Eric Watts is staring at a tough summer in Jets camp, but he’s not walking in empty-handed. With New York remaking its defensive line for Aaron Glenn and Brian Duker’s new scheme, the room is tighter than it used to be. That makes life harder for a holdover like Watts, yet it also leaves him with a clear lane if he can sell the one thing this staff may still want: versatility.
Watts’ path to sticking around is not built on pass-rush fireworks. It’s built on being movable, dependable, and useful in different spots along the front. That matters more now that the Jets are shifting to a 3-4 look, a change that could give him one more shot to matter.
The former undrafted free agent has already outperformed the usual expectations once. After signing with the Jets following the 2024 NFL Draft, he made the initial 53-man roster as a rookie and played in 14 games. He logged about a quarter of the defense’s snaps and posted a 66.1 Pro Football Focus overall grade, along with a 72.1 run-defense grade.
The pass-rush numbers told a different story. Watts generated only five pressures on 102 pass-rush snaps and finished with a 46.1 PFF pass-rush grade. When the new coaching staff arrived the next offseason, that didn’t help his standing.
Most of the 2025 season was spent on the practice squad, with Watts appearing in just four games late in the year as injuries mounted and the Jets took a longer look at the bottom of the roster.
Still, there’s a reason he hasn’t disappeared from the conversation. Watts has spent most of his NFL career as a traditional 4-3 defensive end, but he also has interior experience from his time at UConn, where he played a significant amount of defensive tackle. That background gives him a chance to fit into Karl Dunbar’s rotation as a piece who can move around.
At 6-foot-5 and 277 pounds, Watts has the frame to work as a five-technique defensive end in Glenn’s defense, a role that asks him to set the edge against the run and slide inside in certain fronts. For a player trying to hang onto a roster spot, that kind of flexibility is the selling point.
The reality, though, is that Watts is still fighting an uphill battle. To make the Week 1 53-man roster, he’d likely need injuries to open a door or a summer that clearly separates him from the pack. A return to the practice squad looks like the more likely outcome, and that would at least keep him in the building as developmental depth.
For an undrafted player heading into his third NFL season, that’s not nothing. And Watts has already shown a little edge.
A couple of weeks after the Jets traded Quinnen Williams last season, he quickly switched to Williams’ old No. 95 jersey. That kind of confidence stands out.
Now he has to turn it into something on the field. If Watts is going to survive this roster overhaul in any form, his best shot is simple: prove he can do more than one job.
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