When Woody Johnson fired general manager Joe Douglas, back on Nov. 17, he said it was in part so the Jets could begin their search for a successor immediately. And when they started interviewing candidates in mid December after hiring a sports media and analytics firm (led by former GM Mike Tannenbaum) to help with the search,
Woody Johnson expressed confidence in his and the organization’s ability to find the right general manager and head coach to turn the Jets around.
Veteran quarterback Aaron Rodgers' future with the New York Jets is still uncertain, but he offered some signs of positivity on Thursday. During an
On Tuesday, Packers vice president of player personnel Jon-Eric Sullivan spoke to the team about the role. He is the 14th candidate to interview since Jets owner Woody Johnson fired Joe Douglas in November.
1. Familiar position: Saturday marked Woody Johnson's 25th anniversary as the owner of the Jets. On Jan. 11, 2000, he purchased the team from the Leon Hess estate for $635 million, which was a record for an NFL franchise at the time. Forbes recently valued the Jets at $6.9 billion -- roughly 10 times Johnson's original investment.
New York Jets owner Woody Johnson insists his teenage son has no influence ... The Jets will be hiring a new coach and general manager this offseason after Robert Saleh and Joe Douglas were fired this season.br/]
The Jets have launched their head coaching search, and Ron Rivera and Rex Ryan are a couple of the early candidates.
Aaron Rodgers’ future with the New York Jets remains at a crossroads, as the final decision remains in owner Woody Johnson’s hands. Rodgers, meanwhile, is busy monitoring Californian wildfires.
"I think everybody understands that it's going to come down to a GM and coach and myself and whether we all want to do the dance together or if it's not in the cards," Rodgers said.
He lives, he breathes, and now, he finally speaks. For haters of Aaron Rodgers, the “speaking” part is something they could do without, but that does not matter as it relates to the New York Jets‘ future—which is exactly what the man spoke about on Thursday.
Aaron Rodgers made it sound Thursday like the Jets' incoming new general manager and coach, not owner Woody Johnson, will determine if he's back with the team in 2025.
Jets quarterback Aaron Rodgers spoke with “The Pat McAfee Show” on Thursday, saying that he’s in a holding pattern for his own future while the team figures out who’ll be running New York's show next season.