New York Jets owner Woody Johnson, heavily criticized for his role in last season's 5-12 disappointment, vows to improve in 2025. "Absolutely, I have to look in the mirror, and I have to be a better owner,
Being better for Johnson means taking a more hands-off approach and letting the people he hired do their jobs.
The biggest "cheat code," so to speak, in sports is having good ownership. The value of having an owner who not only invests financially, but also hires
Robert Saleh is back with the San Francisco 49ers. Saleh, who was fired by the Jets during the season, was hired by the 49ers for second stint as the team’s defensive coordinator on Friday night, The Post’s Brian Costello confirmed.
The Jets owner said all the right things when introducing his new head coach and general manager — will he follow through?
After years of failure, Jets owner Woody Johnson has realized that he should stay out of the team's football decisions.
The Jets are changing their organizational reporting structure with the hires of Aaron Glenn as coach and Darren Mougey as general manager.
“I have to look in the mirror and I have to be a better owner,” Johnson said. “And I'm trying to be better.” The Jets have missed the playoffs for 14 consecutive years under Johnson’s ownership. This season was especially tumultuous. Johnson fired head coach Robert Saleh and general manager Joe Douglas during the season.
It’s decision time for the New York Jets as they determine who will lead the team as quarterback in 2025. Owner Woody Johnson has now revealed the organization’s plans for Aaron Rodgers heading into the upcoming season.
Woody Johnson confirmed earlier this week the Jets are adjusting their power structure. Both Aaron Glenn and Darren Mougey will report to ownership, signaling a shift from the Joe Douglas-Robert Saleh regime — in which only the GM did so.
The Patriots struck gold with Mike Vrabel, who tops the ranking of NFL head coaching hires, while the Cowboys fell short with Brian Schottenheimer.