Jets acquire wide receiver Davante
Adams from Raiders, reuniting him with Aaron Rodgers
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[October 16, 2024]
By DENNIS WASZAK Jr.
Aaron Rodgers and Davante Adams are finally reunited after more than
two years of separation and one year of speculation — and now
they’ll try to save the New York Jets' sinking season.
The Jets acquired the disgruntled Adams from the Las Vegas Raiders
on Tuesday, sending a conditional third-round pick in next year’s
draft, which could become a second-rounder.
“We're back, man,” Adams said while briefly joining Rodgers at the
Jets' facility in Florham Park, New Jersey, for the quarterback's
weekly appearance on “The Pat McAfee Show.” “We're back.”
The deal was agreed upon Tuesday morning and was contingent on Adams
passing his physical. The teams announced the trade a few hours
later.
“Obviously, I'm really excited,” said Rodgers, who spoke to Adams a
few hours after the Jets' 23-20 loss to Buffalo on Monday night and
the wide receiver told him he was joining him in New York.
“I love Tae,” the quarterback added. “He's a phenomenal player and a
dear friend.”
The 31-year-old Adams immediately boosts a Jets offense that has
been inconsistent through the first part of the season. The
three-time All-Pro joins Garrett Wilson to give Rodgers two No.
1-caliber wide receivers to throw to, complementing fellow receivers
Mike Williams, Allen Lazard and Xavier Gipson, tight end Tyler
Conklin and running backs Breece Hall and Braelon Allen.
“It's on us now,” Rodgers said. “We're going all in.”
Adams, who missed the Raiders’ last three games with a hamstring
injury, reportedly told the team he wanted out of Las Vegas — and
the team was willing to accommodate his request.
“I'm feeling great, man,” Adams said, adding he got lots of
treatment from the Raiders' training staff. “Fortunately, I'll be
able to roll.”
Jets interim coach Jeff Ulbrich said he was “ecstatic” to have Adams
join the team, but added that it was too early to assess whether the
wide receiver will be ready to play Sunday night at Pittsburgh.
And Adams is back with Rodgers, the quarterback with whom he enjoyed
eight seasons of success catching passes from in Green Bay.
“He's made me look good a lot of times,” Rodgers said. "We got
better today."
It seemed inevitable, especially when the Jets reportedly showed
interest in Adams last year at the NFL trade deadline. Rodgers said
at a celebrity golf tournament over the summer: “I love Davante. I
can’t wait to play with him ... again.” With a smile, Rodgers said
during training camp he meant on the golf course, but it was enough
to fuel speculation that at some point — somehow — the Jets would
move to bring in Adams.
The deal came less than 12 hours after the Jets lost to the Bills, a
game in which Rodgers threw a Hail Mary just before halftime but
also was intercepted on New York's final drive for the second
straight week. It was a game marked by penalties, mistakes and
missed opportunities on offense, and dropped the Jets to 2-4 amid a
three-game skid.
“It’s frustrating,” Rodgers said. “I’m here to win those games, but
we’ve got to be on our details. It’s little things every single
time.”
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The trade also caps what has been a tumultuous last
seven days for the Jets. Two days after losing to Minnesota in
London, owner Woody Johnson fired head coach Robert Saleh on Tuesday
and defensive coordinator Ulbrich was tapped to replace him as the
interim. Ulbrich then demoted offensive coordinator Nathaniel
Hackett and replaced him with pass game coordinator Todd Downing on
Wednesday.
And now the Jets have made a major deal to bring in Adams, one of
Rodgers' best friends and favorite teammates. Adams has caught 615
passes from Rodgers for 7,517 yards and 68 touchdowns, all in Green
Bay. That’s the most in all three categories between any combination
of active players.
Adams’ departure from Las Vegas was expected after reports surfaced
that he no longer wanted to be there — and the Jets immediately
became a likely landing spot because of his relationship with
Rodgers.
In his weekly appearance on the “Up & Adams Show” two weeks ago,
Adams said he hadn’t heard from Antonio Pierce since the Raiders
coach appeared to like a social media post about possibly trading
Adams.
That was the first sure sign that a split could be coming, though an
Adams trade has long been speculated given several statements he has
made for more than a year. That included clear frustration he showed
on the Netflix documentary series “Receiver” in which Adams’ season
was among those featured.
Adams remains one of the NFL’s top receivers, even at nearly 32,
because of his precise route running and ability to catch passes,
even while double teamed. He caught 103 passes last season for 1,144
yards and eight touchdowns. It was his fifth 1,000-yard season in
six years, broken up only by the 997 yards Adams had in 2019.
He has caught 18 passes for 209 yards and a touchdown in three games
this season.
The Raiders gave up a major haul in 2022 to get Adams when they sent
the Packers first- and second-round picks in that year’s draft and
made Adams the highest-paid receiver at the time with a five-year,
$140 million contract, with nearly $66 million guaranteed.
His final two years in 2025 and 2026 are not guaranteed. Adams’
salary-cap hit rises from $25.35 million this season to $44.1
million each of the next two years, according to Spotrac. ESPN
reported the Jets will assume the balance of Adams’ remaining
salary, but it's possible the sides could agree to a contract
restructure to lower the wide receiver's cap hit for this season.
“I’m sure there’s a few new, little nuances,” Adams said of fitting
into New York's offense. “But for the most part, a lot of the same
verbiage. It’s still the same OG right here, so should be able to
pick up where we left off. You know, that’s the idea.”
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AP Pro Football Writers Josh Dubow and Rob Maaddi and AP Sports
Writer Mark Anderson contributed to this report.
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