The New York Jets executed a major teardown at the 2025 NFL trade deadline, sending cornerback Sauce Gardner to the Indianapolis Colts and defensive lineman Quinnen Williams to the Dallas Cowboys. In return, the Jets acquired multiple first-round draft picks to fuel a rebuild amid their 1-7 record and league-longest playoff drought. The moves, orchestrated by first-year GM Darren Mougey, provide New York with significant future assets including two 2026 first-rounders and three 2027 first-rounders.
The New York Jets' trade deadline activity marked a seismic shift, prioritizing long-term rebuilding over short-term contention. On Tuesday, the Jets traded 25-year-old All-Pro cornerback Sauce Gardner, who had signed a four-year, $120.4 million extension earlier this year, to the Colts. In exchange, New York received the Colts' 2026 and 2027 first-round picks along with wide receiver Adonai Mitchell. Gardner, a two-time All-Pro First Team selection in his first two NFL seasons, joins a 7-2 Colts team atop the AFC South.
Hours later, the Jets dealt 27-year-old three-time Pro Bowler Quinnen Williams, whose contract runs through 2027, to the Cowboys. Dallas sent a 2026 second-round pick, the better of their own or the Green Bay Packers' 2027 first-round pick, and defensive lineman Mazi Smith. Williams bolsters a Cowboys defense ranked near the bottom of the league, pairing with recent acquisition Logan Wilson from the Bengals.
These deals give the Jets five first-round picks over the next two drafts, including two in 2026 and three in 2027, plus two 2026 second-rounders. With quarterback Justin Fields' experiment faltering and a defense that ranked poorly even before the trades, New York eyes a quarterback in the loaded 2027 class, featuring prospects like Jeremiah Smith and Arch Manning. GM Mougey emphasized restocking the defense and skill positions beyond Garrett Wilson, whom the Jets refused to trade.
The Jets' 14-year playoff drought, tied for the longest in major sports, extends this season, but the haul positions them for flexibility. As Mougey noted, the team now controls its future, potentially emulating past rebuilds like the 1990s Cowboys. Jets owner Woody Johnson approved the patient approach, ending quick fixes that previously stalled progress.