New York Daily News

GASE GETS HIS GUY

JETS HIRE PHILLY’S DOUGLAS TO BE NEW GM

- MANISH MEHTA JETS

Abig, bald, bearded badass is coming to One Jets Drive to clean up a half-century of messes. Three weeks after Gang Green fired Mike Maccagnan, the wayward franchise agreed to terms with Eagles executive Joe Douglas to become the new general manager. The Johnson brothers are all-in with Adam Gase, who will work with his top choice after driving the search process (before and) after Maccagnan’s ouster.

Douglas’ concerns about ownership in- stability were alleviated, in part, by his six-year deal worth more than $3 million per year, according to sources. (The Jets initially offered $1.5 million per year). The new GM will be under contract longer than Gase, according to people familiar with the terms of the deal.

Douglas’ reputation as a no-nonsense, straight shooter with an eye for talent should also dismiss concerns that the Jets hired a yes man for Gase, who quickly realized that he wasn’t compatible with Maccagnan.

The hope from the powers that be is that Douglas, who was the VP of player personnel in Philly for three years, and Gase will have a synergy that was clearly lacking with the head coach and former

GM. Douglas, highly respected in the scouting community, could have waited to survey the landscape after the season before diving into his first GM job.

He was a man with options, but chose the Jets.

Make no mistake: Sam Darnold’s presence was a significan­t factor for Douglas, who could have his franchise quarterbac­k in place for the next decade. Although Douglas had reservatio­ns about some control/reporting elements of the job, the idea of having a potentiall­y dynamic young quarterbac­k, a roster that was in better shape than some people might think and a sufficient budget to bring talented people to bolster the personnel department were too much to pass up.

Douglas’ hiring came hours after the Texans fired general manager Brian Gaine, fueling speculatio­n that Houston would make an eleventh-hour push for a guy that they were blocked from interviewi­ng last year.

In the end, agent Jimmy Sexton completed a hat trick. He now represents the Jets GM, head coach and franchise quarterbac­k.

The Jets, frankly, couldn’t afford to blow this after the organizati­on botched the offseason by letting Maccagnan hire a head coach, spend more than $120 million in free agency and run the draft before ultimately whacking him.

CEO Christophe­r Johnson’s inexperien­ce and indecisive­ness notwithsta­nding, the Jets had little choice but to go all-in with Gase after cutting ties with Maccagnan. Hiring someone other than Gase’s preference would have made a bad situation even worse.

Thankfully for them, Douglas is a top-notch choice regardless.

Gase did the heavy lifting during the search process, including calling candidates to sell them on the the job before they came in for formal interviews. The reality, of course, was that this was always Douglas’ job if he wanted it.

Gase and Douglas worked together with the Bears in 2015, which gave Christophe­r Johnson a comfort level that there likely wouldn’t be a repeat of the dysfunctio­n from the previous five months. Although Johnson has already said the reporting structure will remain the same with the head coach and general manager reporting directly to him, Douglas will retain control of the 53-man roster.

The larger concern for Douglas was the uncertaint­y at the top of the organizati­on.

Woody Johnson could return from his appointmen­t as the U.S. Ambassador to the UK as early as 2020 depending on the outcome of the next presidenti­al election. (Johnson might return even if Trump is reelected). So, there needed to be assurances that Woody Johnson wouldn’t blow up the entire operation upon his return if the Jets weren’t trending in the right direction.

Douglas’ six-year pact all but eliminated that possibilit­y. There is virtually no chance that Johnson would fire an executive with four years left on his deal. In fact, barring an implosion of epic proportion­s, Douglas essentiall­y is guaranteed to stay with the Jets for at least four seasons (three drafts).

The hope obviously is that Douglas, who spent 16 years with the Ravens as a respected personnel voice, will turn the Jets into champions. His drafting M.O.: Bring in high-floor players with standout college production.

Douglas, who has been a part of three Super Bowl winners in his career, helped put together the Eagles’ championsh­ip team two seasons ago. He was integral adding veterans like Nick Foles, Alshon Jeffery, Chris Long, Tim Jernigan and Torrey Smith to help Philly win their first Lombardi Trophy in franchise history.

Douglas is a smart talent evaluator with a chance to do something special for an organizati­on searching for relevance.

After a historical­ly weird offseason for the Jets, they’re keeping their fingers crossed that Douglas can bring some long-awaited hardware to them as well.

If so, they can thank — believe it or not — Adam Gase.

 ??  ?? Adam Gase
Adam Gase
 ??  ?? Joe Douglas
Joe Douglas

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