Sauce Gardner is the biggest winner
from the NFL's trade deadline
[November 05, 2025]
By ROB MAADDI
The Colts went all-in. The Eagles were aggressive. The Jets looked
to the future.
NFL teams were active in the weeks, days and minutes leading up to
the trade deadline on Tuesday with the wildest moves coming from the
Big Apple.
Two-time All-Pro cornerback Sauce Gardner went from New York to
Indianapolis for two first-round picks. The Jets also sent
three-time Pro Bowl defensive tackle Quinnen Williams to Dallas in
another blockbuster deal for a second-round pick in 2026 and a
first-round pick in 2027.
Here are some winners and losers:
Biggest individual winner
Gardner. He goes from the worst team in the AFC East to the
first-place team in the AFC South. Gardner has never been part of a
team that won more than seven games in a season. He joins one that
won seven before November. The Colts are 7-2 and aiming for a No. 1
seed.

Biggest team member
Philadelphia Eagles. The defending Super Bowl champions didn’t make
a move Tuesday but have been active since training camp, making nine
trades. They made three over the past six days.
The Eagles (6-2) got edge rusher Jaelan Phillips from Miami on
Monday. He reunites with defensive coordinator Vic Fangio and fills
a big need. Phillips has as many sacks (three) in his last five
games as all of the Philadelphia’s edge rushers have combined this
season.
The Eagles acquired slot cornerback Michael Carter II from the Jets
last week and two-time Pro Bowl cornerback Jaire Alexander from the
Baltimore Ravens on Saturday. Carter should step into the lineup
right away. Alexander provides depth and could play a bigger role if
he returns to his old form.
Biggest individual loser
Breece Hall. The Jets didn’t trade the running back to the Chiefs or
another team. He’s stuck on a losing team in New York instead of
heading to a contender.
Biggest team loser
New York Jets. Until they use the draft capital they acquired for
Gardner and Williams to get star players, it’s hard to say the Jets
made the right move. Breaking up a 1-7 team is understandable.
[to top of second column] |

“I wouldn’t call it a teardown,” general manager
Darren Mougey said.
The Jets didn’t win with Gardner or Williams. But both are young
guys and the type of cornerstone players that franchises build
around. The defense is significantly worse without them and now the
goal will be to find players as talented with the picks they
received.
Wait and see
The Cowboys (3-5-1) improved the league’s second-worst defense by
getting Williams and linebacker Logan Wilson. But they’re not going
anywhere this season and they surrendered valuable picks along with
defensive tackle Mazi Smith, a first-round pick in 2023 who didn’t
pan out.
The first-round pick sent to the Jets will be the better of the two
the Cowboys own. They got a pair of firsts from Green Bay for Micah
Parsons.
So, the haul for Parsons now is Williams, Kenny Clark and a 2026
first plus salary cap space. Williams was an All-Pro in 2022, is
under contract through 2027 and teams with Clark to give Dallas a
formidable interior line.
Jerry Jones had to do something to boost the defense now and for the
future. The Cowboys are better now. That could impact their draft
positioning but that’s another story.
Stand Pat
The Patriots (7-2), Broncos (7-2), Buccaneers (6-2) and Chiefs (5-4)
were among the teams that didn’t make any moves. New England, Denver
and Kansas City could’ve used another playmaker on offense. Tampa
Bay is thin at several positions. The Bucs are counting on injured
players returning as additions.
All contents © copyright 2025 Associated Press. All rights reserved
 |