The New York Jets have made it clear for weeks now that they have no intention of trading All-Pro safety Jamal Adams, despite their disgruntled star clamoring to get dealt elsewhere.

After Adams’s latest rant to Manish Mehta in which he blasted GM Joe Douglas and head coach Adam Gase, that feeling could change.

Adams all but confirmed that the Jets would “move him” for the right price while ripping Adam Gace as a head coach and questioning Joe Douglas’s experience.

“I don’t feel like he’s the right leader for this organization to reach the Promised Land,” Adams told Mehta. “As a leader, what really bothers me is that he doesn’t have a relationship with everybody in the building.

“At the end of the day, he doesn’t address the team,” Adams added. “If there’s a problem in the locker room, he lets another coach address the team. If we’re playing s—– and we’re losing, he doesn’t address the entire team as a group at halftime. He’ll walk out of the locker room and let another coach handle it.”

Shortly after his comments were revealed, ESPN.com again broke down the best fits for Adams and the Eagles, along with the Cowboys, were again the favorites.

Matt Bowen, NFL analyst: Eagles. Adams would be an easy fit in Jim Schwartz’s system, given his versatile traits. In Philadelphia, Adams would match to tight ends in coverage, spin down as a robber safety/underneath zone defender or pressure the quarterback in schemed-up blitzes.

Mike Clay, fantasy writer: Eagles. Philadelphia currently ranks among the league leaders in cap space and has a major need at safety following the offseason departure of Malcolm Jenkins. Linebacker and edge rush depth are also weak spots, which makes Adams’ versatility very intriguing. The Eagles are also in need of guard help following Brandon Brooks’ injury, so perhaps a deal including Adams and Brian Winters could be in the cards.

Aaron Schatz, editor of Football Outsiders: Eagles. Moving Jalen Mills to safety seems like a good idea, but let’s make no mistake, Adams would be a major upgrade as a playmaker who could do everything Jenkins has done for the Eagles’ defense in the past. And their weakness at linebacker makes them a team likely to mix in some three-safety packages.

The Eagles shouldn’t give up two first-round picks for Adams, but he would without a doubt give the Birds one of the top secondaries in football and put Philadelphia into definite Super Bowl contention.

But a team staring at salary cap misery probably can’t afford to swing a deal for a player that wants to be paid like the best safety in football.