Brady Cook Gets the Nod In Week 17 For New York Jets
For Brady Cook, the undrafted rookie quarterback out of Missouri, that door has swung open for the third consecutive week.
New York Jets head coach Aaron Glenn confirmed Monday that Cook will remain under center for the Week 17 clash against the New England Patriots. Itโs a massive stage for a young signal-caller looking to prove he belongs in this league, especially against a division rival fighting to lock up the AFC East title.
The Reality of the “Rookie Audition”
Letโs be real about where the New York Jets are right now. At this point in the 2025 season, the playoffs are a mathematical impossibility. The “tank,” as fans and pundits whisper (or shout), is effectively on. But inside the locker room, and specifically inside the helmet of Brady Cook, the narrative is entirely different.
For an undrafted free agent, every snap is currency. Every drop-back is a chance to put something on tape that says, “I belong here.” Brady Cook isn’t playing for a Super Bowl ring this year; he’s playing for a roster spot next August, whether thatโs with the Jets or somewhere else.
Analyzing Cookโs Rough Outing in New Orleans
To understand the stakes for Brady Cook this week, you have to look at the bruises heโs still likely feeling from Sunday. The 29-6 loss to the New Orleans Saints was, in a word, brutal. 22-of-35 passing for 188 yards, one interception, and zero touchdowns. But the number that jumps off the page is eight. Thatโs how many times Cook was sacked.
Now, sack numbers are often a shared statistic between the offensive line and the quarterback, and that was certainly the case in the Superdome. Cook looked rattled by the Saints’ pressure packages. Reports from the game noted he held onto the ball too long, a classic rookie mistake when the internal clock hasn’t quite calibrated to NFL speed.
However, Glenn did point out that Cook was doing a “really, really good job” early in the game before the wheels fell off. Finding that rhythm againโand maintaining it for 60 minutesโis the primary objective against New England.
What Aaron Glenn is Looking For
Why keep throwing the kid to the wolves? Itโs a fair question, but Coach Glennโs philosophy is sound.
“I think he gives us the best chance to win, but we also want to evaluate where heโs at,” Glenn told reporters.
Itโs a balancing act. The Jets want to winโcompetitors always doโbut the long-term value of seeing Brady Cook respond to adversity is worth more than a meaningless win with a veteran backup. Glenn needs to see resilience. After taking a beating in New Orleans, does Cook shy away from contact? Does he get “ghosts” in the pocket? Or does he stand in there, deliver the throw, and take the hit?
