
Brighton boss Hurzeler signs new contract
Brighton head coach Fabian Hurzeler signs new three-year deal until 2029.
Geno Smith faces significant pressure as he returns to the Jets in 2026, a team that is determined to win after years of struggle. The franchise aims to shed its dysfunctional reputation and expects immediate results.
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This isn’t the same old New York Jets. At least, they don’t believe it is. For years, this franchise carried the label nobody wanted: dysfunctional, unstable, and permanently rebuilding.
Missing the playoffs every season since 2010 tends to do that, but inside the building, the tone has changed. This team expects to win now. That’s why Aaron Glenn's seat has gotten warmer in his sophomore season as head coach.
It’s also why Geno Smith enters 2026 carrying one of the heavier burdens of any quarterback in football. Honestly, the pressure is deserved, and it's obvious, as one NFL writer recently mentioned.
The NFL rarely gives this many chances. Smith’s career has come full circle in a way few could have predicted. The Jets drafted him in 2013 in hopes that he could stabilize their quarterback position.
Instead, those early years unraveled quickly. Turnovers mounted. Losses followed. The confidence disappeared. Eventually, so did his starting job. Most quarterbacks never recover from that. Smith somehow did. After years wandering the league as a backup, he reinvented himself with the Seattle Seahawks.
Smith earned Pro Bowl recognition. He reminded everyone why talent alone or past ptfalls never tell the full story, but then came the 2024 and 2025 NFL seasons. Things fell apart yet again.
Hopefully, Smith’s reunion with the Jets isn’t about nostalgia.Hopefully, this time, it’s about urgency. At 34 years old, there’s little mystery surrounding what this season represents. The Jets didn’t bring him back to mentor younger quarterbacks or oversee another reset.
They believe this roster can compete immediately. That means Smith has to deliver immediately. The expectations aren’t subtle anymore either. That's why Bleacher Report's Moe Moton names him as one of the QBs who will be under the most pressure entering the 2026 NFL season.
Geno Smith faces immense pressure to perform as the Jets expect to win immediately after years of missing the playoffs.
The Jets' culture has shifted from being labeled dysfunctional and unstable to one that now expects to win, reflecting a new mindset within the organization.
Aaron Glenn's job security is in question due to the increased expectations for the Jets to succeed this season after a long playoff drought.

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"Geno Smith's pro career has been a rollercoaster ride, and it's come full circle... Smith had his best years with the Seahawks, earning a couple of Pro Bowl nods, but he wanted out of Seattle after the 2024 season... Having gone through career trials and tribulations, Smith can turn things around for himself, but he'll try to do it with a franchise that hasn't had stability at quarterback for decades. If Smith has another down year, he's unlikely to get another chance to be a full-time starter in the league."
This roster has more talent than the Jets teams he first joined over a decade ago. Garrett Wilson gives him a legitimate WR1. The offensive infrastructure feels stronger. The excuses feel smaller.
The pressure is real, and it’s difficult to argue otherwise. Because if this doesn’t work, there probably isn’t another starting opportunity waiting afterward.
Geno Smith has already rewritten his story once. Now, he’s being asked to do something even harder: save the franchise where the struggles first began. Believe it or not, the task may be taller than it was back in 2013.
This article originally appeared on Jets Wire: Geno Smith’s second Jets chapter comes with little margin for error