Hartford Courant

Douglas must come out of hiding and denounce Gase

- By Manish Mehta

FLORHAM PARK, N.J. — Joe Douglas spent the offseason waxing poetic about his mercurial head coach. He talked tough about “angry” folks offended by low preseason expectatio­ns and scoffed at “a quote-unquote soft schedule” down the stretch last season. He was defiant and arrogant, dismissing the notion the Jets were still a dysfunctio­nal mess.

The general manager’s brazenness has been replaced by silence amid an 0-6 start that has turned this franchise into a laughingst­ock. He has retreated and refused to explain this utter disgrace.

Leaders embrace challenges and shine during tough times. They provide hope.

They don’t hide.

Douglas has chosen the easy path. He has stayed under the covers, wishing away this nightmare rather than confrontin­g it.

There’s a danger down this road, a stain that might never be removed if Douglas doesn’t comport himself like the leader he was brought on to be.

The GM needs to hold himself partly responsibl­e for the circus on 1 Jets Drive.

Although Douglas surely is aware Adam Gase will be gone soon enough, the GM must take a two-pronged stance. First and foremost, he must recommend to ownership that Gase be removed immediatel­y. Secondly, he must hold himself publicly accountabl­e for this dumpster fire.

The first part requires a backbone.

Although Gase doesn’t technicall­y report to Douglas, it’s incumbent upon the GM to disassocia­te himself with a wildly unpopular and unsuccessf­ul coach. Douglas might have been Gase’s hand-picked successor to Mike Maccagnan, but that’s irrelevant now.

The longer Douglas remains silent, the longer his words in the offseason linger.

Strike One: “I especially believe in Coach Gase,” Douglas said on July 27. “I feel like he is the right coach to lead this team… I feel really good about where we are with him and his leadership.”

Strike Two: “Adam’s done as well as anybody in terms of rolling with the punches and adjusting on the fly,” Douglas said on Sept. 7. “The communicat­ion has been on point. Communicat­ion has been direct and the leadership has been strong. So, I’ve been really impressed.”

Douglas obviously looks silly with that stance given the realities of the day. The Jets are the only winless team in the league this season. Gase’s team — which has been outscored by 110 points through six weeks — is on pace to have the worst point differenti­al in NFL history.

Gase’s offense has produced six touchdowns in six games. The average margin of defeat: 18.3 points.

If you didn’t know better, you’d could have sworn that Benny Hill was blaring over the Hard Rock Stadium speakers on Sunday.

The stench is strong. It will stick with Gase, who will be remembered as an epic failure, forever.

But it doesn’t have to follow Douglas if he rises to this moment.

Hiding in the shadows will only enrage Jets die-hards looking for answers.

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