School’s out. Time for summer break.New York Jets coach Aaron Glenn brought his roster in for a team meeting on Thursday morning and opted to cancel the last practice of minicamp, meaning the next time the new-look Jets take the field will be the start of training camp in late July (report day is expected to be July 28, though the Jets haven’t made an official announcement yet).Glenn called the participation “outstanding” during voluntary organized team activities and mandatory minicamp.“I like exactly where we’re at,” Glenn said. “But I want to get to the point where I love where we’re at.”Analyzing 3 standout performers from the Jets' offseason programZack RosenblattBefore we look ahead to training camp, let’s look back at the spring. Here are 10 of the most interesting Jets players coming out of minicamp, based on how they look and what’s to come.T’Vondre Sweat, DTHarrison Phillips (6 foot 3, 307 pounds) is not small. However, when he’s watching film, he feels small next to No. 99.That’s T’Vondre Sweat, the Jets’ 366-pound defensive tackle — and 366 might be erring on the lighter side of his true weight.“T-Sweat is one of those guys when you’re watching tape where you’re just like: Which one am I? Is a linebacker in a three-point stance next to him? I want to get as many photos taken next to him as I can,” Phillips said.The Jets acquired Sweat in a swap with the Tennessee Titans for Jermaine Johnson. Sweat’s presence — in terms of his size, skills and athleticism — was all the rage this spring.“Genetically, it’s incredible,” Phillips said.Wide receiver Adonai Mitchell: “He’s a big ol’ dude, man.”Guard Joe Tippmann: “He’s going to make our camp hell. Having him on this team is going to make us all, especially inside, it’s going to make us all better.”And defensive line coach Karl Dunbar had the funniest line of them all: “I love big men. I remember a coach telling me back in the day: Big men are like pretty women. There’s not a lot of them, but everybody wants them.”The Jets have a legitimate rotation at defensive tackle for the first time in a while with Sweat, Phillips, veteran David Onyemata and Jowon Briggs. But Sweat, at least potentially, feels like the key to it all.If the Jets can tap into his upside and keep him in shape, Sweat could make a significant impact in the middle of a defense that was one of the worst in the NFL last season, including in the area he thrives: against the run.Sweat only played a part-time role in Tennessee but graded as one of the best run stoppers in the NFL, even as a second-year player. PFF had him ranked fourth among all defensive tackles.In a comparison Jets fans will appreciate, Glenn likened Sweat to Kris Jenkins, a Pro Bowler for them in 2008, and Jason Ferguson.“He’s a big man that’s agile,” Glenn said. “He’s tough, he’s competitive, he has long arms, he demands a double-team block. … Any time you can go around and you can get somebody of that magnitude that actually fits exactly what you’re doing, you think about how you can put that player on your team, and it just happened that we were able to make the swap with those two guys.”Armand Membou, OTThe 2025 first-round pick was indisputably the best thing to come out of a terrible three-win season. Even as a high draft pick, he exceeded expectations and looked like a future Pro Bowl player out of the gate.Maybe that future is now. It’s important not to overreact to anything in the trenches during this time of the year due to limited/no contact, no tackling and when the quarterback can’t be touched.And yet, Membou looked like he dominated just about every rep in team drills with the media present, many of them coming against first-round rookie David Bailey.Jets center Josh Myers said that Membou “has the ability to be one of the greats. There’s a lot that needs to happen between now and then, but he’s got the talent; he’s got the mentality (and) he’s a heck of a player.”Adonai Mitchell, WRWe’ve written at length about how good Mitchell has been this spring, as well as his budding chemistry with quarterback Geno Smith. So I’ll leave you with this quote from offensive coordinator Frank Reich about what he’s seen from Mitchell: