FLORHAM PARK, NJ — The 2025 season broke the New York Jets. A staggering 3-14 finish under head coach Aaron Glenn emptied MetLife Stadium by November. The chill in the air matched the mood in the stands as the mid-season trades of defensive anchors Sauce Gardner and Quinnen Williams triggered a full-scale cultural reset. Now, holding a massive stockpile of capital, the New York Jets 2026 NFL Draft approach demands surgical precision. The front office quieted the panic in free agency by reuniting with veteran quarterback Geno Smith, locking down Breece Hall, and signing defensive backs Nahshon Wright and Bryan Cook. The desperation is gone. They can finally hunt for pure, unadulterated talent.
The Playmaker: Jordyn Tyson
Geno Smith needs weapons. Defenses spent all of 2025 suffocating Garrett Wilson with double teams. Jordyn Tyson breaks that coverage math. The Arizona State standout brings the exact perimeter explosiveness this offense lacks. Tyson hauled in 61 receptions for 711 yards and eight touchdowns during a dominant nine-game stretch in 2025. He creates instant separation. He snaps off routes with sudden violence and exploits leverage against veteran corners. You can almost feel the defensive panic when Tyson drops his hips and breaks upfield. Drafting him forces defenses to play honest, instantly lightening the box for Breece Hall.
The Enforcer: Colton Hood
The Jets lost their swagger when they traded Gardner. Rebuilding this secondary requires an absolute attitude adjustment. Colton Hood brings that edge. The Tennessee corner dominated the SEC last season, recording 50 tackles and returning an interception 23 yards for a touchdown. He presses receivers at the line of scrimmage and ruins timing routes before they even develop. Hood ran a blazing 4.44 in the 40-yard dash at the Combine, but his tape shows controlled rage. He tackles like a linebacker and covers like a blanket, replacing lost star power with relentless grit.
The Anchor: Peter Woods
Trading Quinnen Williams left a massive crater in the defensive interior. Games are won in the mud, and Peter Woods offers immediate stability. The Clemson defensive tackle officially measured in at 6-foot-2 and 298 pounds at the Scouting Combine in Indianapolis. He pairs that density with a devastating first step. Woods collapses the pocket from the inside, eats double teams, and frees up edge rushers to hunt the quarterback. He anchors against the run and attacks gaps with pure power. He does the dirty work that allows an entire defensive front to breathe.
“I’m just a confident guy. I think my technique is second to none as a corner. I’m not coming to the NFL to be on the bench. I’m coming to be a starter, take somebody’s job.”
— Colton Hood, Tennessee Cornerback (Speaking at the 2026 NFL Combine)
Playoff Implications / What’s Next
Hitting on these draft picks dramatically alters the AFC East hierarchy. The Jets are not competing for a Super Bowl in 2026, but they are laying down a sustainable core. Adding pro-ready, physical talent like Tyson, Hood, and Woods gives Aaron Glenn the structural integrity to install his defensive vision, while supplying Geno Smith with a highly functional offense. A successful draft class transitions this franchise from a disorganized, rebuilding punchline into a legitimate wild-card threat by December.

