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

Wednesday, September 14, 2016

NY Jets Lose vs Bengals –> On To Buffalo; JN Radio

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JNRadio

On this week’s episode of JetNation Radio, Joe is joined by Jetnation.com writer Glenn Naughton and we have a ton to talk about!

The New York Jets lost in heart breaking fashion in their home opener vs the Bengals. Who were the studs and who were the duds of the game? What did the guys like that they saw and what didn’t they like?

After starting 0-1 the Jets now have to turn around on a quick week and get a win in Buffalo vs the Bills.

Find us on Twitter: Joe-@joerb31 and Glenn-@Acefan23.


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Jets Make Room for Richardson; Waive TE Braedon Bowman

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Sheldon Richardson JN

By Glenn Naughton

 

With defensive lineman Sheldon Richardson eligible to play this Thursday after serving his one-game suspension, the Jets have made room by dropping one of their four tight ends.

Gang Green cut ties with recently signed tight end Braedon Bowman, enabling them to add Richardson to their 53-man roster, adding him to an already imposing defensive line that accounted for six of the team’s seven sacks this past Sunday against the Cincinnati Bengals.

 


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Tuesday, September 13, 2016

Jets Passing Offense Film Review- Week 1 (Bengals)

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2016-week-1-fitzpatrick-fitzmagic-4

The Jets got out to an inauspicious start in their first game of the year, against the Cincinnati Bengals.  They lost a heart breaker on a last minute field goal, by former second round pick Mike Nugent.   Many fans have turned their ire towards Ryan Fitzpatrick, so let’s examine the game for the QB of the Jets. One change from last year, there is a new section deemed “Sidekick Power” to illustrate instances where the majority of the positive outcome was due to a secondary player other than the QB.

Fitzmagic:

1) 2016-week-1-fitzpatrick-fitzmagic-1

The first play highlighted is actually a broken play.  The initial call is for a run to the right side of the line, as evidenced by the down field blocking by the WRs, but the snap is low, and it throws off the timing of the play.  Forte runs by Fitzpatrick, who is forced to improvise, and does a decent job of gaining positive yards on this play.  He makes a defender miss, and gains about 4 yards on the play.   Many times on broken plays, you will see a sack or at best an in-completion because the receivers are blocking on the play, thus not looking for a pass.

2) 2016-week-1-fitzpatrick-fitzmagic-2

The Bengals are showing single high safety from the onset of the formation, but as they did many times during the game, the front line made various changes according to the Jets’ audibles.   At the bottom of the screen, the CB across from Brandon Marshall has lined up with outside leverage, indicating that he’s expecting help on the inside, so Fitzpatrick rightly ascertains that Marshall will be open on the medium range slant route.  The linebackers can’t close the gap backpedaling fast enough, and he steps up in the pocket to make a very nice throw.  The ball is a bit behind Marshall, but he makes the catch.  It’s a very good pre-snap read by Fitzpatrick, and a very good throw.  The other thing to notice on this play is the man going in motion, and the reaction from the Bengals.  They switched on assignments for this play, which is something the Jets fail to realize on a few plays later in the game.

3) 2016-week-1-fitzpatrick-fitzmagic-3

 The result of the play is an incomplete pass, albeit the Bengals were called for a penalty which resulted in a first down for the Jets.  First of all, the Bengals again moved late in the play to get into their defense.  They reacted in time for multiple plays, timing them perfectly, so the Jets might have to either speed up or slow down their snap times in the future.  Jalin Marshall is lined up outside, and runs a deep in-route.  The two Jet receivers are essentially clearing the lane for the throw on the right side, and they do their job.  Fitzpatrick throws this ball right as Marshall is running by the defender.  There is a good amount of talk about NFL QBs being able to “throw receivers open” around the time of the draft.  This is a great example of this, because Fitzpatrick threw the ball where Marshall should be, assuming he’ll get open.  The defender grabs Marshall knowing the chances are better to hold the WR, rather than risking an open TD pass.

4) 2016-week-1-fitzpatrick-fitzmagic-4

This is a prime example of the evolution of Quincy Enunwa.  Last year, Brandon Marshall was the target of such passes, but this year Enunwa scores the first TD of the season.  This is essentially a pick route by Marshall, and there is a borderline argument to be made that he made contact before the pass was thrown.  However, the penalty wasn’t called, and Fitzpatrick makes a great throw to Enunwa.   On the other side of the play, notice the man in motion, and how the Bengals CBs switched on their assignments.  The outside corner moved with the man, indicating man coverage, but they switched when they crossed another Jets WR.  The Bengals did this constantly, and the Jets never adjusted.   One of the main benefits of late movement is to have the defender off-balance at the snap, because he’s trying to keep up with the WR.  The Bengals circumvented this by switching at spots (even in man coverage) and taking away some of the benefits of late movement.

5) 2016-week-1-fitzpatrick-fitzmagic-5

Another play, another perfectly timed late adjustment by the Bengals.  This pre-snap read starts off with a LB showing blitz, and a deep safety covering Enunwa.  This is an easy hot route for the blitz and Fitzpatrick reads it.  However, at the last second, the LB moves over to cover Enunwa, throwing off the hot route plan.  Unfazed, Enunwa runs through the bump coverage, and gets open down the middle.  The deep safety moves back, and the MLB comes out in coverage for the WR.  Fitzpatrick makes a decent throw, and Enunwa makes an excellent hands catch over the middle knowing he was going to be hit immediately.  Notice that the Bengals are only rushing four, and having everyone else fall back into coverage.  Expect to see this type of coverage often because it’s a proven tactic against Ryan Fitzpatrick.  Deep safety prevents deep passes, and the underneath LBs are trying to take away passing lanes.  The middle of the field is wide open for runs, and Matt Forte is open for a screen pass as well.  The defenses are betting they can close in on the screen pass receiver or Fitzpatrick scrambling before it’s a long gain.  The Jets need to be successful in their screen pass game, and Fitzpatrick has to run more consistently to make defenses adjust.

6) 2016-week-1-fitzpatrick-fitzmagic-6

This is the Jets second TD of the game, and Eric Decker makes a good catch with a defender draped all over him.  This is excellent coverage by the defender and the Bengals have this play bottled up from their scheme.   This is another example of the Bengals timing their movements perfectly to the Jets snap.  Pre-snap, the Bengals show two deep safety with man coverage on the receivers.   However, right before the snap, the safety on Brandon Marshall’s side moves up towards the line, which should have meant a one on one match-up for Marshall.   Fitzpatrick has already made up his mind by then, and locks into Eric Decker.   Decker runs a good route, and Fitzpatrick makes a back shoulder throw that is caught for the TD.  This is also an excellent example of the route running from Decker, because the play calls for a back shoulder pass (especially with the safety protecting the inside route) and you can see the CB shading to the outside.  However, Decker runs an inside slant first and gets the CB to commit inside before cutting back outside.  He has now reversed positioning with the CB, and has placed himself in good position for the back shoulder pass.  Had the CB been on the outside, a back shoulder throw would have been impossible, and any throw inside would have been dangerously close to the safety.

7) 2016-week-1-fitzpatrick-fitzmagic-7

The Bengals performed a late movement again with perfect timing.  This is just a circa-2015 throw and catch from Fitzpatrick to Marshall.  Fitzpatrick locks into Marshall from the onset, and Marshall wins the one on one match up with the CB, and it’s an easy catch.  Fitzpatrick does a good job of recognizing the one on one match up, trusting his star WR, and taking advantage of it.   Now this was the first series of the second half for the Jets, and on the previous series, they hurt the Bengals with short passes, which led to a field goal.  Notice how the Bengals adjusted by having a spy in for Forte on this play.   Forte also has to get some credit on this play for picking up the blitz, because Ryan Clady for some unbeknownst reason decided to just run away from the defender right across from him.

8)  2016-week-1-fitzpatrick-fitzmagic-8

Ryan Fitzpatrick runs for about 9 yards of this play, showing that he’s learning from the Bengals’ scheme.  On this play, the Bengals again have a LB on Forte and drop everyone else back.   They leave the whole middle of the field open, daring Fitzpatrick to run, and he takes advantage of this.  This is a significant play because the defense is giving the Jets free yards, and they are showing they can take advantage.  If the Jets do this on a consistent basis, defenses will have to change their game plan to have  their LB stay closer to the line, which should open up passing lanes.

9) 2016-week-1-fitzpatrick-fitzmagic-9

Late movement timed perfectly by the Bengals once more.  The Jets spread them out again, and you see the open area in the middle of the field.   Ryan Fitzpatrick steps up and delivers a great pass to Decker for a great catch.  This plays happens on a 3rd and 5, so it was a clutch throw and catch as the Jets were driving down the field to take the lead.

Sidekick Power:

1) 2016-week-1-fitzpatrick-helped-out

Quincy Enunwa shows off his versatility with this play, with a tap pass from Fitzpatrick.  This gets counted as a pass, but this is essentially Enunwa taking a hand off and running with the ball.  This concept has grown within the spread offense lately, although it usually involves more nimble runners.  Enunwa shows off good speed and vision on this play, which goes for 9 yards.  West Virginia is famous for running this tap option play with Geno Smith and Tavon Austin in the past, so it’s good to see that Chan Gailey is incorporating some of the successful concepts from college.  During “Gruden’s QB Camp”, I believe the play was deemed “96 Wanda” where Geno Smith had the option to run, tap it to Austin, bubble screen, or pass.   The Jets kept it simple here and executed it as a tap pass all the way.

2) 2016-week-1-fitzpatrick-helped-out-2

Up until Bilal Powell found his speed gear last year, this was the biggest weakness for the Jets on offense.  They could not execute a good screen pass that went for big yards.  Most successful screen passes meant it wasn’t intercepted.  Matt Forte shows off his pass catching ability, speed, and vision in the open field to get 20 plus yards on this play.  The second hero of this play is Enunwa, who goes in motion at the start of the play.  He eventually gets matched up with a safety, and notice how the safety is not completely set at the snap.  The Bengals were switching often to prevent this situation, but they didn’t have a choice in this instance.  Enunwa’s first goal is to engage the LB, but he has to prevent him from seeing the screen.  For this purpose, he runs an outside route, turning the hips of the defender.  The defender no longer can see Forte setting up for the screen, and blow it up.  By the time, the screen is set up, Enunwa engages the defender in blocking and effectively takes him out of the play until Forte runs by him (although the LB makes a good recovery and eventually helps tackle Forte), enabling the long run.

3) 2016-week-1-fitzpatrick-helped-out-3

This is another screen, and another successful run.  Notice how the safety adjusted his positioning right before the snap.   Forte again does most of the work here, as he sets up perfectly for the screen and then gains positive yards as he runs to the sideline.  You have to give the DT of the Bengals credit on this tackle, as he doesn’t give up on the play and makes a shoe string tackle on Forte down the field.

Assistants Fail:

1) 2016-week-1-fitzpatrick-assistants-fail-1

This is pretty much a team failure on this play.  Pre-snap, this is an automatic TD play, as the LB (or safety) assigned to the RB is about 5 yards away from the line of scrimmage.  The read would be to have the two outside WRs act as traffic in the middle and prevent the LB from catching up with the RB.  However, the Bengals again make a late adjustment switch, timing it perfectly.  The LB (or safety, hard to tell) switches from the RB to the WRs, and the slot CB who was covering the WR moves to the RB.  Deep in the red zone, the Bengals played zone and won.  Trevor Reilly goes in motion before the play, which causes minimal movement on the other side.  Bilal Powell also can’t break this open field tackle.  This is more of a failure on the play call than anything, because the Jets played right into what the Bengals were baiting them to do.

2) 2016-week-1-fitzpatrick-assistants-fail-2

This play of course if infamous to anyone that watched the game.  The Jets are desperately trying to move down the field for a last second FG, and Brandon Marshall makes a terrible drop.   Marshall does a good job of finding the open spot in zone coverage, and Ryan Fitzpatrick finds the open area as well for what should have been a completion to the 50 yard line.  Fitzpatrick does throw the ball slightly behind, but any NFL WR should come up with this pass.

Bad Magic:

1) 2016-week-1-fitzpatrick-black-magic-1

The first play of horrible day from Fitzpatrick is this fairly simple pass to Marshall.  The Jets have a quasi run fake here, and then Fitzpatrick locks in on Marshall and fires the ball behind him.  This is the type of play that got Mark Sanchez and Geno Smith in trouble, with a DT dropping back into coverage, to take away the slant route to Marshall.  Fitzpatrick has no reason to fire this pass early because if it’s on target, it might be an interception.  He could have easily waited for Marshall to take two more steps for an open passing lane, especially considering he had a clean pocket.  Contrary to popular belief, Fitzpatrick struggles at times because he locks into player pre-snap with pre-determined throws.  He’s not great at scanning the field, and it shows up in this instance.  This is a horrible throw to Marshall, and it’s a positive outcome that it landed in-complete.

2) 2016-week-1-fitzpatrick-black-magic-2

This is another play in which Fitzpatrick is locked into one receiver, Marshall again, and fails to notice the match ups elsewhere.  Even in a zone coverage, Marshall is double covered here, as there will be an underneath LB, and a CB over the top.  The Jets send Trevor Reilly in motion to that side, but that doesn’t make any difference at all to the left side of the play.  Where it does make a difference is the safety over the top, moving more towards the left before the start of the play.  This would mean that it’s less crowded for Eric Decker, who is open for a TD pass on the inside slant route.  Fitzpatrick, however, is locked in on Marshall, and it ends up as an incomplete pass, although this is another throw that could have been intercepted.  He was one of the leaders for the most intercept-able passes (passes that likely could have been intercepted, but were not) last year, and he’s starting where he left off.

3) 2016-week-1-fitzpatrick-black-magic-3

Another play, another locked in throw to Marshall.  This is a major theme with Fitzpatrick, and it’s on display again on this play.  Pre-snap, it’s man coverage on Marshall on the outside, but the Bengals are playing the run here.  Quincy Enunwa has inside release on a slant play, which should be an easy TD as he runs further into the end zone.  It’s a clean pocket, so Fitzpatrick has time for him to clear the under-neath LBs, but instead he chooses to throw it up to Marshall.  While these throws did work last year, they were more the results of great WR play.

4) 2016-week-1-fitzpatrick-black-magic-4

This is another play, where Fitzpatrick misses an easy TD.  On this play, Trevor Reilly goes in motion and the Bengals barely flinch.  Against all odds, Reilly finds himself wide open for an easy TD catch, but Fitzpatrick decides to go towards Marshall coming off a screen he set for Reilly.  It would have been an OK read, had the pass not sailed over his head.  Fitzpatrick has no reason to sail this pass, as he has a clean pocket and can step into this throw.  He also has a wide open option as well that he ignores.  Fitzpatrick also has Forte as an option out of the backfield, with hope that he can break an open field tackle.  There are three legitimate options on this play, and Fitzpatrick picks one of them, but completely screws up the throw.   There is a shallow LB in his throwing lane, but Fitzpatrick has enough time to wait on Marshall clearing this lane if it was an issue.

5) 2016-week-1-fitzpatrick-black-magic-5

Maybe Fitzpatrick has been hanging around Hackenberg for too long, because this is a bad short pass to the RB.  The Jets have them spread out, and once again the Bengals make a perfectly timed last minute adjustment.  This is the biggest cause of failure on this play, and another testament to the Fitzpatrick locking into receivers theory.  Pre-snap, the read is simple, there are three receivers on the right side, with three defenders.  The safety lining up over Forte is a good 10 yards away from him, at which point all they have to do is have the two WRs block their defenders and it’s open space.  However, the Bengals completely blow this up, but moving their LBs (who were showing blitz) into coverage, and the LB chases down Forte.  The pass is also bad, because Forte has to turn around to catch the pass, slowing down his momentum.  The Bengals baited Fitzpatrick into this throw, and he fell for it hook, line, and sinker.

6) 2016-week-1-fitzpatrick-black-magic-6

Is this a mirror image of the last play?  The Bengals make a perfectly timed adjustment at the last moment, and they have a LB chase down the RB.  It’s the same exact read as last time, and similar result.  Infact, the Jets have the exact same route tree as the last one, just in reverse.  This indicates a pre-snap audible from Fitzpatrick, after he sees the coverage.  The Bengals were baiting him again, and he fell right into it, again.  It would behoove the Jets to call an inside slant from the RB instead of an out route, because the LB rushing over would have all his momentum heading the other way, and the middle of the field was open all day.  A couple of batted down passes, may have influenced Fitzpatrick into calling audibles away from the short middle of the field though.

7) 2016-week-1-fitzpatrick-black-magic-7

On this play, Jalin Marshall goes in motion before the snap, and runs a deep crossing route across the zone.  He finds a seam in the zone, and Fitzpatrick finds him open as well.  However, this is just a horrible throw that Marshall doesn’t have a chance at catching.  The Jets get bailed out here with a penalty on the hit, but it doesn’t excuse the throw.  Fitzpatrick could have hit Marshall earlier in the route tree, but hesitated, and paid for it.  The Bengals bring an overload blitz on this play, and Forte does a good job of taking out one blitzer, but another one has a free run at Fitzpatrick.  The ball should have been thrown quicker, when Marshall is first looking for the pass.

8) 2016-week-1-fitzpatrick-black-magic-8

This play shows some semblance of an adjustment.  Remember the failed passes to the RB before?  Well it’s the same exact formation, and same exact reaction from the Bengals.  However, they show their hand early on this play.  To show how much the Bengals were switching, as soon as they realize they showed their hand, they switch coverage on the RB.  Fitzpatrick points out the “Mike” LB prior to the snap, and of course he’s the one that just switched to cover the RB, while the previous man covering the RB switches to the “Mike” LB.  However, the Jets didn’t audible to a RB pass in this case, most likely learning from the baits they fell into before.  Decker is open for an easy pass, but Fitzpatrick misses the pass as he fires it low and behind the receiver.

9) 2016-week-1-fitzpatrick-black-magic-9

Another bad decision by the QB on a crucial play.  The Bengals show blitz at first, but move back, eventually just rushing four.  However, Fitzpatrick seems to be locked in on Enunwa, running the crossing route on this play.  The RB is open for a pass, and the outside WR (which looks like Jalin Marshall) is also open on the out route.  This is a critical passing down, and Fitzpatrick makes the wrong decision and costs the team a first down.  This is another case of the Bengals adjusting, in this case, the LB drops back into the middle after showing blitz.  Fitzpatrick looks like he assumed a blitz and followed Enunwa to what he thought would be an empty area, but it wasn’t the case.

10)   2016-week-1-fitzpatrick-black-magic-10

Now this is the desperation last drive, right after the Marshall drop.  However, this is another example of Fitzpatrick locking into a WR and not looking at other options.  On the left side of this play, he has two options open for good yardage.  Matt Forte down the sideline has a LB on him, and if he makes the catch, can easily go out of bounds as well.  Instead Fitzpatrick looked towards the middle and Decker, and then made a bad throw as well.  It”s desperation time, so there can’t be too much blame on the QB here, but he has to make better decisions than this, when there were other options open.   Even pre-snap he has to read a LB backing off Forte 10 yards away as his go to throw.  There is a chance the CB covering the WR could jump the route, but that would mean an open seam route for the WR.

11) 2016-week-1-fitzpatrick-black-magic-11

The final pass of the game, and a horrible interception as the cherry on top.  This is the same exact analysis as the last time, he has a LB on Forte down the sideline, and man coverage on a WR.  Instead, Fitzpatrick is locked on Decker and makes a horrible mistake.  When Fitzpatrick throws this pass, Decker has just begun his cut, so he is trying to “throw his receiver open” but fails to account for the CB under cutting the route.  At this point, there were other options which were safer, especially considering the whole middle of the field was open and he could run for a first down and live for another down after a quick spike.  Another possibility is that Charone Peake (or at least it looks like Peake) is by his defender on the outside, with a safety over the top.  Why not just take a shot down the field with a WR against a safety instead of taking such a risk for a 15 yard gain at best?  It’s a bad decision and a horrible outcome.

Conclusion:

Ryan Fitzpatrick is not an elite QB, and I don’t think the sternest of Fitzpatrick fans would disagree with that statement.  He is an average QB that can take advantage of weak defenses because he has arguably the best pass catching options in the game.  The Bengals are not a weak defense, however, and therefore he struggled.   On too many occasions, Fitzpatrick locked into his first read and paid for it.  The Bengals had his snap count timed almost perfectly throughout the day, and they baited him into predictable audibles too many times.  This was a bad game offensively for the Jets, although they were two Nick Folk kicks away from winning this game.  Fitzpatrick needs to improve his ability to scan the field moving forward, and he needs to be willing to run more often to offset defenses that are dropping LBs into coverage more often than not.   It’s not a good start for the Jets, but hopefully, they recover against the Bills.

Fitzpatrick Grade:  C-

Forum Questions:

What grade would you give Fitzpatrick?  

 


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Monday, September 12, 2016

New York Jets Report Card: Week 1

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Leonard Williams, Andy Dalton, Bengals

New York Jets Report Card

Week 1: Bengals @ Jets

9/11/16

Not thrilled about his contract situation, Fitzpatrick

Quarterback: C-
Fitzpatrick: 19/35, 189 yards, 2 TD, 1 INT, 4 rushes for 15 yards
Fitzpatrick got off to a slow start for the Jets in the preseason, having missed training camp while negotiating a new contract. Has the rust finally come off?  Perhaps a little, but certainly not enough. Fitz didn’t turn the ball over until the final seconds of the 4th quarter were ticking down and there were even brief moments when he seemed to be in mid-season form, but he’d be the first to admit that he left way too many plays on the field. Of particular concern were the failed red done conversions.
Running Backs: B+
Forte: 22/96/0, 5 receptions for 59 yards
Powell: 4/41/0, 2 receptions for 7 yards
Forte was a major addition for the Jets this offseason, as they looked to add a more multipurpose back to the roster: one with the ability to run, catch and block. So did the move pay off in week 1? Absolutely. Forte made his presence felt early and often, gaining over 150 yards from scrimmage. He may not be the bell cow that Ivory was, but the added element he brings in the passing game and as a dump off option for Fitzpatrick will make him quite a weapon for this offense in 2016. Powell looked spry on limited touches.
Wide Receivers/Tight Ends: B-
Enunwa: 7/54/1
Decker: 2/37/1
Marshall: 3/32/0
The Jets are carrying several young receivers into the season to complement their big duo in Marshall and Decker. Enunwa was the star on the day, and, although I could live without ever seeing one of those quasi end-arounds again, he’s clearly providing an element to the passing game that he didn’t last year.
Offensive Line: B
Offensive Line has been a major question mark on this roster all offseason, especially along the right side where Breno Giacomini is out and unproven young tackles are fighting for his spot. But the Jets O-line surrendered just 1 sack on the day. Part of that is due to Fitz getting the ball out of his hands and maneuvering out of dangerous situations, but that’s more than you might have expected from this unit going up against a tough Bengals D-line. They did a good job here in blocking for the run as well and that’s a positive sign as Forte is not the type of power back that Ivory was last year.
Defensive Line: A
The Jets were without Sheldon Richardson, but did you really notice? Steven McLendon (formerly of the Pittsburgh Steelers) was a force out there at defensive tackle, posting 2 sacks to go along with Wilkerson’s 1.5 and Leonard Williams’ – get this – 2.5. Altogether, the Jets defensive line came down with 6 sacks on the day (an additional sack was provided by linebacker Lorenzo Mauldin).
Linebackers: C-
The Jets made a number of changes in the offseason to improve their team speed at linebacker. The Cincinnati Bengals ran just 19 running plays. Jets linebackers struggled, though, in pursuing the tackle on screen passes and in providing support on short outs.
Secondary: D
The Jets had question marks surrounding the 2nd cornerback position on the outside after the release of players like Milliner and McDougle. This was the toughest game that I can remember for a Jets secondary in years. In fairness, Cincy QB Andy Dalton was firing a laser gun out there time and time again, and his #1 receiving threat A.J. Green was at the top of his game. Nevertheless, numerous mix-ups, miscommunications and trips and falls contributed to Dalton’s total of 366 passing yards on the game.
Special Teams: D
The Special Teams unit is expected by many to be the most improved unit for the Jets this season. Rookie returner Jalin Marshall (not Brandon) looked explosive out there but Nick Folk missed a PAT and had a short FG blocked and that ended up being more than the difference in the game. This is the kind of game that you’d love to give split ratings for, if you could: other than a few devastating mistakes, the Special Teams does indeed look improved. Look for a big bounce back performance coming shortly.
Coaching: C-
With one of the league’s toughest schedules early on, Bowles and his staff knew the importance of securing this week 1 win. Gailey’s overly conservative playcalling in the red-zone was a big contributor to the loss here, as was miscommunication and confusion in the secondary – and those kinds of mistakes are on the head coach. It was a tight game against a tough team, and sometimes that ends up being a coin toss kind of game as it did today. It’s those little decisions here and there that can turn the game in your favor or against you.

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Friday, September 9, 2016

Jets Game Day Info

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Metlife Stadium

The Jets open the season at home on Sunday and here is all the game day info that you need to know if you will be at Metlife Stadium.

Game Day Info:

HOME OPENER: The Jets kickoff their 2016 season at MetLife Stadium in New York’s Home Opener.

DAY OF GAME PARTNER: SAP

Pregame Notes

The Jets will hold a pregame tribute during their home opener to remember the victims of 9/11 on the 15th anniversary of the terror attacks. Members of Tuesday’s Children, the organization that supports youth, families and communities impacted by terrorism and traumatic loss, will participate in the tribute. In addition to forming the tunnel for player introductions, 200 members of Tuesday’s Children and 20 members of the Stephen Siller Tunnel to Towers Foundation will hold a full-field American Flag during the National Anthem sung by Tony and Grammy-Award winning Broadway actress Heather Headley. Headley has starred in musicals such as “The Lion King,” “Aida” and currently “The Color Purple.” In the first Jets home game following September 11th, 2001, Headley performed “God Bless America” at Meadowlands Stadium. The Tuesday’s Children Chorus will accompany Headley during the National Anthem. PAPD Color Guard will be on field and players and coaches will wear NYPD, PAPD, and FDNY hats with a 9/11 memorial logo in remembrance, as well as helmet stickers for players and lapel pins for coaches. Additionally, representatives from FDNY, NYPD, PAPD and the Stephen Siller Tunnel to Towers Foundation will be honorary captains along with members of the Jets 2001 team.

An NFL-wide video featuring President Barack Obama will be played and every fan will receive a 6” x 9” American flag. First Responder Hats and 9/11 Memorial t-shirts will be sold at Jets Shop, with all of the proceeds going to the National 9/11 Memorial and Museum. Additionally, the ceremony will feature an abbreviated video, produced by Jets 360, with members of the 2001 New York Jets team remembering 9/11. A link to the full-length video is available here.

Halftime:

Youth Football: The NYPD and FDNY youth football teams will compete at halftime.

On the Plaza/In Game:

Metlife Central: Make MetLife Central your ultimate fan destination on game day at MetLife Stadium and meet Jets Alum Jay Feely from 11:15 a.m. – 12:45 p.m.

GEN JETS KIDS ZONE: Jets Fest presented by Chase will be between the Verizon and SAP Gates. There will be a DJ, inflatables, a photo booth, a juggler, games and more.

Jets experience: Inside the “Jets Experience,” find out how you size up against current Jets players, study up on your Jets history, and take fun photos with oversized J-E-T-S letters and the logo gloves sculpture. New for this season, fans can pose for pictures on a life-sized trading card backdrop and a life-size Joe Namath Bobblehead.  Fans can also use a VR Google Paint station featuring artist Rocco Manno.

VERIZON: Fans attending tonight’s game can visit the Verizon Fan Zone for a chance to be upgraded to better seats, play the Verizon Game Time virtual reality experience, watch NFL Mobile, enjoy complimentary phone charging and more.

SAP: Listen live inside the SAP gate from 12:00 p.m. – 12:45 p.m. as SNY’s Jeané Coakley and Jets Ring of Honor member Mark Gastineau discuss the 2016 New York Jets.

TOYOTA: Be sure to check out the 3D sidewalk art by the Toyota vehicles on the plaza. Fans can also take part in the RAV4 Roll-a-Way or Sienna packing game to win a prize.

NRG: Fans can huddle up for pictures in the NRG/Jets locker room and charge their phones at the NRG solar charging station. Jets Flight Crew will be signing autographs and taking photos.

Bud Light: There will be $ 5 Bud Lights available in the Bud Light Beer Garden, The Benjamins will be performing on the Bud Light Stage and Jets Alum Tony Richardson will be signing autographs.

ESPN RADIO: ESPN NY 98.7 FM with Greg Buttle and Don La Greca will broadcast live from 11 a.m. – 1 p.m. on the MetLife Stage.

NJ lotto: NJ Lotto will be on the Inner Loop Roadway with giveaways and Jets Alum Randy Beverly from 11:30 a.m. – 12:30 p.m.

Premio Sausage: The Premio Sausage truck will be in parking lots E and F giving away free samples of their sweet and hot sausage in addition to free sausage coupons and other giveaways.

Info for Fans:

JETS REWARDS: Season Ticket Holders who loaded money onto their Jets Rewards card(s) using a Mastercard between August 4th and September 12th will receive a special surprise, courtesy of Mastercard.

MERCHANDISE: New York City First Responder Hats will be $ 20, and 9/11 Memorial t-shirts will be $ 28. All proceeds go to the National 9/11 Memorial & Museum.

FOOD & BEVERAGE: Local Pizza will be $ 9 (normally $ 10).

CLEAR BAGS: Fans are permitted to bring inside the stadium one clear plastic bag that does not exceed 12” x 6” x 12” as well as one small clutch bag, approximately 4.5” x 6.5” (size of a hand). Purses, handbags, seat cushions, camera and binocular cases are not permitted.

 


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Sunday, September 4, 2016

Saxton, Worthy, Kevin Short are Latest Jets cuts

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Chandler Worthy JN

By Glenn Naughton

 

The names keep rolling in as the Jets work their roster down to 53 players.

The latest names we’ve seen come from Kimberly Martin, are, TE Wes Saxton, WR Chandler Worthy and cornerback Kevin Short.


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Jets Reduce Roster to 53

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Dee Milliner

The Jets announced the final three roster moves required to get down to the 53 man limit this afternoon. Jace Amaro and Dee Milliner were waived and Breno Giacomini was placed on the PUP list. It ends a disappointing Jets career for both players who were selected early in the NFL draft (Milliner 1st round 2013 – Amaro 2nd round 2014). The moves are a bit of a surprise because the Jets aren’t deep at Tight End and they seem to have a need at CB behind Darrelle Revis.

Sheldon Richardson has a one-week roster exemption because of his one game suspension. The team will have to make another roster move when they bring him back.

September 3, 2016 – The New York Jets announced the transactions below. Clubs had to reduce their roster to a maximum of 53 players by 4:00 p.m. on Saturday, September 3.

Waived

Jace Amaro (TE/6-5/265/Texas Tech/San Antonio, TX)

Waived/Injured

Dee Milliner (CB/6-0/201/Alabama/Millbrook, AL)

Reserve/Physically Unable to Perform (PUP)

Breno Giacomini (T/6-7/318/Louisville/Cambridge, MA)

 


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Saturday, September 3, 2016

Taiwan Jones and Jeremy Ross Reportedly Waived by Jets

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Taiwan Jones JN

By Glenn Naughton

 

An outstanding performance on Thursday night wasn’t enough to save a roster spot for Jets inside linebacker Taiwan Jones as he has reportedly been waived by Gang Green along with wide receiver Jeremy Ross.

As mentioned above by Costello, the Ross news bodes well for undrafted rookie free agent receiver Jalin Marahsall who looks to be safe at this point.


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Friday, September 2, 2016

Bowles: Jets have “A lot” of Trade Talks Going on

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Jace Amaro

By Glenn Naughton

 

According to Kimberly Martin of Newsday, Jets head coach Todd Bowles says the Jets are involved in “a lot” of trade talks as the deadline for final roster cut-downs to 53 approaches.

While major trades between teams are a rare NFL occurrence, it’s not uncommon for a team to part ways with a player for a late-round draft pick to add depth at a position of need before final cuts.

The Jets do have a few players who may have some value in any late-round swaps or another bottom of the roster player.  Here are a few to keep an eye on.

QB Geno Smith- There were rumors earlier this week that the Jets were receiving calls regarding Smith’s availability, but no word on what the Jets were expecting in return or what clubs were offering, if anything at all.

TE Jace Amaro- Amaro looked good early on in training camp but that hasn’t translated in to games.  The tight end has dropped several passes in the preseason and coughed up a costly fumble in last nights preseason finale, possibly sealing his fate with the Jets.  A team intrigued with the skill set of the former second-round pick may be willing to fork over a late-rounder to see if they can get him trending in the right direction.

ILB’s Bruce Carter and Taiwan Jones- With David Harris and Erin Henderson set to start for the Jets at inside linebacker, they have a glut of options to back the pair up.  First of course would be first-round draft pick Darron Lee, with Bruce Carter and Jones behind him. Carter is a solid pro who has had himself a good preseason with the Jets, while second-year player Taiwan Jones was the best player on the Jets defense last night.  Jones would be a candidate to be poached by another club if Gang Green wanted to carry him on their practice squad as they did last season, but  a team with a need for some depth at ILB might want to give the Jets a call.

RG Brian Winters- Owner of 28 career starts, Winters enters the final season of his rookie deal as a solid but unspectacular player.  With fellow guard Craig Watts quietly enjoying a solid camp, Winters could be expendable for a team in need of an experienced interior lineman.

OLB Trevor Reilly- Reilly had the Jets’ lone sack against the Eagles, but has garnered very little playing time this pre-season and was truly under-utilized in 2015 as well.  A special teams standout who sits firmly on the bubble with other, younger linebackers making a strong push, Reilly wouldn’t likely fetch any more than a conditional 7th round choice.

When all is said and done, we may not see any deals at all, but there’s no denying that for the first time in years, the Jets could be looking at the possibility of parting ways with legitimate NFL-level talent thanks to a roster that’s been well-built for the most part by GM Mike Maccagnan who will be a busy man over the next 24 hours while the Jets get their roster down from 75 to 53.

 


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Jets \ Eagles Post Game Thoughts

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Juston Burris

It was a painful game to watch but let’s take a look at some thoughts as the preseason closes.

Special Teams

– One bad flashback to 2015 with the punt return TD, but other than that the coverage units continue to look improved.

– With a horrid offensive performance Lachlan Edwards got quite a workout and was outstanding.  Fantastic upgrade over Ryan Quigley.

Defense

– Ended the pre-season on a high note, creating almost as many turnovers (five) as the offense scored (six).

– Deon Simon (NT) controlled the running game and showed excellent range laterally.  He and Steve McLendon look to be a nice replacement of Damon Harrison.

– Taiwan Jones (ILB) had a “Canton” game with at least 10 tackles, multiple TFL’s, creating an INT with a tip and grabbing an INT.  Did that save him a roster spot or was it too little too late?

– Juston Burris (CB) ended pre-season on a high note with an INT and better ball awareness when covering WR’s.  He’s going to get important reps in the regular season with the way he’s improved this summer.

Offense

– LVP of the game was Brandon Shell (OT).  Who had at least two whiffs that nearly got Bryce Petty killed and definitely got him injured.  He’s got a ton of technique work to do because he reaches and “ducks” his head when pass blocking.

– Speaking of Petty, with him getting hurt does that “help” us with roster management?  Will Maccagnan put him on IR to save us a roster spot?  Too bad he got hurt because he was on his way to a big game.

– Christian Hackenberg looked overwhelmed the longer he played which was disappointing.  But I didn’t go crazy last week when he had a TD drive so I’m not going crazy with last night’s dreck. He needs to be rebuilt and the organization appears dedicated to that process, so see you next
year Hackenberg.

– Was that Jace Amaro’s last appearance?  He had a couple of catches but something always seems “off” when he plays in a game.  To me his worst play was at the end of the first half when we were  trying to get into FG range.  He makes the catch and gets the necessary yardage for the FG but
fumbles the ball which allows time to run out before we can call a timeout.  Bad situational football.

– Khiry Robinson flashed a lot of ability behind a makeshift OLine.  He showed good hands in the passing game and ran with good power inside & outside.  With Robinson, Forte & Powell it appears we’ve upgraded our RB corps.

– Robby Anderson completed his fantastic summer with another long TD.  It’s amazing how far he’s come since camp opened in late July.  Early on he flashed with some catches in practice but Karl Dorrell (WR coach) was all over him about the depth of his routes & footwork.  But he took the
coaching and now he’s doing what we expected from Devin Smith.


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Thursday, September 1, 2016

Jets – Giants Preseason Game & 53 Man Roster Prediciton

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JNRadio

On this week’s episode Joe will be joined by JetNation.com writer Glenn Naughton and we have a ton of topics to talk about!

What did we learn from the Jets vs Giants preseason game? Were there any surprises from the 75 man roster trim down?

We will also be giving our 53 man roster predictions position by position! These topics and many more will be covered on tonight’s episode of JetNation Radio.

Find us on Twitter- Joe- @joerb31 and Glenn @Acefan23


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Tuesday, August 30, 2016

Jets Lose Snoopy Bowl; Post Game Thoughts

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Eli Apple, Darron Lee

By KRL

An “encouraging and dominant loss” last night, let’s take a look at the game:

General

– Good to see the “challenge operation” improved as Bowles got both of them right and got awarded a third.

Eli Apple, Darron Lee– Impressed with NYG Eli Apple he looks like he could be a good CB.  He better watch his hands though he got away with several holds that weren’t called.

Special Teams

– Continues to show massive improvement from the what we’ve been exposed to the last few years.  Lachlan Edwards, Bruce Carter, Rontez Miles, Jeremy Ross and Chandler Worthy all had big games.  Our coverage units had a couple of hiccups though allowing a good punt and kick return.

– Good bounce back from Ross Martin with that 55 yard FG.  He won’t make the team this year but with a little more work he could get the job next year.

Defense

– An absolutely dominant effort, NYG couldn’t get past midfield until the third quarter and that was because of a facemask penalty.  The missed tackles and “whiffs” disappeared and the third down efficiency was excellent.

– The speed and pressure started to remind me of what Bowles was running in ARZ.  You also saw a ton of 4-2-5 looks where Calvin Pryor “floated” between S & LB.

– Speaking of Pryor he had a huge game with a sack, at least one TFL and an assist on the Revis INT.  Beckham was so scared of getting clocked by Pryor that he broke off his route and allowed the pick.

– The DLine was so dominant it seemed like NYG was scared to run certain plays and put Manning in harm’s way.  Muhammad Wilkerson and Steve McLendon were absolute beasts and lived in the backfield all night.  With McLendon’s ability to penetrate we didn’t have to sub him out in passing downs and stayed with four down linemen.

– The only bad play of the night was Dee Milliner getting spun around and giving up a TD to a second string WR.  He needs to be better than that.

– An under the radar guy who had another excellent game was Julian Stanford (ILB).  Was all over the field with the #2 defense and is a demon on specials.  Can he find a spot on the roster?

Offense

– Was the worst of the three units particularly because of awful QB ball security when we were in scoring range.  Ryan Fitzpatrick held onto the ball too long allowing the Harrison sack/fumble and Bryce Petty threw a “Sanchezian” screen pass pick 6.  Those plays cost us 6 points and gave them 7.

– Speaking of Fitzpatrick he needs to get into better sync with ALL the WR’s not just Brandon Marshall. Because there were at least three wide open receivers he missed that would have gone for big gains:
* Eric Decker on a 15 yard out for a first down
* Matt Forte on a screen in single coverage against a LB
* Robby Anderson wide open with no one around on a broken play

To whom much is given much is required, he wanted $ 12 million he’s got to play up to that level.  He can’t be under 60% again when it comes to completion percentage, not with this group of WR’s.

– Good opening drive by Christian Hackenberg taking the team in for a TD.  He was up and down after that but that’s to be expected.  There’s still a ton of work that needs to be done but one thing that’s encouraging is he works through his progressions when scanning the field.  He doesn’t just lock onto his first option.

– Good pass protection from the OLine again.  The RT’s remained anonymous and for all the $ $ $ NYG spent on their DLine our QB’s remained clean.  Did Pierre-Paul even play, I never heard his name. The run blocking was up and down but I’ll give credit to Harrison for that, we all know how good
he is.

– Good to see Matt Forte out there working the rust off.  Nothing dynamic but you caught glimpses of how he’ll help in the pass game.

– Solid games out of Zach Sudfeld and Brandon Bostick at TE.  Can they push Jace Amaro and Kellen Davis out the door?

– Solid games again for Jalin Marshall, Robby Anderson, Charone Peake and Jeremy Ross at WR.  In my book I keep all of them over Kenbrell Thompkins.  A few nice catches last year doesn’t give him a “scholarship”.

Tell us your New York Jets thoughts in our forums.


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Monday, August 29, 2016

Jarvis Harrison Among Latest Cuts for Jets

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Jarvis Harrison

By Glenn Naughton

With news of cuts continuing to roll on, the New York Jets have parted ways with second-year offensive lineman Jarvis Harrison.

Harrison was a fifth-round draft choice of Texas A&M last season with the reputation as a player who had immense talent, but didn’t always give 100% effort on the field.

He didn’t see playing time last year, and the fact that he was demoted to the practice squad was the first sign of the front office’s displeasure with Harrison’s performance.

The team has also parted ways with the following players:

LB Deion Barnes, TE Jason Vander Laan, K Ross Martin, DL Helva Mantugulu, OT Jesse Davis, RB Terry Williams, C Kyle Friend.

You can read more about the New York Jets roster cuts in our forums.

 

 

 


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Quartet of Jets QB’s look good, bad and Ugly in Loss to Giants

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Christian Hackenberg

By Glenn Naughton

 

In the days leading up to last night’s meeting with the New York Giants, Jets Head Coach Todd Bowles was peppered with questions in regards to which quarterbacks would play, when they would play and how much action they would see.  Bowles deflected, saying he would play starter Ryan Fitzpatrick and backup Geno Smith, but that it would be difficult to get three quarterbacks playing time with this being the team’s dress rehearsal.  By the time all was said and done, Bowles used not just three, but all four of his quarterbacks and the reviews were mixed.

Things kicked off with starter Ryan Fitzpatrick whose final stat line was underwhelming with 9 completions on 16 attempts for 76 yards and a touchdown.  There were no interceptions from the Jets’ unquestioned leader, but he did cough up a fumble when he held on to the ball too long on a play that saw former Jets defensive lineman Damon Harrison get the sack, forcing the Fitzpatrick fumble that was recovered by the Giants.

Best Play: Fitzpatrick’s 22-yard scoring strike to Eric Decker was a perfectly placed ball to the left side that sneaked over the defensive back and in to the arms of Decker who took it the final few yards for a touchdown.

Worst Play: On a throw that was more indicative of a much younger/inexperienced quarterback, Fitzpatrick unleashed a wildly thrown incompletion when faced with heavy pressure from the Giants.  It was clearly a desperation throw from Fitz into no-man’s-land that harmlessly hit the turf, but could have easily been a Giants interception.

It was an up and down night for Ryan Fitzpatrick against the Giants.

It was an up and down night for Ryan Fitzpatrick against the Giants.

Close but no Cigar: Fitzpatrick lofted a deep ball down the right sideline to pre-season sensation Robbie Anderson.  Coverage was tight from the Giants cornerback with the trailing safety not far behind.  Looking up to locate the ball, Anderson appeared to break stride and lose a step, resulting in a ball that fell wasn’t caught, but likely would have been with a more experienced receiver on the other end of the Fitz pass.

Current back-up Geno Smith was up next, but trying to rate his brief outing isn’t easy.  Smith threw only five passes on a pair of three-and-outs.

Best Play: After completing a pair of quick, short passes to Bilal Powell and Jeremy Ross on his first drive, Smith fired a completion to Robby Anderson on an out route toward the left sideline that saw Anderson tap his left foot to stay in bounds after slightly bobbling the bullet from Smith.

Worst Play: Again, with so few attempts and only two incomplete passes, Smith didn’t have any particularly bad throws.  It was mostly check-downs and short stuff for Smith on this night.

Encouraging sign: One of Smith’s incomplete passes came while under pressure rolling to his left.  Smith showed awareness in flipping the ball out-of-bounds while outside the tackle box to avoid a loss of yards.  In year’s past, we’ve seen Smith take that type of play and run out-of-bounds and give away ground than getting rid of it.

Last week’s standout, Bryce Petty got the call after Smith’s five attempts and as with Fitzpatrick and Smith, it was a mixed bag.  Some very good, some not so good.  Petty’s final stat line read 5-10 for 59 yards with no touchdowns and an interception that was taken back the other way for a Giants touchdown.

Best Play: Before the interception, Petty had put together a pair of solid throws, the best one being a completion to Zach Sudfeld for a first down.  The Giants were able to get pressure on Petty from the back side.  Feeling the pressure, Petty scrambled to the right, keeping his eyes down the field and hitting Sudfeld with a pair of defenders in the area.  It was a good display of awareness, mobility, focus and accuracy.

Worst Play: Just two throws after the aforementioned play, Petty took what should have been a golden opportunity for a big gain and his inexperience showed.  The Jets set up a screen with Dakota Dozier and Craig Watts out front to block and little presence from Giants defenders, but with heavy pressure coming, Petty panicked, made the throw too early, and missed fullback Tommy Bohannon by a wide margin.  Instead of a big play, Petty saw his pass batted by a Giants linebacker, popping it up in the air for defensive lineman Kerry Wynn picked it out of the air and ran it back 73-yards for the score.

Jets Quarterback Bryce Petty failed to build on a strong week 2 performacne.

Jets Quarterback Bryce Petty failed to build on a strong week 2 performance.

Close but no Cigar II: As with Fitzpatrick, again it was Anderson on what could have been the receiving end of a big throw.  After managing to shake loose from a defender, Petty overthrew a wide open Anderson toward the left sideline on a throw that you just know he wanted back.  A completion in that spot would’ve been another chunk play for Petty, but the misfire won’t go unnoticed by Jets coaches.

Finally, it was the long-awaited debut of second-round draft choice Christian Hackenberg who started out hot before cooling off.  His first drive was a seven-play series the culminated with a gorgeous touchdown pass to Robby Anderson.  As reflected by his final line, Hackenberg did cool off after the hot start.

Best Play: There were actually a few throws to choose from on Hackenberg’s first drive, but the best would have to be his 16-yard completion to tight end Zach Sudfeld on a 3rd & 15.  Sudfeld was facing tight coverage over the middle but Hackenberg delivered a bullet where Sudfeld had to lay out to make the grab, but it wasn’t a ball that the defender would have a chance at.  It was an excellent throw the kept the drive alive that would end with a touchdown.

Worst Play: Playing from deep inside Jets territory, Hackenberg failed to recognize Giants defensive lineman Davon Coleman dropping back in to coverage over the middle, resulting in a Coleman deflection that was intercepted by safety Andrew Adams.  The Giants made the most of the turnover, scoring a touchdown that ended up being the difference.

Encouraging Sign II: Let’s face it, nobody knew if Hackenberg would see any reps at all in this game and his work in practice has been so limited that it would have been difficult to complain if he’d completely laid an egg.  As it turns out, he made a number of quality throws down the field and gave Jets fans a glimpse of some of the attributes that spurred Mike Maccagnan and company to make him their second-round choice in this year’s draft.

It was more bad than good for Jets signal callers, and a rather underwhelming pre-season this far for the most part.  Through three pre-season contests, Jets quarterbacks ratings are as follows:

Bryce Petty- 86.6

Ryan Fitzpatrick- 85.8

Geno Smith- 62

Christian Hackenberg- 55.5

The Jets will close out the preseason this Thursday night against the Eagles at Lincoln Financial Field in Philadelphia.

 

 

 

 

 


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Friday, August 19, 2016

Jets Training Camp Weekend Wrap-Up

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Bryce Petty

By Glenn Naughton

 

The New York Jets wrapped up a weekend of practices following their pre-season opening win against the Jacksonville Jaguars and while it was business as usual for the most part, there were a few noteworthy developments.

During Saturday’s session, a big hit from safety Rontez Miles to running back Romar Morris left Morris with a shoulder injury, and the Jets down yet another back as Matt Forte, Bernard Pierce, Dominique Williams and Khiry Robinson were all out or limited.  As a result, fullbacks Tommy Bohannon and Julian Howsare were called upon to get some rare carries to avoid overworking the few healthy available backs as temperatures soared over 100 degrees.

Robinson and Forte did take part in individual drills, but neither was available for team periods.  In an effort to bolster the position, the team did announce the signing of running backs Terry Williams and Baylor product, Lache Seastrunk, both of whom saw some action on Sunday.

The most intriguing story of the day on Sunday was current third-string quarterback Bryce Petty following starter Ryan Fitzpatrick most of the day, clearly seeing more reps with the second team than Geno Smith.  Just a few days in to camp, head coach Todd Bowles declared the back-up spot “up for grabs“, and it’s beginning to look as if Gang Green is giving Petty every chance to gain ground on Smith.  Petty also had one of the best throws of the day when he hit tight end Jace Amaro up the right seam for an 81-yard catch and run TD.

Geno Smith saw limited reps but hit on multiple deep balls and Ryan Fitzpatrick had his ups and downs.  The down was a pick-6 to cornerback Buster Skrine but made what may have been his best throw of camp on Saturday when he hit Eric Decker in stride on a 50+ yard pass.

The best catch of the day belonged to tight end Zach Sudfeld when he hauled in what appeared to be an errant Bryce Petty pass in the end zone during tight end drills when he reached back and behind himself while leaping toward the back of the end zone.

Even Jace Amaro couldn

Even Jace Amaro couldn’t help but admire Zach Sudfeld’s one-handed grab.

Defensively, cornerback Buster Skrine continued his strong camp when he picked off a Ryan Fitzpatrick pass and streaked down the sideline for a pick-six, and Canadian import Freddie Bishop flashed on several plays, picking up at least one “sack” and multiple QB pressures.

Rookie outside linebacker Jordan Jenkins also continued to play well, coming up with several stops at or behind the line of scrimmage while second-year lineman Leonard Williams continued to cause problems for the offensive line.

After a frustrating day on Saturday in which back-up safety Dion Bailey took himself out of practice for a brief period, removing his pads and voicing his frustration to coaches and teammates, he closed out today’s session by intercepting a Bryce Petty pass just two plays after nearly coming up with another pick.

The team will have an off-day on Monday before resuming practice on Tuesday the 16th.


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Quarterbacks top List of Players to Watch as Jets Face Redskins

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Dion Bailey

By Glenn Naughton

 

With the Jets getting set to kick off their second pre-season contest, a road game against the Washington Redskins, we take a look at a few players worth watching early on, and when the starters have exited and battles for roster spots are playing out on the field.  Generally these can be broken down to individual performers, but with it being the pre-season, there are plenty of battles at specific position groups, so we’ll start with a couple of those.

Quarterbacks Bryce Petty, Geno Smith and Christian Hackenberg-  Head Coach Todd Bowles said early in camp that the number two QB job was “up in the air” but has since backed off of those comments, suggesting otherwise.  However, the Jets are clearly in full evaluation mode of Petty as he got the lions share of snaps as the number two this week.

Even if it’s not their intention to have Smith and Petty battle it out for the number two job, should Petty out-perform Smith, is it something they’d be willing to turn a blind eye to?

For Smith, this could be a chance for him to clear his head without having to hear boo’s raining down on him before even taking a single snap.  He’s boycotted the media since facing off against Jacksonville on Thursday after ducking post-game interviews, chalking it up to being “focused”.  Just how much that focus pays off will be determined tonight against Washington.

It should be interesting to see if Gang Green trots Petty out with the 2’s or the 3’s and 4’s as the did last week, or if he’ll be flipped with Smith.

Could any other fan base possibly be looking more forward to the pre-season debut of their 4th string QB than Jets fans?  Highly unlikely, but it’s not without good reason.

While plenty of attention will be paid to Petty and Smith, hopes will likely be highest for Hackenberg as the team gets its first look at this year’s second-round draft choice, who they’re hoping is the answer to their decades-long search for a franchise QB.  Hackenberg has seen increased reps in recent days and made some very good throws at practice on Wednesday.

Don

Don’t be surprised to see Christian Hackenberg trying to find Robby Anderson should he make is pro debut tonight.

The Young Wideouts-  Jalin Marshall, Charone Peake, and Robby Anderson headline a group of playmaking rookie receivers who are generating plenty of buzz at Jets camp.

Marshall for the fact that he finds ways to get open on a consistent basis, while Peake and Anderson continue to utilize their height (6’ 2’’ and 6’ 3’’ respectively) and sub 4.4 speed to stand out.

Peake was the best of the group in the team’s pre-season win against the Jaguars as he led the team with 4 catches, one of which showed great awareness and body control as he kept his feet in bounds while falling to the ground and hauling in a touchdown pass.

Anderson didn’t show much in terms of numbers, but he narrowly missed making an impressive touchdown grab from Petty on the corner of the end zone.  This week in practice, Anderson also made a eye-popping, one-handed grab on a pass from Petty that appeared to be good for a big gain before being called out of bounds by an official.

With more reps in practice this week, Hackenberg seemed to have solid chemistry with Anderson and threw his way several times.  Should he get the opportunity, look for Hackenberg to try to find Anderson a time or two.

OT Ryan Clady- One of the off-season’s most important acquisitions as D’Brickashaw Ferguson’s replacement at left tackle, Clady is still trying to get the rust off after missing all of last season.  He was beaten by rookie defensive lineman Yannick Ngakoue on a sack of Ryan Fitzpatrick which should be taken with a grain of salt at this point, but fans should be watching to see if it becomes a regular thing for the former Pro-Bowler.

S Dion Bailey- Bailey was up and down at Jets practice this week after saying he felt he wasn’t being given a chance at one point.  Head coach Todd Bowles was asked about Bailey’s comments but didn’t seem too concerned.  The following day, Bailey had a pair of passes defended to go along with an interception of Bryce Petty to close the session out.  Bailey, it appears, is doing all he can to prove he belongs on one of the most talented defensive backfield’s in the NFL.

OG Craig Watts-  A former San Diego Charger, Watts held his own last week against the Jaguars back-ups while Brian Winters was pushed around a little bit in the passing game early on.  Given Winters’ experience and knowledge of the system, he may be difficult to unseat, but Watts is a mauler in the run game who may push Winters.  Watts may also get a look at right tackle at some point if Brent Qvale or Ben Ijalana don’t step up and seize the opportunity in front of them with starter Breno Giacomini on the shelf.

Inside Linebackers Erin Henderson, Bruce Carter and Darron Lee-  Henderson, the projected opening day starter, had a rough day at the office against Jacksonville.  A pair of missed tackles and being run over by Chris Ivory got him plenty of attention from onlookers for all the wrong reasons.

As the team’s first-round draft choice, some fans may be tempted to ask for more of Darron Lee, but head coach Todd Bowles is more likely to use him as a chess piece in a variety of roles, for the time being, anyway.

Then there’s Carter who has appeared in 63 career games (35 starts), picking up close to 300 tackles to go along with 5 sacks and 5 interceptions.

Even with Henderson likely to retain the starting job, depth at linebacker appears to be the best it’s been in years.  That alone is reason to keep an eye on what the Jets have behind the starters in the middle.

TE/H-Back Jace Amaro- Amaro might be a tight end or H-back on paper, but his off-season weight loss combined with the team lining him up in the slot and on the outside against Jacksonville suggests they may have other plans for the third-year pro.  If not for a pair of errant passes from Geno Smith and Bryce Petty last week, Amaro could have had a nice game for himself as he managed to get plenty of separation from linebackers and defensive backs, but nobody was able to hit the 6’ 5’’ pass catcher.

Kickoff is set for 7:30 tonight between the Jets and ‘Skins.  Be sure to log in to our forums to talk about all the action.

 

 

 


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Jets Sign RB Antone Smith, Place Pierce on IR

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The Jets announced a pair of RB transactions today, singing veteran Antone Smith and placing Bernard Pierce  on injured reserve.

The 5’9”, 192-pound Smith, a Florida State product entering his seventh NFL season, appeared in five games with the Chicago Bears last season. An undrafted free agent who spent his first five credited NFL seasons with the Atlanta Falcons, Smith has averaged 9.9 yards on his 30 NFL carries and totaled 7 touchdowns on 45 touches.

Pierce signed with the Jets in July, but he had been slowed by a hamstring injury during training camp. The 6’0”, 232-pound Pierce, a Temple alum, appeared in seven games last season with the Jacksonville Jaguars after spending his first three pro seasons with the Baltimore Ravens. He has rushed for 1,345  yards and 5 TDs on his 359 career attempts.


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Thursday, August 18, 2016

Jets’ Shelby Harris Searching for Sacks and Stability

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Shelby Harris

By Glenn Naughton

 

During their pre-season opening win against the Jacksonville Jaguars last week, the New York Jets had several young players carry over what had been strong starts to their training camp in Florham Park, New Jersey.  One player however, came from out of nowhere to earn a few mentions and raise a few eyebrows among Jets fans.

Defensive lineman Shelby Harris came within inches of picking up a pair of sacks against the Jaguars but had to settle for a pair of QB pressures as the passers were able to break free from Harris’ grasp.  Still, an impressive start for a player who hadn’t generated much chatter among Jets coaches so far this pre-season.

Harris may have allowed a pair of early sacks to get away, but one would assume that following years of being plagued by character concerns off the field, and failing to stick with the team who drafted him, the Oakland Raiders, he’s going to be fighting as hard as he can get back on the field.  With an opportunity to make a roster that already has what is widely viewed as a top-3 unit in the NFL, Harris will have his work cut out.

Jets Defensive line coach Pepper Johnson has a project on his hands with Harris along the D-line.

Jets Defensive line coach Pepper Johnson has a project on his hands with Harris along the D-line.

A native of Thiennsville, WI, Harris committed to stay home and suit up for the Wisconsin Badgers where he was slated to play defensive end as a four-star recruit who was ranked 16th in the nation at his position according to Rivals.com.  Things didn’t go according to plan as trouble soon followed.

After his freshman season at Wisconsin, Harris, along with a pair of teammates, was suspended by the team for an undisclosed incident that reportedly did not require police involvement, but was investigated internally by the university, leading to the suspension.  It later learned that Harris had been warned by the university the previous off-season for his involvement in an incident that involved him and a teammate dumping a moped in the middle of the road to flee on foot when they spotted a police patrol car.

Following a violation of team rules a short time later, Harris was off the team and forced to transfer to Illinois State where he hoped to start fresh.  Things were going well early on.  So well that Harris was all-Missouri Valley Conference selection in 2012, with seven sacks and 16 tackles for lossesbut then, once again, Harris was in trouble for “violation of team rules” and suspended by head coach Brock Spack.

After taking a year off to wait tables, Harris managed to get drafted by the Raiders who chose the 6′ 2” 288 lb lineman in the 7th round of the 2014 draft (235th overall).  During his two seasons with the Raiders, Harris managed to play in just 8 games as a back-up, picking up 10 tackles and just 1 sack.

Eventually let go by the Raiders in May of 2016 before the Jets scooped him up.  Now, with the Jets having offered him an opportunity to impress by keeping an open mind, Harris hopes to continue opening eyes.

 

 

 


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