Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Jets better than most expected — or wanted

- By Dennis Waszak Jr.

The New York Jets have already won more games than most expected.

That’s good news to some — and bad news to others.

At 4-6, Todd Bowles’ bunch has been one of the NFL’s early season surprises. Sure, the Jets have lost four of their past five and blew a chance at heading into their byeweek break with a .500 record.

But this was a team that cleared its roster of several highpriced veterans with big contracts and entered training camp with few stars, particular­ly on offense.

The “tank” was on, many assumed, to land a top quarterbac­k in next year’s NFL draft. Then, a funny thing happened: Somehow, this rag-tag group of veterans, castoffs, youngsters and nonames pulled off a few wins and sacked the narrative that had been raging beyond the walls of the team’s facility.

“I mean, we thought we’d be better than this, despite all of the outside talk,” defensive end Leonard Williams said.

“We’re not happy that we’re 4-6 just because people thought

we were going to have zero wins. We still knew who we were and still wanted to achieve greatness this year.”

But now the Jets are in the middle of the pack — some might say no-man’s land — when it comes to the playoff picture, as well as draft positionin­g.

New York currently would have the No. 11 pick, likely out of position for one of the top college quarterbac­ks expected to be selected.

So, the winning now might be fun, but it has also become a midseason dilemma: Could more victories just simply end up hurting the team’s future in the long run?

“We’ve lost some close games and we’ve won some close games,” general manager Mike Maccagnan said. “We feel good about where we’re at. We feel we have a vision for where we want this team to be. We feel like we’re making progress in that direction.”

That’s the overwhelmi­ng big-picture message for the franchise.

Bowles is still likely coaching for his job and needs the Jets to remain competitiv­e as they play out the final six games. But what he has accomplish­ed as the overseer of a complete culture change can’t be overlooked.

He has preached team unity since the offseason, and the motivation­al messages and odes to franchise history printed all over the walls of the Jets’ facility are physical examples of that.

It has played out on the field, too, from the entire organizati­on — including acting owner Christophe­r Johnson — linking arms before every game during the national anthem to the defense busting out their dance moves during a recent game.

“Todd does a good job of laying the vision, the plan out for us,” quarterbac­k Josh McCown said. “And then for us as a group, veterans and young players, listening to veterans, being wise enough to do what they’re being asked to do, I think that’s the chemistry that we seek out. A

“nd we’re seeing that unfold and I think that’s what keeps us in ballgames and keeps us competitiv­e.”

McCown has also played a key role in that. The 38-year-old journeyman is on his 10th team in 15 NFL seasons, and was looked at as a mere placeholde­r at the position for youngsters Christian Hackenberg and Bryce Petty.

Instead, McCown is having perhaps his best season with a career-high 14 touchdown passes while also providing a calming presence in the huddle and the locker room.

“He’s just been a great leader, a great teammate,” center Wesley Johnson said.

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