The Miami Dolphins are tearing it all down — and Minkah Fitzpatrick is the latest casualty.
On the same morning Miami announced plans to release quarterback Tua Tagovailoa, the Dolphins shipped Fitzpatrick to the New York Jets in exchange for a 2026 seventh-round pick originating from the Los Angeles Chargers. It is a stunning departure for one of the game’s most versatile defensive backs — and a bargain-bin acquisition for a Jets team in desperate need of defensive identity.
Fitzpatrick will sign a three-year, $40 million contract with New York as part of the move. He had been entering the final year of his Miami deal carrying a $15.6 million base salary. The new arrangement lands him in the middle tier of the safety market, with an average annual value that ranks 13th at the position — a slight step back in earnings, but a significant step forward in opportunity.
Minkah Fitzpatrick and a Dolphins Roster in Free Fall
The Fitzpatrick trade is not an isolated move. It is the latest in a rapid series of departures that have fundamentally reshaped Miami’s roster in a matter of weeks. Wide receiver Tyreek Hill is gone. Fullback Alec Ingold signed with the Chargers. Long-tenured kicker Jason Sanders was released. And now, Tagovailoa’s exit — via a post-June 1 designation — officially closes the chapter on Miami’s most ambitious competitive window.
General manager Jon-Eric Sullivan and head coach Jeff Hafley have inherited a franchise carrying significant dead money obligations, and they are clearly willing to absorb short-term pain in pursuit of long-term flexibility. The Dolphins are not rebuilding quietly. They are blowing the roof off. What follows could be a turbulent reset season, one where Miami prioritizes cap relief, younger depth, and patience over chasing immediate wins while recalibrating expectations.
A Jets Defense That Desperately Needed Fitzpatrick
For New York, the math is straightforward — and almost unfairly favorable. The Jets landed a proven, elite-level safety for the price of a late seventh-round pick. In any other context, that would seem like a misprint.
Fitzpatrick is not just a safety in the traditional sense. He is a chess piece — a defensive weapon that can be deployed in a dizzying variety of ways. Last season, he lined up for 345 snaps in the slot, 251 as a deep safety, and 191 as a box safety. Few players in the NFL demand that kind of schematic versatility, and fewer still deliver on it.
The Jets needed all of it. New York’s defense finished 25th in yards allowed and 31st — second to last in the entire league — in points allowed during Aaron Glenn’s first season as head coach. Fitzpatrick gives Glenn a legitimate cornerstone to build around.
Minkah Fitzpatrick Stays in the AFC East
There is an added layer of intrigue here—Fitzpatrick does not leave the division. He simply switches sidelines. Having spent years playing against the Jets twice a season, he now suits up for them — and will face his former Miami teammates when the two teams meet in 2025.
For Fitzpatrick personally, the move offers both financial security and a reset. He has been one of the most respected defensive players in the league since his Pittsburgh Steelers days, and his arrival in New York signals that the Jets are serious — at least on that side of the ball — about competing.
For Miami, the message is harder to swallow. The Dolphins are entering a new era, and it will require patience. The pieces that made them exciting — and occasionally dangerous — over the past several seasons are gone. What comes next remains to be written.
What is clear, however, is that Fitzpatrick will not be part of it.
Source: CBS Sports

