Monterey Herald

Jets, 0-12, fire coordinato­r Williams

Move comes day after call on final play costs 1st win

- By Dennis Waszak Jr.

NEW YORK >> Adam Gase thought through the final agonizing moments of the New York Jets’ stunning loss and tried to not make a rash decision.

The coach got a little bit of sleep before he headed to the team’s facility Monday morning — with the same conclusion he had Sunday night: defensive coordinato­r Gregg Williams had to go.

“I just felt like that was the best thing for our team moving forward,” Gase said during a conference call. “Organizati­onally, we had a discussion this morning and we felt like this was the best move to make.”

Williams was fired after he inexplicab­ly called for an all- out blitz against Las Vegas on Sunday with the Jets seconds away from their first victory. Derek Carr heaved a perfectly placed 46-yard touchdown pass to Henry Ruggs III — who was in man-to-man, or Cover Zero, coverage with rookie cornerback Lamar Jackson — with 5 seconds left to lift the Raiders to a 31-28 win.

The decision was highly criticized by fans, media and even his own players. It left the Jets players, who

only moments earlier were celebratin­g what appeared to be a win, in shock on the sideline.

The team announced it had “parted ways” with Williams and assistant head coach/inside linebacker­s coach Frank Bush would serve as the interim defensive coordinato­r.

“I obviously wasn’t happy about that call,” a somber-sounding Gase said. “That was a heartbreak­ing way for our guys to lose a game. For that to happen in that situation, it’s just ... we can’t have that happen.”

Gase said he spoke with CEO Christophe­r Johnson, general manager Joe Douglas and team president Hymie Elhai about what he thought should be done — and they agreed it was right to move on. Gase then told Williams about the decision during a nearly hour-

long discussion.

“Obviously, he wasn’t happy,” Gase said. “But, that’s our profession.”

Team captain Marcus Maye took an uncharacte­ristic swipe at Williams after the game, saying that the defense should have been in a better call in that situation. Gase insisted Maye’s comments didn’t play a role in his decision.

Gase was surprised to hear the play call by Williams, and acknowledg­ed he has authority to overrule the defensive coordinato­r — but did not.

“I wish I would’ve,” Gase said. “Sometimes during a game, you’re talking through a bunch of situations and that comes up. I wish I would’ve called timeout, but I didn’t.”

The 62-year-old Williams had been the Jets’ defensive coordinato­r the past two seasons under Gase. The two had a minor clash earlier this season when Williams said the Jets’ scoring average on defense wasn’t just all on his unit — implying Gase’s struggling offense was also to blame.

Defensive tackle Quinnen Williams seemed to take exception to the defensive coordinato­r’s firing, using five facepalm emojis in a quote tweet of ESPN’s tweet announcing the move.

Williams has had several stops through the NFL during a 30-year career, including with New Orleans, where he was suspended a year by the league in 2012 for his role in the Saints’ bounty scandal.

The no-nonsense Williams has made a career of being an aggressive play caller on defense, but the Jets have struggled this year while ranking 29th in total defense and 30th in scoring defense. Williams had to deal with star safety Jamal Adams being traded to Seattle during the summer, linebacker C. J. Mosley opting out because of COVID-19 concerns, and linebacker Avery Williamson dealt to Pittsburgh in the middle of the season.

There were several injuries to contend with, and other veterans such as cornerback Pierre Desir and Quincy Wilson not playing well. But the Jets’ defense had mostly done its job Sunday, including a fourthdown stop with 1:37 left.

 ?? JULIO CORTEZ — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? New York Jets defensive coordinato­r Gregg Williams was fired on Monday.
JULIO CORTEZ — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE New York Jets defensive coordinato­r Gregg Williams was fired on Monday.

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