The New York Jets, Philadelphia Eagles, and New Orleans Saints are structuring trade packages to move up in the 2026 NFL Draft, according to mock draft analysis circulating among front offices this week. The Jets hold the No. 6 overall pick. The Eagles sit at No. 13. The Saints are positioned outside the top 20. All three are gaming scenarios to climb into the top five before the quarterback tier splinters.
The activity comes 14 months before draft week, earlier than the typical April scramble. The reason is roster clarity: the Jets need a franchise quarterback after Aaron Rodgers' retirement window closed, the Eagles face Jalen Hurts extension pressure that could price them out of premium trades next cycle, and the Saints are rebuilding post-Derek Carr with no succession plan. General managers are treating 2026 like a market with defined supply—three consensus first-round quarterbacks, two of whom project as immediate starters—and limited inventory at the top. The trade math favors moving now, before combine metrics compress tiers and inflate cost.
The structure matters for teams holding top-five capital. The Tennessee Titans at No. 1, Cleveland Browns at No. 2, and Carolina Panthers at No. 3 are all either locked into their quarterback or desperate for one. That leaves the Las Vegas Raiders at No. 4 and Jacksonville Jaguars at No. 5 as realistic trade partners. The Raiders need edge rushers and offensive tackles more than a passer. The Jaguars have Trevor Lawrence under contract through 2030 at $275 million and can afford to sell the pick. The typical trade-up cost from No. 6 to No. 4 is a future first-round pick plus a second-rounder. From No. 13 to No. 5, the historical median is two first-rounders and a third. The Saints, picking in the 20s, would need to package three first-rounders or include a starting-caliber defender to break into the top five.
The secondary effect is pick-value inflation across the board. If the Jets lock a deal with the Raiders before April, the Eagles lose leverage and face steeper asks from the Jaguars. If both the Jets and Eagles move, the Saints are priced out entirely or forced to package defensive assets—cornerback Marshon Lattimore and linebacker Demario Davis are the only players on New Orleans' roster with meaningful trade value to a contender. The knock-on extends to sponsors and media buyers: a Jets quarterback selection in the top five changes the calculus for brands negotiating naming rights at the new stadium in 2027, because it signals ownership is resetting the championship window rather than patching.
The timing also exposes front-office vulnerability. Jets general manager Joe Douglas is on a one-year prove-it window after the Rodgers experiment. If he trades up and misses on the quarterback, he is fired before the player's second contract. The Eagles' Howie Roseman is the opposite: entrenched enough to survive a bad pick, but aware that Hurts' $255 million extension leaves $60 million less cap space for premium non-quarterback contracts over the next four years. The Saints' Mickey Loomis is rebuilding in his 60s with owner Gayle Benson, 76, reportedly weighing succession plans. The urgency is personal, not just tactical.
Watch for three signals in the next six weeks: (1) whether the Jets or Eagles send advance scouts to Alabama and Tennessee spring practices, the clearest tell of quarterback interest; (2) whether the Raiders or Jaguars start returning calls from other teams, indicating they are open to selling the pick; and (3) whether the Saints move Lattimore before the draft, freeing cap space and signaling they are punting the 2026 window to stockpile picks for 2027. The combine in late February will set baseline medicals, but the real price discovery happens in the 72 hours after pro days in March, when teams commit internal draft grades and start floating offers.
The Jets have $45 million in cap space and no long-term quarterback contract. The math says trade up. The question is whether Douglas survives long enough to see it pay off.
The takeaway
Jets, Eagles, and Saints are pre-positioning 2026 draft trades to beat quarterback-tier inflation before combine metrics reset the board.
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