So, with their season almost over, here’s a very early look at the Jets’ draft situation and the instant help they might be able to get:
CURRENT DRAFT POSITION: 4th (with their own pick) and 6th (with the pick they acquired from Seattle in the Adams trade).
HIGHEST PICK THEY COULD GET: Their strength of schedule is weak enough that they could still get the No. 1 overall pick if they lose out, Jacksonville and Detroit win out (good luck with that), and the Houston Texans win at least one game (ties go to the team with the worst strength of schedule).
LOWEST PICK THEY COULD GET: It would be close and might come down to tie-breakers, but the Seahawks’ pick they own could be as low as 13th. That might happen if the Seahawks win their last two games (vs. Detroit, at Arizona), Washington loses twice, and four of these five teams lose their last two games -- Atlanta, Denver, Minnesota, New Orleans, and Cleveland.
WHAT THEY NEED: So much. A pass rusher to line up opposite a healthy Carl Lawson next season. Another top receiver to help Zach Wilson. A pass-catching tight end. A safety to replace Marcus Maye. More corners and offensive linemen wouldn’t be terrible ideas, either.
WHAT THEY CAN GET:
Oregon DE/LB Kayvon Thibodeaux – He may be the best player in the draft and figures to be a Top 2 pick. Maybe, if a QB sneaks in to the top spots, he falls to 3, but no further. The 6-4, 250-pound edge rusher would seem to be an ideal fit on the opposite end of a healthy Lawson. That would instantly transform the Jets’ defense into something dangerous, and give Robert Saleh the kind of front he had in San Francisco.
Michigan DE Aidan Hutchinson – Ditto everything written above about Thibodeaux. This 6-6, 265-pounder is coming off a 14-sack season and right now it’s a coin flip as to which is the best pass rusher and maybe best player in the draft. It’s hard to see the Jets passing either one if they’re available. With one of them the Jets’ D would look a whole lot different next year.