The Jets may have sent Sauce Gardner packing months after extending him, but the part of this deal that keeps getting louder is the player they got back.
Adonai Mitchell has become the name Jets people keep circling, and that alone makes the Gardner trade feel a little surreal. New York moved on from an All-Pro cornerback seemingly out of nowhere, then spent the offseason talking up a third-year receiver out of Texas who looks like the likely No. 2 option.
That doesn’t mean anyone is pretending Mitchell is about to turn into Justin Jefferson. But the buzz around him has been steady for months, and the reports out of OTAs have only added to it. People around the Jets have praised how he looked in those workouts and how he’s building chemistry with Geno Smith.
Garrett Wilson still sits at the top of the depth chart and remains Smith’s expected No. 1 target, barring injury. So the real question is what kind of production Mitchell can supply behind him.
There was at least a small sample last season. Mitchell finished with 24 catches for 301 yards and two touchdowns in eight games with the Jets.
Stretch that over a full 17-game season, and it comes out to about 50 receptions and 600 yards. That projection gets even more interesting when you remember he and Wilson never shared the field.
If Mitchell reaches those numbers this year, it would say plenty. Last season, 62 players cleared 600 receiving yards. The Jets weren’t one of those teams, in part because Wilson was limited by injuries and finished with 395 yards in seven games.
A season like that would show Mitchell can handle the No. 2 role when the opportunity is there.
There’s also a contract angle coming fast. Mitchell, a 2024 second-round pick, is eligible for a new deal next spring. If he keeps trending this way, he’d have real leverage to push for an extension.
By then, he’d have roughly 25 games of Jets tape on him, which is usually enough to make a judgment on a trade or waiver pickup.
Even with all the optimism building around him, the Jets are not projecting Mitchell as a 1,000-yard receiver. Wilson already opened his career with three straight 1,000-yard seasons, and there’s no reason to think he can’t make it four in five years.
Still, if Mitchell gives them 50 catches and 600 yards, the Jets will be thrilled. Given everything that’s happened since the Gardner trade, that’s the kind of outcome that would make the whole thing look even more absurd in hindsight.
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The bigger question is whether the rest of the setup can now match his talent. Geno Smith is expected to bring some much-needed stability at quarterback, and after Wilsons 2025 season was interrupted by a midseason injury, the Jets are clearly hoping a healthier year and a deeper supporting cast can finally unlock the kind of leap they have been waiting for. There is even a longer-term safety net in the background, with the possibility of adding another quarterback in the 2027 NFL Draft if the position still needs more insulation. [Read more 🡒]
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New York also has a couple of reasons to think a deal could make sense if Tennessee is willing to listen. The Jets have done business with the Titans before, and their connection to former head coach Robert Saleh could help open the door if talks ever get serious. Tennessees draft moves have only added to the sense that one of its linebackers could be available, but for now the Jets are still waiting on a move that would finally address a familiar problem. [Read more 🡒]
Jets Mock Draft Finally Tackles Their Biggest Fear About The Future
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The defensive help in that scenario is just as notable, with the Jets also lined up to address cornerback and edge rusher in the first round. Whether those picks ever come to pass is another matter, since this is only a projection and not a confirmed outcome, but it does underline how much the franchises future depends on getting the quarterback decision right while continuing to stockpile difference-makers on the other side of the ball. [Read more 🡒]
