Jets secretly planned for the day they might trade Sauce Gardner

The Jets were prepared to trade Sauce Gardner.
Former New York Jets cornerback Sauce Gardner
Former New York Jets cornerback Sauce Gardner | Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images

The New York Jets' decision to trade All-Pro cornerback Sauce Gardner on Tuesday sent shockwaves through the NFL, stunning fans and leaving analysts and those around the league wondering what exactly is happening in Florham Park.

But while the trade certainly came as a surprise to Jets fans and other teams, the Jets were quietly prepared to move their superstar cornerback if the right opportunity came along. As it turns out, that so-called "right opportunity" came in the form of two first-round picks and wide receiver Adonai Mitchell.

Jets general manager Darren Mougey spoke to reporters following the trade on Tuesday and revealed that the Jets specifically structured Gardner's contract in a way that would make him tradeable.

The Jets signed Gardner to a record-setting four-year, $120.4 million extension in July in a move that, at the time, seemed to cement him as a franchise cornerstone destined to stay in Florham Park for years to come. Instead, less than four months later, he was shipped to Indianapolis.

The Jets were prepared to trade Sauce Gardner even after extending him

The reason Sauce Gardner’s contract was so easy to move comes down to how the Jets built it. When Gardner signed his massive extension earlier this offseason, the deal was structured in a way that gave the team flexibility if things ever went south — or if an unexpected trade opportunity came up.

Instead of giving Gardner a huge signing bonus, which would’ve locked the team into major dead money, the Jets kept that number surprisingly low at just $13.75 million.

In its place, they built in large option bonuses for 2026 and 2027, which don’t fully kick in until later. Those options now transfer to the Colts, meaning Indianapolis takes on the heavy lifting of the deal moving forward.

The result is the Jets only absorb about $19.75 million in dead cap, spread over this year and next, an unusually light hit for trading away a superstar under a brand-new extension. Essentially, the Jets designed the deal to be tradeable from day one — a structure that looks eerily deliberate now.

There are plenty of reasons the Jets chose to accept the Colts’ offer and send Gardner packing, but the fact that Mougey and the front office intentionally structured his contract this way suggests they may have had at least some hesitation about his long-term future in New York.

Notably, the Jets didn't structure Garrett Wilson's extension in the same way. The team made Wilson untouchable in trade talks, even refusing to answer a call from an inquiring team on Tuesday, per reports.

The structure leaves almost no realistic path for a trade anytime soon, showing just how differently the Jets view their offensive centerpiece compared to their former defensive one.

In the end, the Jets built one contract to last and another with an escape hatch, and Sauce Gardner’s exit proves which one was which.

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