
Something that isn't said enough at this time on the NFL calendar, due to the high seriousness with which all 32 teams approach the three days of the draft and all the work that each team puts into it and all the good that each hopes will come out of it, is how much fun the whole endeavor is.
One who knows is Aaron Glenn. The Jets head coach has been a student of the draft in one way or another since the Jets took him 12th overall out of Texas A&M in 1994. It affected him for his 15 playing seasons by providing teammates around which he would perform on the Jets and four other teams. The impact has been even greater from 2012-24, when he was a scout, assistant coach and coordinator.
And now approaching his second draft as Jets head coach, Glenn sounds, well, like a draftnik.
"Draft day, I love that day, I really do, because you just never know what's going to happen," Glenn said recently. "You hear all these guys that are going to get drafted in these certain spots and it's never that, so to me that's the exciting part of it and I love every part of it. Hell, I was a part of that when I came out. Shoot, I thought I was going to be the sixth pick and I wound up going 12, so that's how it happens.""
How will it happen next week for the Jets? Not even Glenn nor general manager Darren Mougey knows for sure. But there will be the exciting parts as the Jets decide what they're going to do with the second and 16th picks of Round 1 on Thursday night in Pittsburgh, and the 33rd and 44th choices on Friday, and even their five Saturday selections.
The Jets' nine total choices have remained steady since March 11, when they got QB Geno Smith and a seventh-rounder from Las Vegas in exchange for a sixth-rounder. (The Justin Fields trade to Kansas City on March 19 was for a 2027 pick.) If they hold on to all those slots, it will be their most since they drafted 10 players in 2021.
And who will they take with those choices? They're not saying, of course, although many are saying for them. That they like one of the top edge rushers, Arvell Reese of Ohio State or David Bailey of Texas Tech, at two. That maybe they like Alabama QB Ty Simpson enough to take him if he's there at 16 or even 33 ... or not. That they could put off taking a QB until day three and instead go high for a WR, such as Southern Cal's Makai Lemon or Arizona State's Jordyn Tyson.
But one important point, which Mougey made about Simpson's one season as 'Bama's starter, is that a player's limited college starts could be an issue, but then again perhaps not.
"Obviously, we want the biggest sample size we can," the GM said. "It's always projections with all these draft players, right? So the bigger the sample size, naturally you might feel a little better about it, but we'll still evaluate him. There's a lot of good things to see in the games he did play.
The Mougey/Glenn Jets might also not be beholden to the Best Available Athlete theory, a flexible approach the coach acquired from one of his NFL mentors, the Saints and current Broncos head coach,
"I learned this, really, with Sean Payton — man, you've got to shut off the outside noise and who do you love? If you love the player, go get the player. And I truly believe that. Regardless of what everybody thinks, regardless of positional value, if you love the player, go and get him. And obviously, me and Dan [Campbell, Lions HC] were together in New Orleans all those years, and that never left us. I'm not changing that either, and that something that me and Mouge talk about a lot and we utilize that. If we love the player, man, we're going to get him.
Glenn cited the importance of football talent, character and coachability coming together ideally in every one of a team's picks and cited the example of Danielle Hunter, the LSU edge who went in the third round of the 2015 draft to the Vikings. Hunter is one reason for the Texans' dynamic defense the past two seasons and has racked up 114.5 career sacks.
Get a look at the hat the 2026 Jets draft class will sport after hearing their name called at the NFL Draft in April. Purchase the hat on Jets Shop here.















"His stats weren't up there," Glenn said of his college metrics. "But he had all the traits and then he had a coach that could coach him to be where he's at right now. So I look at it the same way, Man, it's a combination of the traits and the football character. And is that player coachable enough to be able to do the things that you want him to do to be successful?"
Who is this year's Danielle Hunter? And will the Jets identify him and then, in Glenn's words,
One last point about the Green & White as they make their final preparations for the 2026 NFL Draft is that their nine selections at this moment should be considered a flexible number since Mougey has shown himself comfortable as a draft deal maker. Of his 13 total trades as an NFL general manager, 12 have involved one or more picks, including his first two as GM on day three of last year's draft to bring DB Malachi Moore and DL Tyler Baron to the Jets' roster.
"Mouge has said this before, man. He's going to answer the phone," AG said of Mougey. "Which I love because you never know. You never know."











