New York Jets | |||||||||||||
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Basic info | |||||||||||||
Established | August 14, 1959[1] | ||||||||||||
Stadium | MetLife Stadium, East Rutherford, New Jersey | ||||||||||||
Headquartered | Jets Training Center, Florham Park, New Jersey[2] | ||||||||||||
Colors | Legacy green, legacy white, legacy black[3][4][5] | ||||||||||||
Website | newyorkjets | ||||||||||||
Personnel | |||||||||||||
Owner(s) | Woody Johnson and Christopher Johnson | ||||||||||||
Chairman | Woody Johnson | ||||||||||||
CEO | Woody Johnson | ||||||||||||
President | Hymie Elhai | ||||||||||||
General manager | Darren Mougey | ||||||||||||
Head coach | Aaron Glenn | ||||||||||||
Nicknames | |||||||||||||
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Team history | |||||||||||||
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Home fields | |||||||||||||
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League / conference affiliations | |||||||||||||
American Football League (1960–1969)
National Football League (1970–present)
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Championships | |||||||||||||
League championships: 1†
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Conference championships: 0 | |||||||||||||
Division championships: 4 | |||||||||||||
Playoff appearances (14) | |||||||||||||
Owner(s) | |||||||||||||
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The New York Jets are a professional American football team based in the New York metropolitan area. The Jets compete in the National Football League (NFL) as a member of the American Football Conference (AFC) East division. The team plays its home games at MetLife Stadium (which it shares with the New York Giants) at the Meadowlands Sports Complex in East Rutherford, New Jersey, five miles (eight kilometres) west of New York City. The team is headquartered in Florham Park, New Jersey. The franchise is legally organized as a limited liability company under the name New York Jets, LLC.[6]
The team was founded in 1959 as the Titans of New York, a charter member of the American Football League (AFL); the franchise joined the NFL in the AFL–NFL merger in 1970. The team began play in 1960 at the Polo Grounds in upper Manhattan, the former home of the football and baseball Giants. Under new ownership, the current name was adopted in 1963 and the franchise moved to Shea Stadium in Queens in 1964, then to the Meadowlands Sports Complex in New Jersey in 1984. The team's training facility was located at Hofstra University on Long Island until 2008, when the Atlantic Health Jets Training Center[7] opened in Florham Park.[8]
The Jets advanced to the AFL playoffs for the first time in 1968 and went on to compete in Super Bowl III where they defeated the Baltimore Colts, becoming the first AFL team to defeat an NFL club in an AFL–NFL World Championship Game.[9] However, the Jets have never returned to the Super Bowl, making them one of two NFL teams to win their lone Super Bowl appearance along with the New Orleans Saints, and one of five teams never to win a conference championship since the AFL–NFL merger in 1970, along with the Cleveland Browns, Detroit Lions, and two expansion franchises, the Jacksonville Jaguars (who began play in 1995) and Houston Texans (2002). Since 1970 the Jets have won the AFC East only twice, in 1998 and 2002, the fewest division titles among NFL teams in the post-merger era. They have qualified for the postseason 12 times, and reached the AFC Championship Game four times, most recently losing to the Pittsburgh Steelers in 2010.[10] The Jets have not qualified for the playoffs since then, and currently hold the longest active playoff drought in the NFL and are tied with the Buffalo Sabres for the longest drought in the "Big 4" North American sports leagues.[11] The Jets also have the longest championship drought among New York's major professional sports franchises, having eclipsed the New York Rangers' 54-year drought (from 1940 to 1994) in 2023.
The Jets' team colors are green and white, although they have at times used black as a third/trim color and have had a black alternate uniform since 2019. For most of their history the Jets had white helmets with green stripes and oval or football-shaped logos, and opposite-colored jersey sleeves; the current primary uniforms are based on the design used from 1978-89 with simpler striping, green helmets, and a wordmark logo in stylized italic lettering with a jet-plane silhouette above the letters.