Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Jets’ Gase focused on season finale, not his future

- By Dennis Waszak Jr. AP Pro Football Writer

NEWYORK » Adam Gase came to the New York Jets nearly two years ago on a clear mission.

He was here to win, oversee a consistent­ly productive offense and develop Sam Darnold into a franchise quarterbac­k.

Gase failed on all three counts. And that has the coach likely in his last days on the job.

To his credit, he has maintained the same approach as he has every day since taking over the Jets. He’s focused on the task at hand and not the rumors swirling about his future — and the frequent questions about all the buzz.

“I mean, that’s what it is,” Gase said Wednesday. “I’ve been here two years. I think that started about Week 6 last year.”

He was only half-joking.

Gase wasn’t a popular pick among many longsuffer­ing Jets fans who were turned off by the coach’s struggles in three seasons with AFC East-rival Miami. His somewhat awkward introducto­ry news conference only fueled the naysayers.

A tough start capped by a strong finish and 7-9 record didn’t instill much confidence. Then came this season’s franchisew­orst 0-13 start, Darnold’s regression and the offense’s continued woes. A two-game winning streak won’t help, and WFAN reported Tuesday that Gase has already been told he will be out after the season finale at New England.

“That was news to me,” Gase said. “No one has said that to me.”

But he’s well aware of all the chatter. Again, though, he is trying to keep that stuff out of the building — and his mind.

“You’re going to hate this answer, but it’s the best one I can give you: I learned probably when I was 22 years old, Nick Saban told me you do your job until somebody tells you different,” Gase said. “So, that’s what I’m going to be focused on, and my job is to get us ready to go for this Sunday and go try to win a game.”

The problem has been that those victories have been too few and far between. Gase is 9-22 with the Jets, and a lot of that is on his offense.

Injuries have played a role, for sure. And so did the lack of a real offseason and preseason games. But that was what every other team dealt with, too. Gase has lamented the fact he didn’t do a good enough job with Darnold, unable to get the 23-yearold quarterbac­k to take a drastic positive step in his developmen­t.

New York’s offense has been much better of late, but was absolutely inept for a large chunk of the season. The Jets are on the verge of finishing last in the NFL in total offense for the second straight year — not a good look for a coach who was hailed by CEO Christophe­r Johnson as “a brilliant offensive mind” early this season.

“There’s no point in looking at them, and I know where we’re at — it’s not good,” Gase said of the team’s statistics. “We had way too many games where we were just so unproducti­ve. I feel like we’ve done some things better in the last month or so, still had that Seattle game, we just couldn’t do anything. It’s those games where you just have absolutely nothing: no yards, no points, third-down (and) red-zone percentage is crap.

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