Darren Mougey has already spent the offseason earning plenty of credit, but the Jets may still have one more low-cost swing left if the Giants make Jalin Hyatt available before Week 1.
Hyatt was supposed to be a steal when New York took the former Tennessee standout in the third round of the 2023 draft. That never really took hold. Over the last two years, he has managed just 13 catches for 97 yards, and he fell out of favor with the previous coaching staff.
Now the Giants have turned over their receiver room in a big way. John Harbaugh and the new coaching staff added multiple veteran wideouts this offseason, including three signings in early June, most notably Odell Beckham Jr.
That leaves Hyatt in a shaky spot. He’s in the final year of his rookie deal, and the price tag should be light. Even if the Giants part ways with Braxton Berrios and JuJu Smith-Schuster, it’s still hard to see Hyatt surviving to the 53-man roster without injuries opening the door.
For the Jets, that creates a clean, low-risk opportunity. A conditional late-round pick could be enough to get a deal done, and the kind of return involved would barely register compared with the rest of the team’s offseason moves.
New York has already settled on Geno Smith as a stopgap quarterback and handed new contracts to Breece Hall and Joe Tippmann. Adding another young receiver behind Garrett Wilson and Adonai Mitchell would give the Jets more depth without forcing them into a major investment.
And if the move doesn’t work out? The damage would be minimal. A sixth- or seventh-round pick is the most likely cost, which is a small price for a player who still carries some upside.
That upside was part of the appeal in the first place. Before the 2023 NFL Draft, NFL.com's Lance Zierlein labeled Hyatt a boom-or-bust prospect and pointed to the traits that made him intriguing.
“Hyatt’s gliding gait disguises explosive acceleration that can lead to easy separation on deep throws,” Zierlein wrote. “However, he does display inconsistency on contested catches.”
Zierlein also viewed Hyatt as a first- or second-round talent, which makes his slide to No. 73 all the more notable. The talent is still there, and the Giants’ quarterback changes during Hyatt’s first two seasons probably didn’t help his case.
If the Giants truly believed in him, they likely wouldn’t have overhauled the position so aggressively this spring. Whatever happens next, the Jets should be watching closely.
For a team looking at depth options, Hyatt is the kind of gamble that makes sense. And with 41 games already under his belt, he’s a lot more proven than the usual late-round flier.
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Several veteran names fit the kind of short-term fix the Jets could use, including Jerome Baker, Matt Milano and Elandon Roberts. Bobby Okereke also belongs on the radar, though he may not be eager to come in as a backup, and Milano brings the kind of upside that always tempts teams even if his availability makes the calculation a tricky one. [Read more 🡒]
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What makes the signing interesting is the role the Jets appear to have in mind for him. Enagbare is expected to be used more as a dependable run defender than as a consistent pass-rush threat, which means the fit matters as much as the name on the transaction wire. With T'Vondre Sweat, David Onyemata and Darrell Jackson Jr. already in the mix, the Jets are clearly building with a specific need in mind, and the next question is how much pressure Enagbare can actually add when the game plan asks for more than just setting the edge. [Read more 🡒]
Jets Trade Idea Targets A Fix For Their Biggest Defensive Hole
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It is still just a speculative concept, not a confirmed move, but it speaks to where the Jets are right now. They have been active in trying to reshape the roster, and a low-cost deal for a player who might be squeezed out in Tampa Bay would fit the kind of opportunistic approach teams often take when they believe a clear need is staring them in the face. [Read more 🡒]
