Hartford Courant (Sunday)

Bad week continues as injury bug bites hard

Mosley, Williams are ruled out for Browns game

- By Manish Mehta

FLORHAM PARK, N.J. — And the hits just keep on coming for the Jets.

New York will be without Pro Bowl linebacker C.J. Mosley and rookie defensive lineman Quinnen Williams for their showdown against the Browns on Monday night.

Both players were officially ruled out of the game after not practicing on Saturday. Losing Mosley, who suffered a groin injury in the third quarter of the season-opening loss to the Bills, is significan­t.

He’s an integral piece to Gregg Williams’ puzzle as the defensive play caller.

“I expect to play, but if my body isn’t there, I won’t be able to,” Mosley said on Friday. “I got to be honest with myself.”

Neville Hewitt will start for Mosley, whose absence in the fourth quarter opened the door for Buffalo to rally from a 16-point deficit to win.

Williams left MetLife Stadium in a walking boot, but was walking without a limp in the locker room by Friday.

Wide receiver Demaryius Thomas, acquired in a deal with the Patriots this week, is listed as questionab­le after not practicing all week with a hamstring injury.

Le’Veon Bell (shoulder) and left tackle Kelvin Beachum (ankle) are officially questionab­le after being limited in practice on Saturday.

The Jets were already dealing with the news that Sam Darnold is out indefinite­ly due to mononucleo­sis.

Gase used Browns as threat: Adam Gase used to view the Browns as a joke like much of the rest of the football universe.

Browns wide receiver Jarvis Landry, who isn’t the biggest fan of Gase these days, revealed last year the former Dolphins coach used to tell players in his doghouse that they would be shipped to Cleveland if they didn’t get their act together. Gase referenced Bill Belichick’s move to deal disgruntle­d linebacker Jamie Collins to the Factory of Sadness, according to Landry.

The Jets head coach admitted this week he did indeed once tell a player that he’d be Cleveland-bound if they didn’t fall in line, but he wasn’t actually serious.

“That was in a team meeting and it was a joke at the time to one of the other players because we had a 4 p.m. (trade) deadline,” Gase said in the run-up to the Jets Monday night game against the Browns. “We had a team meeting earlier in the day and one of the guys was like, ‘Well looks like everybody is clean. Nobody is getting traded.’ And (Dolphins GM) Chris Grier and myself were giving him a hard time. I slid it in the PowerPoint. It was supposed to be a joke and I think he took it a little seriously.”

Gase and Landry, who got into a yelling match on the sideline in Week 16 of 2017 in Kansas City, clashed before the player was sent to the Browns for a fourth and seventh round pick before last season. Landry later said, “I just felt like, for some reason, Adam sent me here to die.”

Gase’s decision to trade a Pro Bowl wideout who led the NFL in receptions that season (112) further fueled the notion that he had trouble getting along with players. Gase admitted this week that Landry, who had 206 catches for 2,123 yards and 13 touchdowns in two seasons, “was our best player.”

The Dolphins placed the franchise tag on him before dealing him. Landry ultimately signed a five-year, $75.5 million deal (which is really a $2-year, $34 million deal with an escape catch for Cleveland after this season).

 ?? STEVE LUCIANO/AP ?? New York Jets inside linebacker C.J. Mosley in action during against the Buffalo Bills on Sunday in East Rutherford, N.J.
STEVE LUCIANO/AP New York Jets inside linebacker C.J. Mosley in action during against the Buffalo Bills on Sunday in East Rutherford, N.J.

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