Showing posts with label New York Jets. Show all posts
Showing posts with label New York Jets. Show all posts

Monday, October 29, 2012

Jets report: Rex Ryan struggling to regain team's 'pulse'


EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J.—After the Jets lost the final three games of the 2011 season and missed the playoffs, Rex Ryan admitted he had lost the “pulse” of his team.

One has to wonder if Ryan, a players’ coach, is having the same problem this season. Ryan said he “never saw this coming” after the Jets (3-5) were embarrassed by visiting Miami on Sunday, claiming his team had a great week of practice.


Certainly Ryan and his staff will have a lot to do during the bye week as they try to fix the myriad problems. He already announced he is giving his players the entire week off before they return Nov. 5 to prepare for the game at Seattle six days later.

This would seem a logical time to perhaps make the switch at quarterback from struggling Mark Sanchez to Tim Tebow, given the fact offensive coordinator Tony Sparano will have an extra week to design a game plan around Tebow’s skill-set.

Still, there is a lot more wrong with this team besides Sanchez. The Jets’ defense and rushing game on offense aren’t as strong as those units were for Denver last season, when Tebow had his success.

One wonders if Tebow truly can make a difference without those elements in place, but it wouldn’t be all that surprising if Ryan, Sparano and the desperate Jets decide to go that way.

source:  aol.sportingnews.com

Tuesday, September 25, 2012

Darrelle Revis' season-ending knee injury devastating to Jets' outlook


All around the country, in stadiums stretching from Baltimore to far out west, illegal helmet-to-helmet hits caused reflexive twitches. On one ugly Sunday, there might have been more punches thrown and dirty deeds committed than we normally witness in a month, but that’s what happens when the kids take advantage of substitute teachers.




That’s why the injury that knocked Darrelle Revis out for the season and put a massive dent in the New York Jets’ grand plan is so confounding. He wasn’t the victim of a tackle gone wrong; a teeth-rattling collision didn’t cause him to suffer an ACL tear in his left knee.



Can’t blame it on artificial turf, or dodgy playing conditions, or a Miami Dolphin receiver trying to pull a fast one over the overwhelmed replacement officials. When Revis flew over center while trying to defend a screen pass with about four minutes left in the third quarter of a hideous game the New York Jets would eventually win in overtime, it was as if an invisible hand swooped in to claw at his leg.

Just like that, the sport’s best cover cornerback was done. Tripped up by a freakish non-contact injury. All the giddy hype floating around the J-E-T-S disappeared in a puff.

As it was, the Jets’ medical team had been watching Revis extra close, wary of him doing anything that might muddle his brain. Another freakish injury had forced him to miss the previous game, after a collision with his own teammate in Week 1 left Revis concussed. Without Revis in Pittsburgh the Jets were forced into utilizing more zone coverage than usual and, not coincidentally, the Steelers picked them apart with systemic alacrity.

With the All-Pro Revis tying up Dolphins receiver Davone Bess on Sunday and eliminating huge swaths of the field, Bess had only one catch for 23 yards in the first 40 minutes. Upon Revis’ departure, Bess pulled in four receptions for 63 yards. It was possible to see Dolphins quarterback Ryan Tannehill’s eyes bulge as the field suddenly, magically expanded.

Just as opposing defenses must devote large amounts of time to preparing for what Tim Tebow MIGHT do out of the wildcat – and so far it hasn’t been anything that knocks the socks off -- offenses had to game plan around the intimidating force known as Revis Island.

With him, it was as if the Jets enjoyed a mystical advantage of 12 guys on defense, their blitzes seldom risky because of Revis locking down the fort. With him, in the 88 plays he’s been on the field, the Jets have allowed a 54 percent completion rate, 5.4 yards per pass attempt and one measly touchdown sandwiched around four interceptions. With him, Rex Ryan’s brash talk of this being his best team since coming on board had a ring of truth.

Without Revis, the rate of completions skyrocketed to 62 percent, with opponents teaming for 7.6 yards per pass attempt, four touchdowns and zero interceptions. Without Revis, without their backbone, the Jets will scramble to make the playoffs.

They’re 2-1 and in first place in the AFC East, but the next two weeks are brutal – San Francisco and then Houston come to visit – and the only guarantee is that Kyle Wilson is going to have to perfect the art of turning around.

Wilson, the former top pick, moves into the starting lineup, next to Antonio Cromartie, a capable corner who goes from defending an opponent’s No. 2 receiver to trying to shut down the No 1. Interestingly, Cromartie tore his ACL in college, missed a year and now sometimes doesn’t appear to cut as sharply as he should while defending certain receivers on some routes.

Looking as glum as a man who had found a penny but lost a fortune, Ryan reached for historical spins Monday after announcing he had lost his favorite defensive player. He referenced the time the Baltimore Ravens, his former team, suffered a string of injuries, yet still reached the 2008 AFC Championship Game. Ryan also spoke about the 1985 Chicago Bears, a team that hadn’t any superstar defensive backs but that nonetheless morphed into one of the greatest defenses ever under the tutelage of Buddy, the genius patriarch of the Ryan clan.

Any comparison to those harassing Bears should end there, with the family ties. These Jets have only three sacks and just 10 hits on quarterbacks. Even with Revis controlling receivers in single coverage, the Jets have struggled to close the gaps and stop the run.

"Maybe we play some opponents differently," Ryan said. "There are different ways to skin a cat. Obviously, we can't take away their best receiver with one guy, but we'll find a way."

He wisely steered clear of drawing from another analogy from another sport. Last spring Derrick Rose of the Chicago Bulls suffered a comparable injury when he tore the ACL in his left knee while trying to jump. There went the Bulls’ glorious season, cut short in one cruel second.

Because the Jets always seem to belly flop into the absurd, the shock of them losing the one player they simply can’t afford to be without wasn’t the only hot button on this fateful day. Following the Jets’ 23-20 OT victory Sunday, linebacker Calvin Pace had an interesting take on Reggie Bush, the Miami running back who left the game with a knee injury late in the second quarter.

“I guess he was doing his thing for a quarter or two. We had to put him on out. We didn’t see him again,” Pace had said, comments that followed Ryan’s joke from earlier in the week that his players would "Put some hot sauce on (Bush), if you will."

So there was Pace Monday, in the gloom of the latest shattering news, clarifying that he wasn’t taking tips from the New Orleans Saints.

“I wasn’t trying to say it as if we were trying to hurt him,” Pace said of Bush. “I’m sad to see him get hurt. We aren’t running any kind of bounty system or anything like that, and actually, looking at the play, somebody just fell on his knee. That’s all I have to say. I guess I need to say things in a different manner, and I’ll do a better job of it next time.”

Revis will have surgery within the next three weeks, when the tissue is healthier, and his desire to rework a contract extension that would make him one of the league’s highest paid players figures to be in limbo. It’s such a sudden reversal from just a few days ago, when the concussion symptoms had abated and doctors cleared him to suit up against Miami.

Asked Friday if he had been told to take it easy, Revis grinned and said: “No, I can bang my head on the wall if I want to.”

Who could have predicted the invisible hand swooping in? Who would have guessed the Jets’ fate would be altered so silently, their brash talk dying as soon as Revis crumbled to the grass.

source: aol.sportingnews.com

Thursday, March 29, 2012

NFL: Tim Tebow sports apparel sales halted in Nike-Reebok feud

Nike Inc. has won a court order blocking rival Reebok International Ltd from selling New York Jets apparel bearing the name of the popular quarterback Tim Tebow, in a battle over licensing rights.

The order issued late on Wednesday by U.S. District Judge Kevin Castel prevents Reebok from manufacturing, selling and shipping the alleged unauthorized apparel for the National Football League team and bearing Tebow's name.

It also requires Reebok to offer to buy back such apparel from retailers and recall the products from shipping channels. The Denver Broncos traded Tebow to the Jets on March 21.

Castel, however, rejected Nike's demand that Reebok destroy any unauthorized Tebow products. The judge set an April 4 hearing to discuss whether the ban should be extended. Nike filed the lawsuit on Tuesday.

Reebok is a unit of Germany's Adidas AG.

Daniel Sarro, a Reebok spokesman, said the company plans to refute Nike's contentions at the hearing, "which should enable the court to change its view."

Paul Sarkozi, a lawyer for Nike, declined to comment. Nike spokeswoman Kellie Leonard did not immediately return a telephone call seeking a comment.

According to the complaint, on April 1, Nike will begin an exclusive five-year contract with the NFL to sell uniforms and related apparel for all 32 teams.

Nike also said Reebok has no current agreement to sell Tebow-related Jets products and that a Reebok merchandising license with the NFL players union expired prior to this month.

It accused Reebok of trying to capitalize on "short-lived intense consumer appetite for such products," and selling products bearing Tebow's name without the player's consent.

Tebow's No. 15 Broncos uniform had been among the NFL's top-selling jerseys before his trade to the Jets.

Apparel sales for a popular player who changes teams customarily soar in the first few days after the change.

Nike's lawsuit does not concern Broncos products bearing Tebow's name and those made before March 1.

A January poll by Walt Disney Co's ESPN rated Tebow the No. 1 favorite active professional athlete in the United States.

The 2007 Heisman Trophy winner, who played for the University of Florida, is also an evangelical Christian who prays on the football field in a pose known as "Tebowing."

He left the Broncos after they signed star quarterback Peyton Manning, who had played for the Indianapolis Colts.

The case is Nike Inc et al v Reebok International Ltd, U.S. District Court, Southern District of New York, No. 12-02275. — Reuters

source: gmanetwork.com

Wednesday, March 21, 2012

Tebow traded to New York Jets

Quarterback Tim Tebow has been traded by the Denver Broncos to the New York Jets, the National Football League website NFL.com reported on Wednesday.

Tebow, a Heisman Trophy winner with the University of Florida, helped lead the Broncos to the playoffs last season but was traded one day after Denver signed free agent Peyton Manning.

The Jets acquired the unorthodox quarterback, who became the talking point of the NFL in helping the Broncos mount a six-game winning streak to get into the playoff picture, by sending a fourth-round draft pick and a sixth-round selection to Denver, who sent a seventh-round pick back the Jets along with Tebow.

The move by New York came after the AFC East team had signed young starting quarterback Mark Sanchez to a contract extention.

The Jets finished out of the playoffs last season with an 8-8 record, the same mark posted by Denver, but lost their last three games to fall out of contention.

Denver was looking to trade Tebow after they signed 11-time Pro Bowl quarterback Manning to a five-year $96 million deal. — Reuters

source: gmanetwork.com