Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Win earns Jets a mild reprieve

Gase, Jets take positive step with win, but lots more to do at 2-7

- By Dennis Waszak Jr. AP Pro Football Writer

The New York Jets’ victory over the lowly Giants on Sunday may have tempered the venom directed toward the team — for now.

Sam Darnold is well aware of all the frustrated fans out there, unhappy with the New York Jets’ disappoint­ing start and calling for Adam Gase’s job.

A victory over the lowly Giants on Sunday might have tempered all the venom — for now.

But the Jets quarterbac­k made it clear he supports his coach, and he’s not alone.

“He’s great. There’s no flinch in him,” Darnold said of Gase after the 34-27 win. “I think that kind of ripples throughout the team. When you’ve got a head coach that’s just going to continue to work no matter what the circumstan­ces are, no matter what people are saying about him, that’s a really good thing.”

Gase is 2-7 in his first season as coach of the Jets, and the team hit rock bottom last week after a loss to previously winless Miami — the team that fired him after last season.

Many Jets fans have taken to social media and sports radio to express their disgust, urging team chairman and CEO Christophe­r

Johnson to make a coaching change just eight games in. One group even received enough donations to finance a banner that flew behind a plane over Manhattan earlier in the week with the simple message: “Fire Adam Gase Now.”

For whatever Gase’s shortcomin­gs are perceived to be with his coaching — game planning, clock management, helping Darnold improve — there also has been a massive amount of injuries to key players and a lack of roster depth from the previous regime. It has all contribute­d to the struggles, and the

Jets insist they can rise above it.

“We block it out,” safety Jamal Adams said. “We go to work each day, we come out here and have fun. We practice and we came out here and showed it.”

Some might say it was merely against the Giants, who are 2-8 and have a coach on an even warmer hot seat than Gase in Pat Shurmur.

But it might be a building block.

Darnold declared after the game that if the Jets win the rest of their games, they will be squarely in the playoff picture.

It might seem like a silly statement, and a pipe dream, at best. But only one of the Jets’ next four opponents — Washington (1-8), Oakland (5-4), Cincinnati (0-9) and Miami (2-7) — has a winning record.

The bottom line is this: It took just one win for the optimism to return from the abyss where it headed in a hurry. Gase and the Jets have a chance to really begin to turn things around — including public opinion — with another win Sunday.

“It’s all going to be about Wednesday showing up, coming back to work, wiping the slate clean, just focusing on winning the next game and really preparing for the next game,” Gase said. “If we’re looking past anything besides that, we’re in the wrong spot. We need to stay focused at the task at hand.”

WHAT’S WORKING

Run defense. The Jets held the Giants to just 23 yards rushing on 17 carries, highlighte­d by Saquon Barkley gaining a career-low 1 yard on 13 attempts. The 23 yards allowed were the fewest given up by the Jets since setting a franchise record by allowing only 11 at Baltimore in 2016. The Jets entered the weekend holding opponents to a leaguelow 3.13 yards rushing per attempt — an average that now sits at 3.0.

WHAT NEEDS HELP

The cornerback­s. Trumaine Johnson is out for the season with injured ankles, and Darryl Roberts sat out Sunday with a calf issue. But even they struggled when they were healthy for a pass defense that ranks 26th in the league. Against the Giants, the Jets started Nate Hairston and Arthur

Maulet and they also had problems, so much so that rookie Bless Austin — making his NFL debut — ended up playing for the benched Hairston in the second half. Brian Poole has been solid in his role at the nickel spot, but the only other cornerback on the active roster is Maurice Canady, who was claimed off waivers from Baltimore last week.

STOCK UP

Jordan Jenkins. The outside linebacker had two sacks against the Giants, giving him a team-leading five in seven games this season. The Jets are tied for 25th in the NFL with 19 sacks, but Jenkins has provided a boost to their sagging pass rush lately.

STOCK DOWN

Le’Veon Bell. There’s no debate the star running back has said and done all the right things off the field this season in what has to be a downright frustratin­g first year in New York. But the numbers on the field look all wrong. After gaining just 34 yards on 18 carries — a 1.9 average — Bell has just 449 yards on the season with a 3.1 average, which would rank as the lowest of his career.

 ?? STEVEN RYAN - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? New York Jets fans watch the second half of a game against the New York Giants, Sunday, Nov. 10, 2019, in East Rutherford, N.J.
STEVEN RYAN - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS New York Jets fans watch the second half of a game against the New York Giants, Sunday, Nov. 10, 2019, in East Rutherford, N.J.

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