The Athletic: How Jets training camp will look, sound and feel different under Aaron Glenn

Discussion in 'New York Jets' started by Brook!, Jul 22, 2025 at 4:22 PM.

  1. Brook!

    Brook! Soft Admin...2018 Friendliest Member Award Winner

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    It is behind a pay wall. Sharing link for those who have subscription but copy pasting it here for those who have no subscription.

    https://www.nytimes.com/athletic/6507039/2025/07/22/new-york-jets-training-camp-preview-aaron-glenn/

    How Jets training camp will look, sound and feel different under Aaron Glenn


    When Bill Parcells took over a downtrodden New York Jets team, most of the members of the 2025 Jets weren’t even alive yet. Those were the days of hard-nosed, full-contact, brutal, two-a-day practices, the kind that would seem unfathomable to most modern NFL players. Parcells was hired in 1997 to fix a broken franchise, a team coming off a 1-15 season under Rich Kotite. Former Jets players tell stories of how Kottie would take calls on his cellphone in the middle of practice. The culture was poor, the team unorganized and directionless. And the players were miserable.

    They were still miserable after Parcells arrived, but for a different reason. It’s the way he coached — grinding each player down, with those who could power through the suffering better for it. The Jets were better for it. Aaron Glenn, then a 25-year-old cornerback in his fourth season, was better for it. He made his first Pro Bowl that year.

    “Finally someone was there to put people in their place and set the parameters of what’s expected from you,” former Jets linebacker Chad Cascadden said. “So when (Parcells) came in and set the tone and described what his culture is going to be like, I was like ‘OK, good. It’s about time.’ That was why Parcells was able to turn things around quickly. He got rid of some guys that were only there to cash checks. But he also really pushed guys. Not everybody is the same — and he would say I’m not going to treat everybody the same because not everybody is the same. The best players are usually his favorite players, but he’s going to get guys to play at their capacity.”

    Glenn’s foray into coaching was modeled after Parcells, the lessons he learned from him. Twenty-eight years after Parcells took over the Jets, Glenn is attempting something similar: pull the organization out of the abyss with a hard-nosed style of coaching. No, there won’t be two-a-days, and the Jets probably won’t be running any Oklahoma drills anytime soon. But the sound of pads crunching into each other, of defensive players tackling ball carriers, of offensive linemen blocking defensive linemen into the turf — that’s making a comeback, it seems.

    “It’s a tackling sport, so in this game you got to block, and you got to tackle, and the only way you get good at that craft is to do it,” Glenn said during minicamp. “I’m a firm believer in it. The players understand, they know that, and they want to get better, and if we want to be one of the better tackling teams and one of the better blocking teams in this League, at some point you have to do it. Now, I’m not saying you got to sit here and do it every day, and you also got to have a quick whistle, but there are times when you just have to practice and you have to do it.

    The players report on Tuesday and the first practice is on Wednesday. As Glenn sets out to fix the many things that have ailed the Jets over the last couple of years, it will start there: This is not going to be an easy training camp.

    The 2024 version of the Jets was one of the most dysfunctional in franchise history — which is no small feat. Over the last few years, the Jets were a team with the talent to win, but lacked the gumption to overcome adversity. They were often ill-prepared for stressful moments on Sundays, and last year’s in particular was a team that often crumbled late. The fundamentals were poor and often lacking, on offense and defense. The tackling was bad to start, and only got worse. Things were messy before Robert Saleh was fired after a Week 5 loss to the Vikings in London — but it only got messier after that.

    After that loss in London, linebacker Quincy Williams called out the lack of accountability that was pervasive during the Saleh era, when players were rarely criticized privately — and almost never publicly.
    “I’m gonna be honest. People get tired of hearing the same s—,” Williams said. “People gotta take accountability from the top to the bottom. That’s all I gotta say … people gotta start taking accountability, I’m tired of saying the same thing every week.”

    So the Jets cleaned house. Glenn removed some of the bigger personalities from the locker room (most notably at quarterback) and replaced them with young, hungry players with something to prove. The Jets did their best to “move in silence,” a concerted effort by Glenn and general manager Darren Mougey to not chase headlines and instead focus on bringing in the right players that fit what they are trying to do. Part of that equation was extending the contracts of two young stars — Sauce Gardner and Garrett Wilson — who are made of what Glenn wants.

    In Week 1, the Jets roster will only have two non-specialists 30 years or older: Tyrod Taylor (35) and Josh Reynolds (30). Reynolds signed with the Jets largely because of Glenn — who he knew from their time together with the Detroit Lions.

    “I knew what kind of coach he was, I knew what kind of culture he was trying to bring here,” Reynolds said. “He’s going to tell you what he means and he’s going to tell you what he expects.”
    What is that culture?

    “It’s: We get hit in the mouth, we’re going to get back up,” Reynolds said. “That’s what this team needs.”
    The remnants of the previous regime, the previous scheme, will be mostly gone. The Jets barely ran the ball last year, mostly because of Rodgers. Expect that to flip completely into a run-heavy scheme captained by a mobile quarterback, Justin Fields, with a three-headed backfield — Breece Hall, Braelon Allen, Isaiah Davis — in support.

    The defense, run by Glenn and defensive coordinator Steve Wilks, is going to be aggressive and blitz heavy. Saleh’s defense was predicated on the defensive line winning its battles so the Jets didn’t have to use much blitzing. That mostly worked the first few years — it fell apart in 2024 with a depleted defensive line.
    “He (Glenn) always talks about being physical, being violent on the D-Line,” said defensive tackle Jay Tufele. “He always says it starts up front. I haven’t played in this kind of defense since high school. It’s something I’ve always wanted to be a part of. To get off and attack and be physical — that’s our defense.”

    Beyond the physicality — of camp, and in this team’s style — Glenn is also attempting to create a culture of accountability. Saleh’s philosophy was to let the players lead themselves, and for players to hold each other accountable. Glenn will be leading the charge with this version of the team. He already is.

    During minicamp, Glenn said Williams approached him during practice to say that he could tell things were changing around the Jets because, “there was no b—-ing about anything as far as how we do things,” Glenn said. “Because we are doing things different.”

    “It ain’t waiting until we get into the meeting room,” Williams said. “It’s honest, straightforward on the field so you can get corrected right then. It’s one of those things where you know the expectations so you can challenge yourself to meet those expectations. It’s not something where he’s got to come in and say it again — he already said what his standard is. So when you’re watching film, everyone is having their own conversations as far as: Did I meet the standard he set today?”

    Training camp starts this week. It will look, and sound, different. It might sound more like 1997. Glenn is already sounding like Parcells.

    “Everyone thinks alike, from the top to the bottom,” former Jets offensive lineman William Roberts told the New York Times in 1997. ”I think it’s one of the biggest reasons we’re winning. He gets everyone to come together for one common goal, to win.”

    Players and coaches are singing a similar tune, nearly 30 years later.
    “He’s setting the tone for the standard of what this building is and what the expectation is, and he’s truthful about it,” offensive coordinator Tanner Engstrand said. “He’s not going to sugarcoat it, he’s just going to tell you how it is with the truth… It’s going to be, ‘This is this the expectation, this is the standard, here it is.’”
     
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  2. GreenFan15J

    GreenFan15J Well-Known Member

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    Thanks Brook. I wanted to read this article but couldn't bring myself to pay the Grey Lady a dime.

    What's up with the Post? All articles about Jets are behind a paywall too.

    OK now back to the practices and Aaron Glen. Is he really a student of Parcells coaching style?

    Williams complains about accountability. What form of punishment will Glenn enact for missed tackles and players that just mail it in?

    We all know these coaches' hands are tied by collective bargaining, etc.

    Bring back the two a day's full contact practices and we will see an improvement in this team.

    Otherwise, they field a bunch of poofters.
     
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  3. Ralebird

    Ralebird Well-Known Member

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    The CBA rules apply to every team, they don't apply to attitudes. You won't ever see two-a-days in the NFL again but you'll always see teams that have the attitude that every guy would run them if they could. The worst punishment guys can get in this system is being kept on the bench.
     
  4. burf

    burf Well-Known Member

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    Thanks for posting this, Brook!... I actually came here tonight to post this article.
    As I read it, all I could think of is, "I hope, I hope, I hope."
    .
     
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  5. Brook!

    Brook! Soft Admin...2018 Friendliest Member Award Winner

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    You are welcome burf. I usually try not to post puff pieces but this article spoke to me really. Now running a tight ship is not a guarantee for success but I was so sick and tired of "Zero accountability" with Saleh, this comes as a breath of fresh air.

    Remember the Malachi Corley dropping the ball before crossing the goal line. Yeah he is stupid and shit happens. I was angry but not mad. You know when I got mad? After he talked after the game with zero accountability. And what did Saleh do? He played him again next week.

    I wasn't a huge fan of Glenn because he was from the defensive side of the ball but man, if he establishes a solid culture with the team, I will take him over any offensive mind.
     
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  6. Brook!

    Brook! Soft Admin...2018 Friendliest Member Award Winner

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    All major papers in New York and rest of the country is now behind a paywall. We are subscribed to New York Times and Athletic comes with it. We are also subscribed to Wall Street Journal and thats it. Yep, I am the dummy who pays to read. :)
     
  7. Jets79

    Jets79 Well-Known Member

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    Well I’ll be very interested to see how this all goes…I too was not happy with hiring yet another first time HC who was a DC and then pairing him with yet another rookie OC. We’ve seen this movie too many times already.

    I do love Glenn and I loved watching him play, so I’ll be rooting for him for sure.

    But yeah, I’m interested to see what all this talk of Culture and Accountability amounts to. That is, those are nice words and I love to hear them, but they are also intangible things that need to have a real impact on the play on the field. So we’ll see.

    I can say this…I can’t imagine what Parcells would have done to Corley for dropping that ball before the goal line. First off, I just can’t imagine that happening on Parcells’ watch … that is way too much of a fundamental error. But if it had happened, I’d guess that player would be benched not only for the rest of the game but probably for a bunch of games afterwards. I remember Parcells couldn’t stand RBs who fumbled. That was WAY worse because it was so absolutely STUPID. In fact, I STILL get upset even thinking about it now…

    But anyway, even though I preferred an offensive coach (and would have loved to have seen us pursue either McCarthy or Payton over the last couple of years), I am getting hyped for football and I sure do hope Glenn can deliver when so many other coaches for us have failed.
     

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