Jets' Offseason Outlook Provides Fans with Realistic Path Forward
Jets' Offseason Outlook Provides Fans with Realistic Path Forward
With how the Jets have approached the offseason this year, one can make the case that the path forward is starting to materialize.Nick Faria|
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New York JetsRome wasn't built in a day. Neither are true NFL title contenders.
For the last 15 years, the New York Jets have asked fans to be patient as they have tried to rebuild the roster (and organization) into a viable winner. The fanbase has been given very little to trust over the years.
The same could be said for the current iteration of the Jets. Despite talk of building a team "the fans can be proud of," all people have seen is more of the same in 2025.
But there's a difference in the Jets' roster building this offseason compared to past ones. And that could very well be the difference that fans finally need to see to have faith in the process.
Not because of the immediate results, but due to the path the team is on.
Jets' offseason plans are shaping future hope
A common misconception that Jets fans have made recently is their hopes of turning around a team only takes a single year when you have the right coach and quarterback. They point to the Washington Commanders with Jayden Daniels reaching the NFC Championship game in his first year as a clear example of that.
But Washington's tale is a cautionary one, not something to emulate across the board.
For as good as the Commanders were in 2024, they were equally as bad in 2025. The team won just five games last year and now has one of the oldest and most expensive rosters in the game. Instead of building their team slowly, along with their star quarterback, they tried to cut corners, and it has left them in limbo as a team.
The Jets learned that lesson as well. After boosting their win total in 2022, the team tried to jump into championship contention by acquiring Aaron Rodgers. That move didn't work out, and it left the team kickstarting another rebuild that current head coach Aaron Glenn and general manager Darren Mougey are trying to work through.
But just as the Detroit Lions in their first year under Dan Campbell, improvement is not always linear. Like the Jets, Campbell's Lions were unwatchable in their first season together in 2021. But they used a strong offseason and a year of experience to build off their first-year troubles. 2022 saw a six-win jump that propelled the team to title contention.
It took the Lions two years to build their roster. The Jets are entering their second season with the current regime. Along the way, they have built the locker room in a similar way to that Detroit team - with quality leaders brought in on defense and an offensive line with major upside.
Maybe it doesn't end up working out. Perhaps it actually does.
But the Jets' "plan" this season is far more palatable than ever for a fanbase dying to see competency. If the coaching staff takes a similar jump to what Campbell's Lions did, then New York might finally build a team the "right way" that can itself into a winner sooner rather than later.
Published 49 minutes ago
NICK FARIANick covers the NFL for Sports Illustrated/FN. He was previously on the New York Jets' beat for AM New York with prior experience reporting on the New York Islanders and the Philadelphia Eagles. The New York City resident is also an Adjunct Professor at LIU Brooklyn.
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Three players the Rangers could target in NHL free agency
By Michael Blinn Published June 30, 2026, 6:31 p.m. ET
Three players the Rangers could target when NHL free agency opens on Wednesday, July 1 at noon ET:
Teddy Blueger, Center
In need of a fourth-line center following Sam Carrick’s departure via trade last season, the Rangers could turn to a reliable two-way skater in Blueger. He would boost the penalty kill and the team’s faceoff percentage.
Mats Zuccarello, Right Wing
There has yet to be a better winger for Mika Zibanejad than Zuccarello, who played alongside the Swede for multiple years before the team entered a rebuild and he was traded to Dallas in February 2019. At 38, Zuccarello has proven he can still produce, and a one-year deal is feasible for the Rangers.

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Scott Laughton, Center/Wing
With uncertainties surrounding their center depth, the Rangers could target a utility forward who can play both wing and center. Laughton certainly fits that bill and has proven capable of contributing offensively.
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Woman secretly livestreamed more than 700 hours of her ex-husband using his Ring cameras
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Inset: Rayna Bell in court. Background: Ring camera footage showing Rayna Bell's ex-husband being spied on in his California home (KNSD/YouTube).
A California woman has admitted to using her ex-husband's Ring cameras to spy on him, with court documents saying she livestreamed more than 700 hours of the man and his family from inside his home.
Rayna Bell pleaded guilty last week to a misdemeanor charge of eavesdropping using an electronic device, according to court records. She was ordered to pay restitution as part of the plea deal and must serve one day in custody, with credit for time served and one year of probation.
Sign up for the Law&Crime Daily Newsletter for more breaking news and updatesA request for a "domestic violence restraining order" filed by the ex-husband, obtained by local NBC affiliate KNSD, accused Bell of "unlawfully accessing" her ex's private Ring camera system last year and linking his account to half a dozen Amazon Alexa devices that were registered to her.
"[Bell] viewed video footage for approximately 44,640 minutes — an average of 12 hours per day — over the span of two months," the request said. "These devices include cameras inside and outside my home, including our children's rooms. Her unauthorized access violated both my privacy and the safety of my household."
The ex-husband and his family told KNSD they first noticed something was wrong after hearing a voice coming from one of the cameras.
"It was his ex-wife's voice," recounted the man's fiancee, Acacia Young. "We tried so hard to try to restore the peace, the security, the privacy. Once you are robbed of that, it's almost impossible to try to restore that in your home."
According to the restraining order request, the footage that Bell "live viewed" and recorded included "deeply personal and private moments, such as my fiancee breastfeeding our newborn, nudity and partially undressed footage of our children … in vulnerable settings."
The recordings were "deeply invasive" and deemed as possible child exploitation by the ex-husband, according to KNSD.
"[Bell] also accessed and recorded confidential household conversations, including private discussions between my fiancée and me regarding our finances, credit card numbers, banking details, Social Security information, medical records, medical health history, and other protected health and identity-related data," the request charged. "Her conduct constitutes a serious invasion of privacy and potential identity theft."
Bell did not respond to KNSD's requests for comment. Her ex-husband plans to take legal action against her in civil court.
"You're always going to feel like they can do it again," Young said. "Or if they had the opportunity, they would do it again."
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Brendan Sorsby will not pursue path to NFL in 2026, QB to prepare for 2027 draft
Former Indiana, Cincinnati and Texas Tech quarterback Brendan Sorsby is accepting the consequences for his gambling problems and will sit out both the collegiate and NFL seasons in 2026.
After his effort to join the NFL in a supplemental draft this summer failed, Sorsby will not seek litigation against the NFL and will be eligible for the 2027 NFL Draft, per CBS Sports NFL Insider Jonathan Jones. The league won't punish Sorsby further for his known gambling conduct on top of what's unofficially a one-year suspension from football. Per the settlement between the NFL, the NFL Players' Association and Sorsby, he will be allowed to take part in the Senior Bowl, pro day and team visits in the lead up to the 2027 like any other draft-eligible prospect, per ESPN.
Sorsby released the following statement on the decision:
"There has been a lot of news about me out there, and I want to share this statement to make sure things are clear. I accept 100% responsibility for my actions. I did not have control of my gambling problem, and it took getting caught for me to realize that, but it was truly the best thing that could've happened to me. Because of this, I have been able to get the help I need and fully focus on my recovery.
"The news about the supplemental draft changes nothing about my recovery journey. I will continue to take it one day at a time. Focusing on making myself better throughout this process and making sure to share what I have learned and will continue to learn with others going forward. I am fully committed to being the best version of myself that I can be while getting ready for the 2027 draft. God makes no mistakes, and I look forward to seeing the good that is to come from this."
Sorsby's 2026 has been a winding road to lead up to this decision. He transferred to Texas Tech as the transfer portal's No. 2 overall prospect, per 247 Sports on Jan. 4, after earning first-team All-Big 12 honors at Cincinnati in 2025, thanks to leading the conference in passer efficiency rating (155.1). The NCAA then alerted Texas Tech of Sorsby's gambling activity on April 14, which led to the quarterback entering a gambling rehab facility in Arizona on April 27. He then filed for his collegiate reinstatement on May 18 after being ruled ineligible by the NCAA for thousands of bets placed during his four-year college football career. On June 8, he found a Texas judge willing to grant him an injunction to the NCAA's decision to make him ineligible, which appeared to clear a path for him to play for Texas Tech in 2026. Sorsby then decided to walk away from his college career to join the NFL via a supplemental draft this summer, after the Big 12 pursued legal action against him and Texas Tech on June 15.
| 45-plus pass TD and 1,000-plus rush yards in two-year span, Big 12 history | Two-year span |
|---|---|
Brendan Sorsby (CIN) | 2024-2025 |
Sam Ehlinger (TEX) | 2018-2020 |
Kyler Murray (OKLA) | 2017-2018 |
Trevone Boykin (TCU) | 2014-2015 |
Robert Griffin III (BAY) | 2010-2011 |
Colt McCoy (TEX) | 2007-2008 |
Zac Robinson (OKST) | 2007-2008 |
CBS Sports NFL Draft analyst Ryan Wilson views Sorsby as a potential first-round talent, and he now has a year to prove his worth through a year of training on his own while staying squeaky clean off the field.
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