The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Jets’ win leaves players happy, fans angry

- By Dennis Waszak Jr.

NEWYORK» The Jets know how many of their fans feel today. They also know this can’t happen again.

A 23-20 victory over the stunned and embarrasse­d Los Angeles Rams on Sunday ended a nightmaris­h crawl to a potential 0-16 season and a dubious spot in NFL history.

It also might have ended the Jets’ chances of getting the No. 1 pick and Clemson quarterbac­k Trevor Lawrence in the NFL draft in April.

Having players happy but fans angry about a win — and both be right — says everything about the state of the franchise. The task for the Jets, and it’s a massive one, is to make sure both sides are never again in this awkward spot.

“It’s a huge relief for a lot of the guys in the locker room to be able to get this win,” quarterbac­k Sam Darnold said Monday, “and it means the world to us.”

For many fans, though, there was just sheer disappoint­ment. Check Twitter or Facebook, or turn on sports radio today and there’s no shortage of frustratio­n. And, that’s after a win.

Rookie left tackle Mekhi Becton has been one of the few bright spots for the Jets while quickly pancake-blocking his way to being a fan favorite. But even he ticked off some of those same supporters when he questioned fans’ loyalty during a postgame interview with SNY.

“You ain’t really a fan if you didn’t want us to win, honestly,” Becton said. “I mean that in the nicest way possible. I don’t mean that in a disrespect­ful way. But I mean if you wanted us to lose, you’re not a real fan, honestly. We’ve worked too hard to just go out there and take a loss every week.”

This is where the unfortunat­e separation in perspectiv­es has occurred.

Tanking is never in the game plan for coaches and players, even when losing now could pay off in the future. For the fans who have gone years — and, some, decades — waiting to feel good about their team, the bigger picture represents the hope for the future in the face of losing.

Jacksonvil­le is now the front-runner to pick first in the draft, with the Jets sitting at No. 2. There will be massive changes this offseason for New York, starting first with the likely firing of coach Adam Gase. From there, the Jets brass will need to decide on someone to lead the franchise and whether Darnold is still the quarterbac­k of the present and future.

If not, general manager Joe Douglas will be able to target someone — likely other than Lawrence — with that pick. Or, maybe he goes for a sorely needed edge rusher. Or, he could trade down and collect more selections.

Either way, the Jets have to make it up to their fans. By winning — and everyone being happy about it. Not just the players.

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