With training camp just weeks away, the Jets managed to land an A- from NFL.com’s Matt Okada for their offseason work - but that didn’t stop him from taking a shot at Breece Hall’s new deal.
Okada highlighted New York’s first four draft picks and the Jermaine Johnson-T’Vondre Sweat trade in handing out the grade, but he also said Hall’s extension was a move he didn’t “particularly love for a team that’s a ways from contending.” Hall signed a three-year extension worth nearly $46 million in March.
That criticism misses the basic logic of the move. If the Jets had let Hall get to the open market, the front office would have been hammered for allowing a young, productive running back to walk. Instead, they kept him in the fold, and somehow that becomes a problem because the team isn’t already a finished product.
Hall’s case is pretty straightforward. He turned 25 in May, and over the last three years he has missed only two games. He’s averaged 4.3 yards per carry during that stretch, and he’s also developed into a dependable option in the passing game, averaging 56 catches and 475 receiving yards across those 49 games.
There’s also the durability angle. Since his 2022 torn ACL, Hall has stayed healthy, and outside of a rough stretch in 2024, he hasn’t been a frequent fumbler. For a team trying to build something, that’s the kind of player you keep around.
The deal itself wasn’t even especially heavy on guarantees, with the Jets not needing to lock in $30 million.
Okada’s view of the Dolphins’ De’Von Achane extension only sharpened the contrast. Achane signed a four-year deal with $32 million guaranteed, but that move was folded into what Okada called a “disjointed” Miami offseason. The difference, at least from the national media’s perspective, is simple: the Dolphins are rebuilding, and the Jets are the Jets.
And that’s really the point. An A- should be enough to satisfy just about anybody. Apparently, when it comes to the Jets, even that comes with a catch.
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