On the trip towards putting together a winning product, the New York Jets remain on perpetual standby. The club has yet to taste victory in 2025, dropping to 0-7 under first-year head coach Aaron Glenn. And Sunday’s 13-6 defeat at the hands of the Carolina Panthers may have been rock bottom. The 0-7 mark is tied for the worst start to a season in franchise history through the first seven weeks, and there may be no relief in sight. 

After managing just three points in the first half, Glenn pulled the escape hatch with Justin Fields, benching his veteran quarterback in place of Tyrod Taylor for the second half. Fields’ day ended with him completing six of his 12 passes for 46  yards to go along. 22 yards rushing. With Taylor, the results weren’t any better. The team managed another field goal, while Taylor tossed two interceptions and completed 10 of his 22 throws for 126 yards and zero touchdowns. 

No matter which way you slice it, New York has the worst quarterback room in the NFL. Combine that with a defense that continuously surrenders an ill-timed big plays, a mountain of injuries (including Sauce Gardner being evaluated for a concussion in the midst of Week 7) piling up, and poor coaching, and it leads us to one question: Will the New York Jets win a game in 2025 or go 0-17? 

It would mark the first time a team has gone winless in the NFL’s 17-game format, and the first winless squad since the 2017 Cleveland Browns (0-16) and 2008 Detroit Lions (0-16). 

What’s so dire about New York’s current situation is the road head. The first half of its schedule was front-loaded with home games. Four of their first seven games were played at MetLife Stadium, and they were also considered the home team in Week 6 when the Jets “hosted” the Denver Broncos in London. From here on out, the Jets play just four of their remaining 10 games at home. 

On top of that, half of their remaining 10 opponents are .500 or better. While that may not seem so traitorous, just two of those under .500 clubs catch New York at MetLife Stadium: the Cleveland Browns (one of the best defenses in the NFL) in Week 9 and the Miami Dolphins (who beat them in Week 4) in Week 14. New York’s other “soft” matchups include the Cincinnati Bengals next week on the road, the Ravens in Baltimore in Week 12 and the Saints in New Orleans in Week 16. None of those should be considered a gimmies. 

Jets’ remaining regular-season schedule

The two games that could prevent New York from making this type of negative history come in Week 14 when they host Miami and when they host Buffalo in the regular season finale. 

The Dolphins are arguably just as abysmal as the Jets this season, but their lone win came against New York back in Week 4. With that game being at MetLife Stadium, it does present a realistic lane towards a win, and that may be the only game New York is favored in for the rest of the year. However, the Dolphins will be relatively well-rested for that matchup after recently being on the bye in Week 12. 

Meanwhile, the Week 18 game is purely circumstantial. If the Bills (4-2) have their playoff seeding locked into place before taking the field in the finale, the Jets could be squaring off against backups and reserves. If Buffalo still has something to play for and New York remains winless heading into that game, history will be made. Outside of those two contests, we have the Jets firmly on 0-17 watch. 

Even if New York finds a way into the win column at some point, it feels like this organization is once again going to be hitting the reset button, possibly from the front office down to the coaching staff and the quarterback.

These aren’t the “Same ol’ Jets.” 

They’re worse. 

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Week 7 stats: 7 catches, 42 yards, 2 TDs

Welcome back, Rashee Rice! The Chiefs wideout made his 2025 season debut following his six-game suspension, and it’s safe to say Patrick Mahomes was happy to have his top wideout back. Rice was targeted a team-high 10 times in the club’s 31-0 win over the Raiders. The receiver hauled in seven of those looks for 42 yards and two touchdowns. Those 10 targets were double the amount of any other pass-catcher on the day. 

For the first time this season, Kansas City is above .500 and suddenly looks like the biggest threat in the AFC. As if there was any doubt. 

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Week 7 stats: 5 catches, 35 yards, 3 TDs 

Not one, not two, but THREE touchdowns for Davante Adams. With Puka Nacua sidelined, Adams was the go-to target for Matthew Stafford in the Rams‘ blowout win over the Jaguars in London. This was the third career game for Adams with a hat trick. Adams also became just the second player to score three touchdowns in an international game, joining Marcedes Lewis. 

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Week 7 stats: 21 of 33 passing, 182 yards, 5 TDs

For the first time in the history of the NFL’s international series, we have a five-touchdown passer, and his name is Matthew Stafford. The Rams QB erupted in London, tossing five scores on the day. This was the fifth career five-passing touchdown day for Stafford, which is tied for the eighth most in NFL history. Just as impressive, Stafford spread the ball out, completing at least one pass to 10 different pass-catchers. 

Don’t look now, but Stafford is a surging MVP candidate. 

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Week 7 stats: 21 of 23 passing, 222 yards, 2 TDs

The Patriots are 5-2 on the year and getting elite play from Drake Maye. The second-year quarterback has had a knack for being hyper-efficient, and Week 7 was no exception. In the 31-13 demolition of the Titans, Maye completed 21 of his 23 passes. Per Patriots Communication, Maye set a franchise record for the highest completion percentage (91.3) in a single game (min. 20 attempts). The previous record was held by Tom Brady. Speaking of Brady, Maye has tied the legendary quarterback from his most prolific season. 

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Week 7 stats: 9 catches, 183 yards, 1 TD

All the talk about the lack of a passing attack from the Eagles will be silenced for a least one week after the Eagles’ 28-22 over the Vikings. A.J. Brown and DeVonta Smith exploded for a combined  304 yards receiving and three touchdowns. That is the second-most receiving yards in a game as teammates (307 in 2022 at Bears). Smith carried the bulk of the load, logging a career-high 183 yards receiving. That included a 79-yard touchdown catch (the longest of his career). 

Notable Week 7 gaffesCam Ward drops the ball

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The Titans shook things up this week by firing Brian Callahan, but there was still some sloppiness on the part of Ward. Despite playing New England tight for about two and a half quarters, the wheels fell off of due to Ward letting the ball slip out of his hands as he faced pressure from Patriots pass rusher K’Lavon Chaisson. He picked up the fumbled ball for a touchdown, creating a 31-13 deficit for Tennessee. 

Tua’s time is running out

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While the Jets are garnering most of the negative headlines in the AFC East, the Dolphins’ implosion is right up there. Specifically, Tua Tagovailoa has put together dreadful performances, and Sunday’s showing against the Browns may have been the worst. Tagovailoa completed 12 of his 23 passes for just 100 yards and three interceptions in what was a 31-6 defeat. His 24.1 passer rating is the lowest by any quarterback in a game this season (min. 15 pass attempts). 

Kenny Pickett fumbles opportunity

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The Raiders are broken on offense, and Geno Smith doesn’t seem to be the answer. With seven minutes left in the 31-0 blowout against the Chiefs, Pete Carroll sent Smith to the bench for Kenny Pickett. One would think Pickett would want to use this opportunity to possibly push the conversation towards him getting a crack as the starter and put his best foot forward. Well, the opposite happened. On his very first snap, Pickett bobbled it, the ball hit the ground, and Kansas City recovered the fumble. Not exactly a compelling case for a quarterback change. 

Two-minute drill

Here are some of my quick-hitting takeaways/notes from Week 7:

Jacksonville should just commit to Travis Hunter (9-101-1 vs. Rams) as a wide receiver. The hybrid receiver-corner seems too messy, and the offense needs him more than the defense does. Every contender needing help at wide receiver — cough… Buffalo Bills … cough — should be knocking down the door for Chris Olave. His deep-threat ability was on full display vs. Chicago, catching five of his seven targets for 98 yards and two touchdowns. Carson Wentz’s play (2 INTs vs. Philly)  may require Kevin O’Connell to bring back J.J. McCarthy a little bit earlier than he’d like — maybe as soon as Thursday night vs. the Chargers. Quinshon Judkins is the most impressive offensive rookie I’ve seen in 2025. You may want to sell high if you have Bears stock. Their road ahead — at Ravens, at Bengals, vs. Giants, at Vikings — is not for the faint of heart. And it only gets tougher from there. Rico Dowdle (79 yards rushing on 17 carries) should start for Carolina over Chuba Hubbard going forward.Â