Darrell Jackson Jr., the fourth-round pick selected by the New York Jets in the 2026 NFL Draft, remains unsigned as organized team activities continue into their second week. ESPN's Rich Cimini reported the holdout Tuesday morning, noting that neither the player's camp nor Jets general manager Joe Douglas has offered public explanation for the delay.
Fourth-round contracts under the current collective bargaining agreement are slotted agreements with minimal negotiation leverage. Jackson's deal is valued at approximately $4.2 million over four years with a $780,000 signing bonus, per Over The Cap projections. The absence of creative structuring room makes the unsigned status unusual. Offset language—standard boilerplate allowing teams to recoup guaranteed money if a player is cut and signs elsewhere—occasionally stalls Day 3 picks, but agents typically resolve it within 72 hours of the draft.
The timing matters because Jets ownership is currently conducting a quiet review of Douglas's draft performance after consecutive seasons outside the playoff picture. Jackson, a safety from Cincinnati, was the team's lone selection in rounds four through six after Douglas traded 2026 fifth- and sixth-round picks to move up for linebacker Malik Henderson in round two. Henderson is signed. Jackson is not. Two people with knowledge of the team's draft board said Jackson was not the consensus choice among area scouts, who preferred a developmental edge rusher still available 14 picks later.
The unsigned contract does not affect the Jets' $18.4 million in current cap space, but it does prevent Jackson from participating in the team's rookie minicamp scheduled for May 16-18. Head coach Robert Saleh told reporters Monday that all drafted rookies were expected to attend, a comment made before Cimini's report surfaced. Saleh's staff is installing a revised coverage scheme under new defensive coordinator Jeff Ulbrich, who joined from Atlanta in February. Missing install reps in May compounds in August.
What complicates the situation is that Douglas's contract expires after the 2026 season, and owner Woody Johnson has yet to commit to an extension. Johnson hired analytics consultant Greg Dreiling in March to assess draft hit rates across the front office. Dreiling previously consulted for the Lakers during their 2023 front-office overhaul. A fourth-round pick sitting unsigned while the general manager is under performance review is the kind of operational static that raises questions with ownership—not about dollars, but about process.
Jackson's agent, Drew Rosenhaus, declined to comment when reached Tuesday. Rosenhaus represents 28 active NFL players and typically resolves rookie deals within the first 10 days post-draft. His silence suggests either a contractual snag more complex than offset language or a strategic decision to let the Jets feel the absence during OTAs. One AFC personnel executive, speaking on condition of anonymity, noted that late-round holdouts occasionally serve as leverage plays when an agent suspects the team is already shopping the pick in trade discussions. The Jets have not been linked to any such talks.
Watch for Jackson's status before the May 16 minicamp start. If he misses that session, the front office has a communications problem beyond contract structure. Douglas is scheduled to meet with ownership in late May to discuss the draft class and training camp roster construction. A fourth-round pick still unsigned at that meeting would be a poor opener.
The Jets have 89 players under contract. Jackson would be the 90th.
The takeaway
Unsigned fourth-rounder signals process friction inside a front office under ownership review, not cap trouble.
new york jetsjoe douglasdarrell jackson jrnfl draftfront officecontract negotiation
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