Skip to main content
Advertising

Garrett Wilson Sings a Happy Tune as Jets Continue First Week of OTAs

Standout WR Likes Aaron Glenn's Plan 'to Give Him the Ball as Much as Possible,' Reunion with QB Justin Fields

Garrett Wilson thumb

The marching band has yet to assemble for 2025, but three days into Phase 3 of the Jets' offseason program, head coach Aaron Glenn was humming a tune that caught Garrett Wilson's attention. Something in the key of G.

"We're going to give him the ball as much as possible," Glenn said after Wednesday's practice at the Atlantic Health Jets Training Center. "That's it."

"It makes me feel great," Garrett Wilson, the Jets' fourth-year WR1, said about the coach's short-form long-range plan for No. 5. "That's my mindset — whatever I'm going to be a part of as far as the philosophy, I'll be prepped for that. So to hear that, I've got to get my body ready, get on the same page with Justin [Fields], clean up my details.

"That's awesome to hear but there's a lot of stuff that comes with it that sparks in my head, too."

Those sparks come from more sources than just AG's one-liner about how he'll be used in the offense. One is the previously mentioned Justin Fields, who supplied the vast majority of Wilson's 73 receptions in 2018-19 at Ohio State. G remembers watching the 2021 NFL Draft and grumping about why his QB didn't go higher than 11th overall to Chicago, recalls watching Bears video "a lot" for the first couple of years of Fields' pro career.

"He's someone I'm familiar with, someone I have a great relationship with, someone that I love just watching him play," Wilson said. "Since I met Justin, it's been a pleasure to line up alongside him. I didn't think we'd get that opportunity on this level, so it's exciting. I'm still taking it in all the way. It's cool. We've been definitely picking up where we left off."

Wilson also had good words to pass on about the Jets' redesigned WRs room that includes free agents Tyler Johnson and Josh Reynolds and holdover Allen Lazard, who bring "major vet energy" to the room, and young returnees Xavier Gipson — who Wilson said "had a great day" at Wednesday's practice — and Malachi Corley.

"It's cool to see," he said. "We've got a good group and we'll keep coming along, for sure."

Some may think Wilson has a song in his heart these days because it's 2025, not '24. Some comments he made last year, some on-field body language and exchanges led observers to think he might not want to stick around with the Jets when his rookie contract expires after next season.

But Wilson is a complex, thoughtful young man. He said before and explained again that "unhappier" moments were not related to Aaron Rodgers or Wilson's role in the offense. It was more a matter of 7-10, 7-10 and 5-12, his team's records in his three seasons wearing green and white.

"No matter how bad it might seem, how ugly my face might look at that moment, it's a blessing to do what I do and to have another opportunity to make right on what we did, what I did last year," he said. "I wasn't unhappy — I feel I've been saying this a lot. As far as being a competitor and how it may look when I'm out there when we're down a couple of points, I've got to keep working on that because I realize it can be perceived a certain way.

"But I'm excited to be out here because this team believed in me initially, they still believe in me. And we have the opportunity to do something special. We've got as good a chance as any other team in the league. Everyone starts with a blank slate. No one cares what you did last year. It's our job to kind of make right on it and I'm excited about that."

And the happy tune Wilson can hear these days will turn into a Verdi aria if his reunion with Fields and the new culture that Glenn and the Jets are just setting to work on pay dividends and enable him to equal or exceed his career highs last season of 101 catches, 1,104 yards and 7 touchdowns. Those developments could lead to him signing a rewarding second pro contract with the team that drafted him 10th overall in '22.

"I'm hopeful I'm a Jet for life and we get this thing rolling and all of our best days are ahead of us," Wilson said. "I don't know exactly what that looks like, but I'm going to do my part. And when the time does come and those conversations are being had, I'm going to do my part to make it undeniable."

That would be music to the Jets and their fans.

See Garrett Wilson, Justin Fields, Saucer Gardner and the rest of the Jets on the field during the beginning of Phase 3 of the voluntary offseason program.

Advertising