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Jets Shutting Down WR Garrett Wilson
Julian Leshay Guadalupe/NorthJersey.com / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

Trudging through another down season, the Jets will not opt to bring back their cornerstone wide receiver from IR. Aaron Glenn confirmed Friday ( via the New York Post’s Brian Costello ) the team is shutting down Garrett Wilson.

This will go down as a lost season for the recently extended pass catcher. Wilson has not played since Week 10, going down with knee trouble. Wilson’s knee sprain affected the same knee that caused him to miss time earlier in the season.

That issue hurt a Jets passing attack which entered the season with questions about a shaky Wilson supporting cast. The team has shaken up that group, acquiring Adonai Mitchell in the Sauce Gardner trade and then granting Allen Lazard‘s cut request this week. No one claimed Lazard on waivers; he remains in free agency.

With the Jets starting 0-7 and entering Week 16 at 3-11, neither side stood to gain anything — particularly when draft position is factored in — by Wilson returning from IR. He will have an extended onramp toward 2026, when the Jets will almost definitely have a new starting quarterback. The team benched Justin Fields and will likely release him from the two-year, $40MM deal he signed in March.

Wilson signed a four-year, $130MM extension in July, making him the NFL’s fifth-highest-paid wideout — behind Ja’Marr Chase, Justin Jefferson, CeeDee Lamb and D.K. Metcalf. Illustrating the Jets’ aerial difficulties this season, Wilson’s 395 receiving yards still lead the team. No other Jets wideout has accumulated 250 yards; Wilson’s four receiving touchdowns still pace the team by two. As Costello points out, the Jets last season in which no one eclipsed 500 receiving yards came in 1976. Rules at the time significantly restricted passing attacks, and Lou Holtz was a one-and-done (well, 11 games-and-done) HC that year.

The Jets observed Wilson become a quality receiver despite being restrained by a bad quarterback situation over his first two seasons. Wilson still started his career 3-for-3 in 1,000-yard seasons, doing so after a short-lived demotion to the team’s No. 2 receiver during Davante Adams‘ Big Apple cameo. After rumors of Wilson discontent emerged, the Glenn-Darren Mougey regime made him a priority. While the team trading Gardner so soon after his cornerback-record extension proved shocking, it prioritized Wilson at the deadline. He will undoubtedly enter 2026 as the Jets’ top skill-position player.

This article first appeared on Pro Football Rumors and was syndicated with permission.

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