With the NFL season drawing to a close soon, that means the hiring cycle will begin for many teams. Luckily for the Los Angeles Chargers, that won't be the case this offseason, as they've found success in the regime of Joe Hortiz and Jim Harbaugh thus far.
With several candidates still coaching during the NFL playoffs, here are the latest odds as to who will become the Jets' next head coach, according to BetOnline.
The New York Jets’ search for a new head coach early in the 2025 NFL offseason is well underway. Former head coach Robert Saleh was fired by the team all the way back in October. At the time, New York had a 2-3 record.
The New York Jets’ search for a new general manager early in the 2025 NFL offseason is well underway. Former general manager Joe Douglas was fired in November. The writing was on the wall for Douglas at that point.
Woody Johnson and the New York Jets must swap out motivation to finally value innovation in today's NFL that rewards franchises for guts.
The New York Jets interviewed Buffalo Bills assistant general manager Brian Gaine and Green Bay Packers executive Jon-Eric Sullivan on Tuesday for their general manager vacancy.
The attorney for the suspect accused of fatally stabbing a U.S. Postal Service worker in New York City earlier this month offered a different account of what led up to
I hope he’s maggot food,” Jaia Cruz, 24, told detectives in a statement recorded at the 28th Precinct stationhouse hours after the Jan. 2 stabbing.
This practice led to rising violent crime, and by the early ’90s, the victims were increasingly children. On July 17, 1991, Julia Parker, a popular 17-year-old high school student in East New York, was murdered in broad daylight, shot in the head while sitting on a car hood at the corner of Pennsylvania and Dumont.
Former New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio (D) said Thursday that New Yorkers won’t accept “mass deportations,” even as Mayor Eric Adams (D) pledges to work with President Trump’s administration to
Allen's teammates continue to be shocked, but they're not surprised by what they've seen from the NFL MVP candidate.
"People often say well, you know, you don't sound like a Democrat, and you know, you seem to have left the party. No, the party left me, and it left working-class people."