The Jets are firing everyone who trusted Aaron Rodgers
Once upon a time, the New York Jets brain trust put all of its eggs in the Aaron Rodgers basket. General manager Joe Douglas, who had 20 total wins in four years before acquiring the egotistical four-time MVP, thought Rodgers was his ticket to sustained success. Head coach Robert Saleh, a man who had witnessed the comical foibles of Zach Wilson firsthand, agreed. Despite all the glaring warning signs from a passive-aggressive end to his tenure with the Green Bay Packers, Rodgers was Douglas and Saleh's golden goose at all costs of their professional reputations and self-respect.
Now, both Douglas and Saleh are unemployed because they gave Rodgers undue faith he didn't deserve. On Tuesday, ESPN's Adam Schefter reported that the Jets had fired Douglas just about a month after they jettisoned Saleh for the same "Rodgers let us down ... badly" reasons.
If you weren't born yesterday, you saw this news coming awhile ago:
More change in New York: Jets now have fired GM Joe Douglas, sources tell ESPN.
Last month, head coach Robert Saleh. Now, Douglas.
It’s a complete reboot for the Jets. pic.twitter.com/gmjl5PIQPb— Adam Schefter (@AdamSchefter) November 19, 2024
On some level, I do understand the inclination to label Douglas another Rodgers scapegoat while the woeful Jets flounder. Rodgers is one of the most prominent figures in football history. He has built up such a tremendous cache of goodwill over nearly two decades as a professional quarterback (on the field) that it would probably take a lot for an owner like Woody Johnson to ever (completely) punt on the (imaginary) possibilities he presents.
But I don't think Douglas is a Rodgers scapegoat that lets the future Hall of Famer get off scot-free for incinerating any hope this Jets regime once had. That sentiment applied much more to Saleh, who was a vessel for Rodgers' discontent because he had a precedent of showing that he thought he knew better than his coaches over the years. Saleh was someone who never vibed with Rodgers, so the Jets were happy to throw him under the bus without a second thought when their season still, technically, wasn't over.
At 3-8, Douglas going down with the ship now feels very different. This is the Jets cutting everyone who bought Rodgers' brazen snake oil loose without a second thought. It's ownership making a tacit acknowledgment that acquiring a (then) semi-washed diva like Rodgers for multiple high-end draft picks was a mistake which wasted everyone's time with the organization.
How do I know this for certain?
Well, dearest readers, that's because Rodgers -- a year after tearing his Achilles, mind you -- is having the worst statistical season of his career.
Rodgers hasn't thrown for 300 yards in a game all season. (The last time he threw for 300 yards in a game was in December 2021.) He's also averaging his lowest yards per attempt and has his lowest passer rating since his two initial non-starter seasons in Green Bay in ... 2005 and 2006. This is beyond a quarterback struggling. This is a player who is a hollow husk of the all-world talent he once was, now at the helm of the NFL's 17th-ranked offense on an expected points added (EPA) per play basis. Any time you might think the Jets have a modicum of hope, at this point, Rodgers throws it away himself.
And I think it'd be silly to assert that Johnson and Jets ownership doesn't recognize this grim reality. Rodgers will be 42 come December of next year. He has just one year left on his current contract. The Jets, as it stands, have the No. 7 overall pick in the 2025 NFL Draft. Given the way Gang Green is in a complete nosedive now, don't be surprised if that draft selection ends up being a top-five pick with the next Jets regime sticking its neck out for a new young quarterback to develop while Rodgers plays his usual brand of high-profile obscurity. That is, if they even keep him around for another season.
Nonetheless, until Rodgers' fate is decided, the Jets will offload every way-too-willing sycophant who dared trust him in the first place. Without question. The likely next suspect on the list? Offensive coordinator Nathaniel Hackett, who has sworn by Rodgers' antics for the last half-decade like a lowly barnacle attaches itself to the hull of a well-worn ship.
In the coming weeks, if I were Hackett, I would make sure to have my bags packed. Just in case. The Jets' purge of everything and everyone even somewhat connected to Rodgers has likely only just begun.
This article originally appeared on For The Win: The Jets are firing everyone who trusted Aaron Rodgers