Dayton Daily News

Plenty of the Bad, TheWorse and the Truly Ugly in theNFL

- ByBarryWil­ner

For those teams pleading “Cut us a break” in this weird and unpreceden­tedly unpredicta­ble year, that was a fair ask. Until now.

At this point of the NFL season, as we head into the final quarter of the schedule, the mea culpas have run their course. There’s simply too much bad, worse and truly ugly football to excuse any longer.

Certainly the winless, hapless and possibly hopeless Jets punctuated that Sunday with their latest debacle. The Jaguars perhaps made what’s left of their believers hold the faith into overtime before folding. The Chargers didn’t even get out of the first period in their worst performanc­e since, well, maybe when they called Balboa Stadium home.

Philly has flopped (phlopped?) so badly there are calls for coach Doug Pederson’s job; hey, Eagles fans, the guy won the

Super Bowl three seasons back. But yes, that offense is unsightly.

Even some of the mediocriti­es, and there are many in 2020, can be downright hideous. See Chicago’s six-game slide that, by all indication­s, could reach 10. It’s loss Sunday was to the Lions, who spoiled many a Thanksgivi­ng meal in Detroit by their performanc­e on the holiday.

Two more tailenders, Dallas andWashing­ton, still haven’t played their Week 13 games. The unattracti­veness just might be enhanced by the end of the Cowboys’ visit to Baltimore on Tuesday night.

Chargers coach Anthony Lynn summed up the ugliness after a 45-0 no-show against New England.

“That was one of the worst football games I’ve ever been a part of in my 30 years in the National Football League as a player and a coach. That was unacceptab­le and embarrassi­ng,” Lynn said.

Sort of what America has seen from far too many teams, all of which deserved a pass because of the way the COVID-19 pandemic has disrupted, well, everything. At this point, 12 games in, however, soccer’s process of relegation for the worst offenders — exemplifie­d by action Sunday — seems like a wise approach.

Start with the Jaguars, who deserve credit for extending to the limit many opponents, all of whom are better than they are. Yet every week — including the overtime defeat at Minnesota in which they blew a lead, made an impressive comeback, then committed the game-losing mistakes in OT — things go wrong. Jacksonvil­le is 1-11, all of the losses coming since an opening victory.

“There’s a point where there’s no moral victories,” veteran linebacker Joe Schobert said. “In football, you either win or you lost. It’s not like, ‘Oh, we lost by two. We lost by three.’ I think it just speaks to how hard everybody plays on this team and how hard everybody plays for each other, just with all the stuff we’ve been going through, and getting in these close games. But to be a good football team, you have to win those close games.”

Or play close ones at least. The Chargers would seem to have enough talent ( Joey Bosa, Keenan Allen, Austin Ekeler when healthy, rookie QB Justin Herbert and quite a few others) not to be 3-9. On Sunday, they made the so-so Patriots look like the prime Tom Brady version in a 45-0 fiasco.

Instead, the Chargers appear to be regressing. Lynn kept repeating “unacceptab­le.” We concur.

Then there is incredible ineptitude, spelled J-ET-S. On the brink of what pretty much everyone in the Big Apple believed was unreachabl­e — a win — they reached truly ugly instead. Ultimate ugly.

After stopping Las Vegas deep in Jets territory, they needed a first down to end their team-record 11-game slide. Playing not to lose — hey, guys, it almost never works — they got ultra-conservati­ve and had to punt after the Raiders’ used their timeouts.

But the Jets still were in position to do the unimaginab­le and pull off the victory. So defensive coordinato­r GreggWilli­ams, a known risk taker, blitzed against quarterbac­k Derek Carr, leaving Lamar Jackson — no, not the one who won the 2019 league MVP award as a quarterbac­k, but a rookie cornerback — in single coverage on speedy rookie Henry Ruggs III.

And 46 yards later, Ruggs was in the end zone. With 5 seconds remaining.

“We just played the call that the coaches called,” Jets safety Marcus Maye said ofWilliams’ call. “We’ve got to execute, but you’ve got to help us out at the same time and be in a better call at that spot.”

That call apparently cost Williams his job, as the Jets reportedly fired him on Monday.

It doesn’t get much uglier that.

 ?? AP ?? MarcusMaye leaves the field after the Jets lost to the visiting Raiders in the final seconds Sunday.
AP MarcusMaye leaves the field after the Jets lost to the visiting Raiders in the final seconds Sunday.

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