New York Jets owner Woody Johnson may have known he was in for a long season from the beginning with Aaron Glenn.

Nobody could have expected the 2025 team to look as bad as it has, though.

Gang Green sits at 3-13 heading into the final game of the regular season. They have one of the worst offensive and defensive units in the game. The team is continuously getting blown out.

Over their last four contests, the Jets were outscored by 107 points, the worst point differential in NFL history for the month of December.

All of the blame, for better or worse, comes back to Glenn. This was the team he wanted to coach, the players he wanted to lead. Now, as the losses continue to escalate, questions about his future have begun to arise.

The former Pro Bowl corner isn’t worried, though.

Glenn’s message to ownership after dismal showing

There have been many one-and-done coaches in recent years across the NFL.

The Jets, for all of their dysfunction, have mostly avoided joining that group.

Over the last 45 years, the only Jets head coach to go one-and-done was Al Groh (2000). Even Adam Gase and Rich Kotite were given second seasons, and they are historically known as the worst coaches in team history.

Still, Johnson can’t ignore how bad the product on the field has gotten in 2025. Whether the team was prepared for it or not, players have not improved throughout the season, and there appears to be a major schematic coaching disadvantage that the Jets deal with every game.

After a dismal 42-10 blowout loss to the Patriots on Sunday, Glenn’s relationship with Johnson was called into question again. His answer, though, has been the same since the losing struggles first began.

“I do know thereโ€™s a belief in me. I do know I believe in him,” Glenn said. “Thatโ€™s why Iโ€™m glad I took this job, is because of ownership and what heโ€™s about, what Moug (GM Darren Mougey) is about, what this organization is about.”

It will be challenging for the Jets to move on from Glenn this offseason. Not only did they allow him to trade two of the best talents on the roster during the trade deadline, but he’s also a franchise legend.

To fire a legend of the team a year into his job, when other underperforming coaches were given longer leashes, is difficult for any owner to recover from.

Perhaps that is why Glenn’s main focus with Johnson has been one thing above all else: No BS.

“I think Woody knows just as well as anybody, Iโ€™m not going to BS him about anything at all,” Glenn said. “I think thatโ€™s a good thing about our relationship, that weโ€™re all going to be straightforward with each other.”

The Jets are a lot worse than many expected they would be under Glenn this season. His relationship with Johnson may be strong now, but the microscope will be on the coach moving forward.

Glenn may be safe for another year at the helm, but it’s easy to see where it’s all heading if he can’t turn around the team in Year 2, BS or no BS.