The New York Jets have a rookie in David Bailey who is suddenly carrying more than just the usual first-round spotlight. According to CBS Sports’ Josh Edwards, Bailey is one of the rookies under the most pressure, and the mention that really jumps off the page is Aaron Glenn’s name.
Edwards ranked Bailey, the No. 2 pick, second on his list, behind Cardinals running back and No. 3 pick Jeremiyah Love. But the line that made the Jets connection impossible to miss was this: “Glenn, himself is presumably on the hot seat, so player and coach can bond over shared experiences in 2026,” Edwards wrote.
That’s where the conversation gets interesting. Bailey is not being framed as the one player who will rescue Glenn’s job, and that’s an important distinction. A player can absolutely help push a coach toward the exit, but the idea that one rookie can single-handedly save a head coach has always been a shaky one, especially outside the quarterback position.
Still, the pressure is real for both men. Glenn and Bailey are headed into 2026 with something to prove, and the Jets are banking on both of them making the case that they belong.
Bailey, who apparently moved ahead of Ohio State’s Arvell Reese late in the pre-draft process in media projections and outside chatter, now finds himself linked to Reese in a different way. Reese ended up with the Giants, while Bailey landed with the Jets.
Glenn’s situation is just as loaded. The Jets kept him after a 3-14 first season even though Kevin Stefanski and John Harbaugh were available. Stefanski may not have Harbaugh’s résumé, but he still guided a messy Browns operation to the playoffs twice in six years, which explains why Atlanta moved quickly to get him.
What hasn’t been in doubt with Glenn is the intensity. That’s been obvious beyond the sideline fire. Since his introductory press conference in January 2025, the message has been clear: winning in New York matters to him.
So now the Jets are waiting to see what this pairing can become. In a little less than two months, Glenn and Bailey will get their first real chance to show whether the organization’s faith was justified. The best-case scenario is simple enough: both players make the most of their opportunities and give the Jets a reason to feel good about the decision.
If that doesn’t happen, the same old questions are going to come roaring back.
In Other News...
Jets Fans Are About To Hate The Latest Robert Saleh Hype
Robert Saleh is still getting the sort of national-coach treatment that tends to make Jets fans roll their eyes. Even after a 20-36 run in New York, he remains a popular name in league circles, and Tennessees decision to bring him in has only added to the sense that some evaluators still see him as a defensive mind worth betting on. The Titans also give him a familiar setup, with John Franklin-Myers and Jermaine Johnson II back in the mix, which only strengthens the idea that this is a staff and roster combination built around his style.
The hype has gone a step further with some analysts already floating Tennessee as a possible playoff team, a label that will sound especially familiar to anyone who watched the Jets try to live up to similar optimism. For New York fans, the frustrating part is not just that Saleh is getting another chance, but that the conversation around him has shifted so quickly from what went wrong here to what he might do next. If the Titans do take a step forward, it will only sharpen the debate over how much of Salehs reputation was ever tied to the Jets in the first place. [Read more 🡒]
Aaron Glenn May Have Found The Jets Defender Who Changes Everything
The Jets swap of Jermaine Johnson II to Tennessee for TVondre Sweat was always going to invite a little second-guessing, but the early read on the deal is less about what New York gave up and more about what it may have gained in the middle of the defense. ESPN analyst Ben Solak pointed to Sweat as the player most likely to make a real leap in 2026 under Aaron Glenn, whose reputation for pushing and connecting with players has already become part of the conversation around the new regime.
That kind of projection makes sense in a scheme built to stop the run, where Sweat is expected to line up as a nose tackle and anchor a front that leans on three defensive linemen. There is still plenty to prove, of course, but the appeal is obvious: if Glenns style can unlock the version of Sweat the Jets believe they are getting, New York may have found a defender whose ceiling changes the way the rest of the front is viewed. [Read more 🡒]
