New York Jets general manager Darren Mougey is working the phones ahead of next week's NFL trade deadline, but the first-year executive has already been active in the trade market this year.
Mougey acquired a pair of defensive tackles in Harrison Phillips and Jowon Briggs shortly prior to the start of the 2025 season, and both trades have proved to be worthy gambles to this point. But his best trade so far might be the one he made a little over a month later.
The Jets acquired Jarvis Brownlee from the Tennessee Titans about a month ago, swapping 2026 sixth- and seventh-round picks for a promising young, starting-caliber cornerback with nearly three years of cheap team control left on his contract.
The trade looked like a steal for the Jets at the time, but it’s somehow aged even better over the last few weeks. Brownlee is already making Darren Mougey look like a genius — and the Titans look like they gave up a potential building block.
Jarvis Brownlee is making Darren Mougey and the Jets look like geniuses
Brownlee has been outstanding since taking over as the Jets' starting nickel cornerback from the struggling Michael Carter II. While Carter was arguably the league's worst nickel defender this season, Brownlee has been among the league's best since joining the Jets.
His 75.0 Pro Football Focus grade ranks 10th among all qualified cornerbacks and third among nickel cornerbacks (min. 130 defensive snaps) since his Jets debut in Week 5.
Brownlee ranks second among all cornerbacks over the last month in run stops (8) and fifth in PFF coverage grade (77.9). That coverage grade also ranks second among qualified slot corners.
The Louisville product has brought a level of intensity and physicality to the defense that the Jets had been desperately lacking. He’s also developed an immediate knack for delivering in clutch moments, as evidenced by his game-sealing play in Sunday's 39-38 victory over the Bengals.
The trade looks even more like a fleece when you consider the fact that the Jets will have Brownlee under contract with an average cap hit of just over $1 million in each of the next two seasons.
Mougey managed to land a 24-year-old, above-average starter under contract at a bargain price through 2027 — at a position where the Jets arguably had the worst player in the league — all for the cost of a simple sixth- and seventh-round pick swap.
That’s the kind of savvy, low-cost move that good front offices make. If Brownlee keeps playing at this level, this trade could go down as one of Darren Mougey’s early signature wins.
