another snap in green and white.
The backups fared no better. Veteran Tyrod Taylor provided stability but no spark, and rookie Brady Cook—thrust into action late in the year—looked like exactly what he was: a Day 3 pick trying to survive behind a porous offensive line. Cook flashed grit, but his erratic ball placement confirmed he isn’t the long-term answer.
With the No. 16 and No. 33 overall picks (the first pick of the second round), the Jets are positioned to strike. Do they package those picks to move up for a blue-chip signal-caller, or do they sign a bridge veteran and build the fortress first? The decision will define Mougey’s tenure.
Locker Room Talk
“We stripped it down to the studs. I know it hurts the fans to see guys like Sauce and Q go, but we couldn’t keep putting band-aids on a broken leg. We have the resources now to build a bully, not a highlight reel.”
— Darren Mougey, Jets General Manager (via The Michael Kay Show)
Armed for April: The Draft Strategy
The return on the Gardner and Williams trades has finally arrived. Holding the 16th and 33rd overall picks gives New York four selections in the top 100. This is the ammunition needed to overhaul a roster that ranked 29th in total offense last season.
Top Priorities:
- Quarterback: The obvious QB1 need. If the top names are gone by pick 16, look for the Jets to be aggressive in the trade market.
- Offensive Line: The protection was abysmal in 2025. With nearly $80M to spend, expect Mougey to target premier guards in free agency before looking at tackles in the draft.
- Wide Receiver: Outside of a few flashes, the separation metrics for Jets receivers were historically low. They need a playmaker who can stretch the field.
What’s Next?
The combine in Indianapolis is two weeks away, and the buzz is already building that the Jets are the team to watch. They have the money to outbid anyone for the top free-agent wide receiver, and they have the draft capital to shake up the first round. For a fanbase starved of hope, the offseason is the playoffs. Mougey and Glenn have the keys to the car; now they have to drive it out of the ditch.

