Jets agree to terms with Broncos executive Darren Mougey to be their general manager

FILE - Denver Broncos director of player personnel Darren Mougey looks on as players take part in drills at NFL football training camp Friday, Aug. 6, 2021, in Englewood, Colo. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski, File)

The New York Jets' lengthy searches are over, and they're pairing a first-time general manager with a first-time head coach to try to turn things around.

Denver Broncos assistant general manager Darren Mougey agreed to terms Saturday with the Jets to become their GM.

The 39-year-old Mougey has worked as Broncos general manager George Paton's top assistant for the past three seasons. Mougey replaces the fired Joe Douglas in New York and joins new Jets coach Aaron Glenn as the new leaders of the franchise.

“Darren is a trusted NFL executive who has experience working with an impressive collection of football leaders,” Jets owner and chairman Woody Johnson said in a statement issued by the team. “He is a proven talent evaluator who impressed us with his vision for this team. His partnership with Coach Glenn will revitalize this organization."

The two will be formally introduced at a press conference Monday at the team’s facility in Florham Park, New Jersey.

Mougey, the NFL’s third-youngest GM behind Cleveland’s Andrew Berry and Chicago’s Ryan Poles, held several positions in Denver’s front office since joining the team as a scouting intern under John Elway in 2012.

“It is one of the great honors and privileges of my life to serve as the general manager of the New York Jets,” Mougey said in a statement. “I want to thank Mr. Johnson for this responsibility, one I do not take lightly. I could not be more excited to work alongside Coach Glenn to build a championship team that will make Jets fans proud.”

Mougey was Denver’s director of player personnel in 2021 before being promoted to assistant GM. The native of Scottsdale, Arizona, was once a backup quarterback behind current Vikings coach Kevin O’Connell at San Diego State and later a wide receiver.

Mougey was part of a front office that helped the Broncos win the Super Bowl for the 2015 season and assisted Paton in constructing a roster that made it back to the playoffs this season under Sean Payton after an eight-year drought.

Denver also made one of the most lopsidedly bad trades in recent memory when it acquired quarterback Russell Wilson in 2022 for several draft picks, and Wilson was out after just two seasons.

Mougey, who beat out at least 14 other candidates for the job, was hired after a second interview with the Jets. Washington assistant GM Lance Newmark and Cincinnati executive Trey Brown also returned for follow-up interviews with New York, which ended up choosing Mougey to pair with Glenn.

“I am proud of the thorough search we undertook,” Johnson said, "and that it led us to the two best individuals to lead our football team going forward.”

The two will be tasked with trying to revamp a franchise that has the NFL’s longest active playoff drought at 14 seasons.

Mougey will take over a team coming off a disappointing 5-12 season. The major undertakings for him and Glenn will be trying to build a roster that returns the Jets to the playoffs and determining whether they will have quarterback Aaron Rodgers back next season — if he still wants to play — and possibly beyond.

The 41-year-old four-time MVP, who is the fifth player in NFL history to throw 500 touchdown passes in the regular season, has one year of nonguaranteed money left on his contract. But he would be due a $35 million option bonus before the regular season begins and count $23.5 million against the salary cap.

If Rodgers is cut or retires, the Jets could absorb a $49 million dead-money charge next year unless they designate him a post-June 1 cut and can spread out that charge over two years.

Mougey also will have to make a decision on wide receiver Davante Adams, who's scheduled to make $35.64 million in each of the next two years. The Jets could ask the 32-year-old receiver to redo his deal or he could be released in the next few months. Adams acknowledged after the season ended that what Rodgers does will “for sure” be a factor in his own decision, but added he “potentially” could be back even if the quarterback isn’t.

New York also has several key players scheduled to be free agents, including linebacker Jamien Sherwood, cornerback D.J. Reed, safety Chuck Clark, tight end Tyler Conklin, right tackle Morgan Moses, edge rusher Haason Reddick and left tackle Tyron Smith.

Also, potential key parts of the Jets’ future, including cornerback Sauce Gardner, wide receiver Garrett Wilson, running back Breece Hall and edge rusher Jermaine Johnson, are eligible for extensions.

The hiring of Mougey ends a lengthy search that began in November after owner Woody Johnson hired The 33rd Team, a football media, analytics and consulting group founded by former Jets GM Mike Tannenbaum, to assist the Jets. Tannenbaum and former Dolphins and Vikings GM Rick Spielman helped Johnson identify and vet GM and coach candidates and coordinate interviews.

Spielman likely was able to glean some information on Mougey from Paton, who worked closely with Spielman during stops together in Chicago, Miami and Minnesota.

In addition to Newmark and Brown, Mougey beat out a field of candidates that included Mike Borgonzi, Thomas Dimitroff, Ray Farmer, Brian Gaine, Mike Greenberg, Ryan Grigson, Alec Halaby, Jim Nagy, Louis Riddick, Jon Robinson, Chris Spielman and Jon-Eric Sullivan. Borgonzi has since been hired as the Tennessee Titans’ GM. The New York Post also reported that Phil Savage, the Jets' interim GM, also was interviewed by the team.

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