Jets Fans Wont Like Where This Offense Just Got Ranked

Despite the talents of Breece Hall and Garrett Wilson, the New York Jets' offensive ranking plummets due to Geno Smith's struggles and concerns about his longevity.

CBS Sports’ Jared Dubin doesn’t have much faith in the New York Jets’ offensive trio - at least not yet.

In his ranking of all 32 NFL teams’ “triplets,” meaning the starting quarterback, top pass-catcher and RB1, Dubin placed the Jets at No. 29 with Geno Smith, Breece Hall and Garrett Wilson. That left only three teams behind them.

“The Jets fell six spots here despite replacing Justin Fields with Geno Smith. It feels like they’re being punished for Smith’s awful season in Las Vegas, which unfolded under horrendous circumstances in arguably the NFL’s worst offensive environment (Tennessee is the only team that has an argument for being worse),” Dubin wrote.

“Smith is also getting up there in age, though, so it’s possible that he’s just on the downslide of his career and will never get back what he had for a few years in Seattle,” he continued. “The Jets and the next three teams on the list were separated by a total of 0.2 points in the rankings.”

There’s a real argument that New York should have landed a little higher. Hall just went over 1,000 yards and flashed the kind of ceiling that makes him such a dangerous weapon when the blocking is even halfway decent.

Wilson, meanwhile, finished with only 395 receiving yards, but that came in just seven games. In each of his three fully healthy NFL seasons, he’s topped 1,000 yards despite catching passes from 11 different quarterbacks.

Now healthy heading into the 2026 season, Wilson could be staring at his best year yet. He’s been doing damage in spite of brutal quarterback play, and that matters.

Smith is the tougher sell, and that part of Dubin’s ranking makes sense on the surface. His lone season in Las Vegas was rough.

But the deeper look tells a different story: his 2025 struggles came largely while operating in a terrible supporting cast. Before that move to Vegas, Smith put together three straight seasons of Pro Bowl-level football with the Seattle Seahawks.

The teams ranked just ahead of the Jets were Carolina at No. 28, Pittsburgh at No.

27, Arizona at No. 26, Las Vegas at No.

25, Washington at No. 24, New Orleans at No. 23 and the Giants at No.

Outside of Washington, there’s a strong case that the Jets should have been above every one of them.

Pittsburgh is the easiest one to pick apart. Aaron Rodgers was the definition of a Checkdown Charlie last season, with his 6.5 yards per attempt ranking 25th among 29 qualified quarterbacks.

Jaylen Warren is a useful back, but he still didn’t match Hall’s production. And DK Metcalf hasn’t gone over 1,000 receiving yards since 2023, when Smith was throwing him the ball.

Arizona doesn’t look like a stronger trio on paper, either. Brissett’s best football doesn’t stack up to Smith’s, and Jeremiyah Love’s upside is tied to an offensive line that has to be competent right away - something the Cardinals weren’t last season.

Las Vegas is a different kind of question mark because the Raiders still don’t seem to know who will start at quarterback in Week 1. If it’s Fernando Mendoza, as Dubin appears to expect, he’ll need a strong environment to be effective.

That wasn’t the case in Las Vegas last season, even if Brock Bowers and Ashton Jeanty have the talent to help create one. Putting a rookie quarterback that high on the list is a leap.

New Orleans brings its own uncertainty. Tyler Shough is still an unknown, even after a late rise in his rookie year, and nobody knows yet whether he can be the Saints’ long-term answer.

The offensive line is also a concern, especially with Travis Etienne. The unit finished 31st in Pro Football Focus’ run-blocking grade at 39.9 last season.

The Giants, meanwhile, have more questions than they’re getting credit for. The buzz around John Harbaugh is understandable, but he isn’t part of these rankings. Jaxson Dart is a candidate for a Year 2 jump after a promising rookie season in a bad situation, but Malik Nabers may not be ready for Week 1 after an ACL tear, and Cam Skattebo is still a mystery after playing only eight games as a rookie and averaging 4.1 yards per carry.

In Other News...

Jets Still Have One Defensive Weak Spot They Cannot Ignore

The Jets have spent plenty of time trying to shore up the defense, but one spot still looks vulnerable enough to keep the front office shopping. Linebacker depth has become a real concern, with age and possible regression around the current group pushing New York to at least consider outside help rather than hoping the room sorts itself out on its own.

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 🡒]

Jets Added A Defensive Piece Who Comes With One Big Catch

The Jets kept working to shore up their defensive front by signing former Packers lineman Kingsley Enagbare to a one-year contract, another move aimed at making the run defense sturdier. Enagbare gives New York a familiar kind of depth piece for this stage of the offseason, the sort of player who can fit into a rotation and help the line hold up better against physical opponents.

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

The Jets have spent the offseason trying to patch the middle of their defense, and a new trade proposal points them toward a linebacker who could help stabilize that area without requiring a major investment. SirVocea Dennis has been viewed as an intriguing fit because of his range and upside, and the idea is simple enough: add a young defender who could grow alongside Jamien Sherwood while giving New York another option in a spot that has been a concern.

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 🡒]