The Jets still have a quarterback puzzle on their hands, and the backup spot may be the easiest place to start looking for help. One name that fits is Spencer Rattler, the Saints passer who was floated Wednesday by The Athletic’s Zack Rosenblatt as a trade option for New York.
Rosenblatt pointed to the Saints’ crowded quarterback room as the reason Rattler could be available. “New Orleans has Tyler Shough and signed old friend Zach Wilson this offseason,” he said. “New Orleans won’t release Rattler and it’s unclear how much they’d want in a trade, but he’s an ideal option as a young backup with starting experience (14 starts in two years) and room to grow.”
Rattler, 25, was a fifth-round pick out of South Carolina in 2024. The 6-foot, 211-pound quarterback has completed 304 of 485 passes, good for 62.7%, for 2,903 yards with 12 touchdowns and 10 interceptions in 16 games. He has also added 313 rushing yards on 49 carries, averaging 6.4 yards per attempt, and has one lost fumble.
For New York, the appeal is straightforward. The Jets may not be built for a deep postseason run next season, but they still need a reliable No. 2 behind Geno Smith. Rattler would give them a more proven option than fourth-round rookie Cade Klubnik, while also buying Klubnik time to develop without being thrown into the fire too soon.
That matters because the Jets have a long history of rushing rookie quarterbacks into action and living with the results. Wilson finished 2021 at 55.6% passing with nine touchdowns and 11 interceptions.
Sam Darnold posted 57.7% with 17 touchdowns and 15 interceptions in 2018. Smith, too, struggled early, completing 55.8% of his throws with 12 touchdowns and 21 interceptions in 2013.
Klubnik is not being projected as the kind of long-term starter those players were, but the idea is the same: keep him out of a role that could expose him before he’s ready. If he’s third string, he can develop without the pressure of having to produce right away.
There’s also a financial angle that makes Rattler more attractive. He has two seasons left on his contract and is owed just over $1 million in each of those years, which makes him a low-risk target as long as New York doesn’t give up Day 1 or Day 2 draft capital.
And if the Jets hand Klubnik the backup job instead, they’d be taking a familiar gamble. Given the franchise’s 15-year playoff drought - the longest in North American professional sports - it makes sense for New York to try something different.
In Other News...
Jets Fans Won't Agree On This Latest Quarterback Trade Idea
The Jets quarterback search has a way of circling back to the same question: how much sense does it make to chase another young arm, especially when the answer might be more about patience than certainty? With the Browns carrying a crowded quarterback room and a former third-round pick still trying to carve out a clearer path, the idea of a trade has enough logic on paper to get attention in New York, where the position has been a source of frustration for years.
For the Jets, the appeal is obvious enough. A backup with some starting experience and room to grow can look like a worthwhile swing if the price is modest, and this is the kind of move that can divide fans between those craving upside and those who have seen too many false starts at quarterback. The real question is whether adding another developmental passer changes anything meaningful for a team still trying to find stability at the most important spot on the field. [Read more 🡒]
Jets Fans Just Got Another Unsettling Reminder About The Next QB
The Jets still have Geno Smith under center, but the conversation around what comes next keeps circling back to the same uneasy place: there is not much proven help waiting behind him. The Athletic recently took a look at the quarterback picture and pointed to a pair of possible fallback options, which is a reminder that even with a starter in place, the depth chart is still drawing scrutiny.
One of those names comes with only a small NFL sample, while the other has earned respect for his intelligence and presence in the room without yet convincing evaluators that his game is ready for the league. For a team that has spent years trying to stabilize the most important position in sports, that kind of uncertainty is exactly the sort of detail fans notice, especially when the discussion is less about a solution than about how thin the options remain. [Read more 🡒]
