Connecticut Post

Jets’ commitment to Wilson has many puzzled, including Namath

- By Dennis Waszak Jr.

At this point, most Jets fans would take anyone at quarterbac­k other than Zach Wilson.

They don’t want to hear it’s not all his fault or New York has plenty of problems and not just him.

Well, it all might be true for a team that’s 1-2 after having Super Bowl aspiration­s with Aaron Rodgers under center. But the fact is the Jets are sticking with Wilson, the third-year quarterbac­k who was once the future of the franchise but is now the most popular target of frustrated fans.

Even Broadway Joe sounded off Sunday on social media during the Jets’ 15-10 loss to the New England Patriots — their 15th straight against their AFC East foes — and went even further Monday during an interview on “The Michael Kay Show” on 98.7 ESPN New York.

“I wouldn’t keep him,” said Joe Namath, who was uncharacte­ristically agitated. “I’ve seen enough of Zach Wilson. All right? I’ve seen enough.”

The Pro Football Hall of Famer remains the first and only quarterbac­k to lead the Jets to the Super Bowl — back in January 1969, when he made good on one of sports’ most famous guarantees.

It appears that drought will hit 55 years unless the Jets can turn it around. Even being able to end the NFL’s longest active streak without a playoff appearance — 12 years — seems in jeopardy.

Namath called Wilson’s performanc­e Sunday “disgusting” and “awful.” He added: “I don’t believe in him. I don’t believe he has a future as a good player. I think they made the

wrong choice when they drafted him.”

Namath also called for changes in the organizati­on, from top to bottom.

Yep, it seems everyone’s on notice these days, and that includes coach Robert Saleh and GM Joe Douglas.

They’re charged with trying to keep everything together on a team that was built to win now with Rodgers. After the fourtime NFL MVP was lost for the season with a torn left Achilles tendon just four plays into his debut, the Jets had to quickly pivot to Wilson — who was never supposed to play this season.

The No. 2 overall pick in the 2021 draft struggled through his first two seasons, to the point he was benched twice last season. The idea was for Wilson to watch and learn from Rodgers, the equivalent of a college redshirt season or two.

Perhaps the Jets’ biggest blunder was not bringing in a proven backup during the offseason just in case of what happened.

If the Jets truly wanted Wilson to use this as a developmen­tal year, the contingenc­y plan probably should have started with someone other than Wilson if Rodgers went down.

Instead, Wilson was thrust back into the starter role with only career backup Tim Boyle remaining on the roster.

“He’s our unquestion­ed quarterbac­k,” Saleh said Monday.

And now the Jets are going with a Plan B that shouldn’t have required a system overhaul.

“There’s an identity we’re trying to find on the offensive side of the ball,” Saleh acknowledg­ed. “And it’s not an excuse, but the reality is, it was built a certain way. And now we’re trying to adjust on the fly, which is a challenge, but a challenge that I think we’re going to end up getting an answer for.”

There doesn’t appear to be a simple solution as names such as Matt Ryan, Kirk Cousins, Carson Wentz, Colt McCoy and Jacoby Brissett have been floated around social media.

Well, Jets fans can scratch Ryan off the list after he told CBS Sports — where he works as a TV analyst — “I’ve got no interest in doing that right now.”

Instead, the Jets are adding veteran quarterbac­k Trevor Siemian to the practice squad, according to a person with knowledge of the decision.

The move Tuesday is pending a physical for the 31-year-old Siemian, the person told The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because the team hadn’t announced the signing.

This will be Siemian’s second stint with the Jets after he was with them in 2019. He made one start for New York when Sam Darnold was sidelined with mononucleo­sis, but suffered a season-ending ankle injury early in the “Monday Night Football” game against Cleveland on Sept. 12.

Siemian was a seventhrou­nd pick of Denver out of Northweste­rn in 2015 and was a backup to Peyton Manning during the team’s Super Bowl run during his rookie season. He started 24 games over three seasons with the Broncos before being traded to Minnesota in 2018.

After being injured most of the next season with the Jets, Siemian had stints with Tennessee, New Orleans, Chicago and was among Cincinnati’s cuts after training camp this summer.

Siemian has thrown for 7,027 yards and 42 touchdowns with 28 intercepti­ons during his NFL career. He’s also 13-17 as a starter.

STOCK UP

DT Quinnen Williams. He was an All-Pro last season and got a big payday as a reward, but the defensive tackle continues to stand out on the Jets’ defense. He had three quarterbac­k hits against the Patriots, deflected a pass and had seven pressures to tie a personal best.

STOCK DOWN

OC Nathaniel Hackett. The Jets’ offense has become bland and predictabl­e without Rodgers, and it’s on Hackett to fix it. Everything was designed with Rodgers in mind, but Hackett needs to tailor a game plan that better suits Wilson’s ability to make plays off schedule — and allow him to take some chances.

NEXT STEPS

It doesn’t get any easier for the Jets. In fact, it gets even tougher. New York will try to bounce back while facing Patrick Mahomes and the Kansas City Chiefs in front of a prime-time audience at home Sunday night. The Jets have to hope the only highlight isn’t whether Taylor Swift shows up to cheer on Travis Kelce.

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 ?? ?? Zach Wilson, left, and Joe Namath, right.
Zach Wilson, left, and Joe Namath, right.

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