San Diego Union-Tribune

Jets victorious, but are they really losers?

- INGLEWOOD The Associated Press contribute­d to this report. Farmer writes for the L.A. Times.

Sean McVay has a big heart. Last week, while watching tape to prepare for Sunday’s game against the winless New York Jets, the Rams coach made a highly unusual decision. He made a morning phone call to Jets coach Adam Gase, offering him a few words of encouragem­ent.

“He called me at 7:15 our time,” Gase said after the game. “I’m sitting there going, I can’t believe he’s at the office already. It’s 4:15 (in Los Angeles). I answer it because I know he’s up and wants to say something. He just said, ‘Watching the tape and, man, these guys play hard for you. I know things haven’t gone the way you wanted. But just keep those guys grinding and keep ’em pushing.’ ”

After Sunday’s stunning upset — a 23-20 Jets victory at SoFi Stadium — it was Gase who could have delivered the keep-your-chin-up speech.

In beating a Rams team that’s maddeningl­y inconsiste­nt but probably headed to the playoffs, the Jets dodged the indignity of becoming the third NFL franchise to finish 0-16.

“I’m happy for our guys,” Gase said. “If you watch them work every day, you see how hard they compete in games, they deserve this. I mean, they deserved it a while ago. We’ve had a few snatched away from us, and to finally close out a game — against a good team, too — it says a lot

about what kind of character we have in this locker room.”

As noted by ESPN Stats & Info, three teams 0-13 or worse have gotten their first victory against an opponent with a winning record.

In 2011, the 0-13 Indianapol­is Colts — slogging through the season without Peyton Manning — beat the 7-6 Tennessee Titans.

In 1962, the 0-13 Oakland Raiders beat the 9-3-1 New England Patriots.

And now the 0-13 Jets have beaten the Rams, who were 9-4 and would have secured a playoff spot with a win.

It’s the Jets, so of course even good things are laced with bad. By winning, they surrendere­d the inside track on the No. 1 overall draft pick to Jacksonvil­le. The teams have identical records, and should both lose their final two games, the Jaguars would win the tiebreaker based on strength of schedule.

The prize is likely Clemson quarterbac­k Trevor Lawrence, and heading into

the Rams game, all signs pointed to the Jets trading former USC star Sam Darnold, their No. 3 pick in 2018, in favor of Lawrence. Now, that plan could be kaput.

“It doesn’t affect us,” Darnold said. “We’re focused on one job every single week, and that’s winning a game. Anything other than that, we’re not focused on.”

The Jets finish with a home game against Cleveland, then at New England. Jacksonvil­le plays host to Chicago, and is at Indianapol­is for a finale.

Darnold has a year left on his rookie deal, and it’s clear the Jets aren’t going to exercise his fifth-year option for 2022, which would cost them an estimated $25 million guaranteed. Even though his career hasn’t gone as he had hoped, Darnold would be a coveted player on the open market for a team nearing a transition at quarterbac­k.

Sunday was his first game back in Los Angeles since directing USC to a victory over UCLA at the Coliseum three years ago, although he said he didn’t give the locale much thought. He was just happy to finally win a game.

“It’s the greatest feeling in sports to be able to ice the game out and know we had it,” he said. “It’s the best. … To be able to execute and be able to see it all come into fruition, I think that was the biggest thing for us. It was an amazing feeling.”

Conversely, the Rams have to be deeply troubled. Throughout the season, they have shown that when things are going well, the team looks really good, but this group of players has yet to show it can pull out of a tailspin when what they’re doing isn’t working.

That’s a recipe for a oneand-done playoff appearance, if the team gets there at all.

Meanwhile, salt in the wound for the Rams: NFC West rival Seattle defeated Washington on Sunday to clinch a postseason berth for the third season in a row.

Then again, for a team picking up its first victory in Week 15, one win is a feast.

“You come and watch us, man, and it don’t look like an 0-13 team,” said running back Frank Gore, 37. “These young kids — I won’t call them kids — these young men come in and fight, and we finally got one.”

 ?? SEAN M. HAFFEY GETTY IMAGES ?? Jets quarterbac­k Sam Darnold is all smiles after New York snapped a 13-game losing streak this season.
SEAN M. HAFFEY GETTY IMAGES Jets quarterbac­k Sam Darnold is all smiles after New York snapped a 13-game losing streak this season.

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