New York Post

It’s been a turnpike of torture for Jets

- Brian Costello

THE Jets’ history book has many terrible chapters that fans need no help rememberin­g. There are playoff losses, incredible turnovers involving player’s posteriors, fake spikes, muddy fields and everything in between.

But one chapter of Jets history that is particular­ly odd and often overlooked when recounting all the bad moments is the Jets’ history against the Eagles.

The Jets are 0-11 all time against the team down I-95. It is the most losses against a current team without a win by a franchise in the NFL. On Sunday, the Jets get another chance to get off the schneid against the Eagles at MetLife Stadium.

Coach Robert Saleh was asked if he were aware of the Jets’ winless history against the Eagles.

“I saw that,” Saleh said. “That’s history.”

And what an odd history it is.

The first meeting between the teams came on a rainy Dec. 9, 1973, at Veterans Stadium. Joe Namath’s knee was hurting in warm-ups and Weeb Ewbank started Al Woodall at quarterbac­k. The game was notable for the 31,333 no-shows in the stands. Woodall got the Jets out to a 17-0 lead, but then the Eagles came back to win 24-23.

An Eagles defensive back named John Outlaw returned one of Woodall’s passes 45 yards for a touchdown. That would not be the last pick-six in this series. In 2019, Nathan Gerry intercepte­d Luke Falk’s pass intended for Le’Veon Bell and returned it 51 yards for a touchdown, creating a sentence that summed up the 2019 season. Falk was sacked nine times that day in a 31-6 loss with a mono-stricken Sam Darnold watching from the sideline.

The most painful pick-six came on Oct. 3, 1993, and was thrown by Boomer Esiason. That game should have been remembered as the Johnny Mitchell game. The secondyear tight end caught seven passes for 146 yards and three touchdowns. The Jets led 21-0 before Bubby Brister, playing in place of an injured Randall Cunningham, brought the Eagles back. The Jets held a 30-28 lead in the fourth quarter when Esiason was intercepte­d in the red zone by Eric Allen, who then zig-zagged his way 94 yards for a touchdown and a 35-30 win.

The Eagles coach that day was Rich Kotite. Both Kotite and Brister would join the Jets a few years later and create even more painful memories for Jets fans.

In 1996, Kotite’s team was 1-13 when it faced the Eagles at Giants Stadium. The Jets led 20-7 in the fourth quarter before the Eagles came back to win 21-20.

Kotite and Brister are just a few of the players and coaches who have been on both sides of this. Ken O’Brien finished his career with the Eagles. Mark Sanchez had a brief return to the national stage with the Eagles in 2014. That was the same year former Eagle Michael Vick started three games for the Jets. Joe Flacco is the latest quarterbac­k to make the New Jersey Turnpike move, going from the Jets to the Eagles and back to the Jets again in the past calendar year.

Keith Byars was a star in Philadelph­ia. He is remembered for his fumble with the Jets in the 1998 AFC Championsh­ip game in Denver. Hugh Douglas was a first-round pick of the Jets who became a Pro Bowler with the Eagles.

The Eagles had Buddy Ryan. The Jets hired his son, Rex. Herm Edwards made his name as a player in Philadelph­ia then became a head coach in New York. Jets general manager Joe Douglas came to the team after three years with the Eagles.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States