The Jets have spent the offseason trying to rebuild a roster that fell apart in 2025, and the work has already shown up in the talent around the team. New York has added help in a lot of places and put together what looks like one of the stronger skill groups in the league.
Even with that, the quarterback situation still hangs over everything. With Geno Smith and Cade Klubnik in the mix, the Jets could still use another answer under center.
Bleacher Report’s Kristopher Knox floated a three-team trade that would bring in a quarterback with a Pro Bowl résumé and more than 12,000 career passing yards, and it would cost New York just one draft pick.
"Jets Get: QB Mac Jones. 49ers Get: WR DK Metcalf. Steelers Get: Jets' 2027 3rd-round pick, WR Brandon Aiyuk," Knox writes.
The framework is a little out there, with the 49ers and Steelers pulled into a deal that would send DK Metcalf to San Francisco and Brandon Aiyuk plus a third-round pick to Pittsburgh. But for the Jets, the centerpiece is Mac Jones.
Jones may not be the flashiest name on the board, but he turned in a strong year with the 49ers. Playing behind a banged-up offense, he went 5-3 in eight starts and 11 total games, and that unit was likely worse than what he’d find in New York if this deal ever came together.
He completed 69.6 percent of his passes for 2,151 yards with 13 touchdowns and six interceptions. His 97.4 passer rating was the best of his career.
San Francisco has been willing to move Jones this offseason, but the right offer still hasn’t landed with John Lynch and Kyle Shanahan.
The whole trade idea may be a long shot, but the Jets making a run at Jones would not be a bad move. He’s 27, and the source material makes the case that he offers more upside than Smith.
In Other News...
Jets Risk Another Lost Offensive Season For A Familiar Reason
The Jets offense is heading into 2026 with a familiar problem hanging over it again: the quarterbacks may be the biggest variable, and not in a good way. Geno Smith and Cade Klubnik are part of an evaluation year that is supposed to help the team figure out what it has around them, but if the passing game sputters, it becomes hard to tell whether the issue is the talent at quarterback or the skill players and line trying to support it.
New York has a lot riding on getting a clearer read on that group, especially with young pieces like Adonai Mitchell, Mason Taylor, Omar Cooper Jr. and Kenyon Sadiq needing meaningful looks. The uneasy part is that the Jets may not have much margin for error behind Smith and Klubnik, so a rough season could easily turn into another reset year, even if it also puts them in position to land a premium draft pick and keep future quarterback options open. [Read more 🡒]
Arian Smith Just Got A Real Opening With The Jets
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His case is not just about being around the ball, either. Smith has shown value on special teams, and he also brings a more intriguing offensive ceiling than the other names fighting for that last spot, which is why this has started to feel like a genuine matchup with Jamaal Pritchett rather than simple camp depth. If the Jets are only carrying six receivers, Smith has a real opening, and what he does with it now could determine whether he sticks. [Read more 🡒]
Aaron Glenns First Real Jets Test Hinges On Four Big Gambles
Aaron Glenns first season steering the Jets defense comes with a built-in stress test, and it starts with how quickly a handful of new faces can raise the floor. Minkah Fitzpatrick, David Bailey, Nahshon Wright and Demario Davis give the unit a mix of pedigree, youth, bargain upside and veteran steadiness, but none of it matters much unless the whole group actually fits into Glenns plan and delivers on the promise that brought them in.
Bailey arrives with the pressure that comes with being a top pick, while Fitzpatrick is the kind of high-end defender who changes the conversation if he looks like himself again. Wright has to prove his ball skills can carry over, and Davis is being asked to keep defying the usual timeline at his position. For a defense trying to become the backbone of the team, the upside is obvious. The catch is that each of these additions carries its own question, and the answers might determine how quickly Glenns version of the Jets takes shape. [Read more 🡒]
