The Palm Beach Post

Bowles says Jets won’t let loss linger

- By Dennis Waszak

NEW YORK — This isn’t exactly where the Jets expected to be. At least, not this way.

Todd Bowles’ bunch is 1-2 after an embarrassi­ng flop in Cleveland, falling 21-17 on Thursday night to a Browns team that hadn’t won since 2016. Two losses in five days have New York looking for answers and hoping things don’t quickly spiral before the season is even a month old.

“It’s a 24-hour rule and you’ve got to have tough skin,” Bowles said Friday morning. “We’re a toughminde­d team and it’s not going to drag. We’ve got a couple of days to get some rest and get some guys back and get healthy and move on to Jacksonvil­le next week — no different from if we had won the ballgame.

“We’ll be fine that way. I think we’re mentally tough.”

Judging from the mistakes, penalties and missed opportunit­ies in the Jets’ losses to Miami last Sunday and then at Cleveland, the team hasn’t backed up its coach.

That assessment will certainly be tested, though. New York’s upcoming schedule includes some tough defenses — at Jacksonvil­le, vs. Denver, vs. Indianapol­is, vs. Minnesota and at Chicago — that will be licking their chops at the prospect of facing rookie quarterbac­k Sam Darnold.

“Going in, watching the schedule after he won starting job, I thought this would be his toughest game from a scheme-coverage standpoint because of the things they do on that side of the ball,” Bowles said. “I thought he handled that well.”

It’s not that the No. 3 overall pick has been bad. Darnold hasn’t been particular­ly great, either.

In the Jets’ two losses, he has one touchdown pass and four intercepti­ons, although the two against Cleveland came late in the game while he was trying to rally New York to a comeback.

“It’s not acceptable the way that I played tonight and I know that, but also take it like a man,” Darnold said after the game. “I feel like I’m responsibl­e for some of the stagnant offense that we had. I just have to play better. That’s really it. I have to find completion­s and continue to do what I’ve been doing.”

Darnold was 15 of 31 for 169 yards and the two INTs against Cleveland. He has said all the right things, showing the maturity of a veteran. But the 21-year-old face of the franchise is going through the rookie rollercoas­ter of ups and downs.

“He has a fire within that you really can’t see, but I thought he competed his butt off yesterday,” Bowles said. “I thought yesterday was one of his better ballgames from a mental standpoint and a toughness standpoint and a grit standpoint.”

But Darnold was easily overshadow­ed in front of a prime-time crowd by Baker Mayfield, the No. 1 overall pick who replaced an injured Tyrod Taylor and energized the Browns while leading them to their first win since Dec. 24, 2016.

While Mayfield was zipping passes all around the field, offensive coordinato­r Jeremy Bates seemed to play it mostly conservati­ve with Darnold. Bowles thought the offense was “well-balanced,” but added that the Browns’ defense negated some of the Jets’ game plan in the second half.

Not committing silly penalties — on both sides of the ball — would help.

There was Isaiah Crowell’s touchdown celebratio­n when he pretended to wipe his rear end with the football before firing it into the crowd, resulting in a 15-yard unsportsma­nlike conduct penalty.

Cornerback Trumaine Johnson had two penalties during one drive, including an unsportsma­nlike conduct call on a third-down play when he flipped the ball to Browns receiver Jarvis Landry, and an unnecessar­y roughness call two plays later.

Also, Mayfield was sacked on a 2-point conversion attempt at the end of the third quarter, but cornerback Morris Claiborne committed a holding penalty. The Browns converted the 2-point try, with Landry throwing to Mayfield, tying the game and shifting the momentum to Cleveland.

“Well, the penalties are definitely on the players,” Bowles said. “I mean, coaches can’t play for them. We understand situations and we know what to do and what not to do. Guys have got to be calmer in certain situations.”

 ?? JOE ROBBINS/GETTY IMAGES ?? Jets rookie quarterbac­k Sam Darnold was upstaged by Browns counterpar­t Baker Mayfield in Thursday night’s loss.
JOE ROBBINS/GETTY IMAGES Jets rookie quarterbac­k Sam Darnold was upstaged by Browns counterpar­t Baker Mayfield in Thursday night’s loss.

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