New York Post

READY FOR DEPARTURE

Time for Jets to move on from Gase

- Mark Cannizzaro mark.cannizzaro@nypost.com

THERE comes a time in these proceeding­s when you can just feel it in the air. When it’s time for the head coach to go

When the message from the coach is the same old, same old after each loss and the narrative never changes.

When the evidence has mounted to a point where a firing is inevitable.

That’s where we are with the Jets and Adam Gase.

Jets CEO Christophe­r Johnson, a good man who desperatel­y wants to bring a winner to Jets fans and who’s been an ardent supporter of Gase, wants no part of firing the man he hired less than two seasons ago, the man who as recently as last month, he maintained is an “offensive genius.’’

But we’ve arrived to the point where Johnson has to ask himself this: Does he see any way out of this malaise with Gase in charge?

That answer, if he’s seen what the rest of us have been looking at for a season and a half and he’s being honest with himself, is no.

Gase’s team looked lifeless on Sunday, losing 24-0 to the Dolphins at Hard Rock Stadium, a defeat that dropped the Jets to 0-6 and making them the only winless team in the NFL.

Gase owns a 30-40 record as an NFL head coach and 31 of those 40 losses gave come by double digits. He’s 7-15 as the Jets head coach with eight of those losses coming by double digits and five of them by 20 or more points. That’s simply too many lopsided losses.

“I’m not even thinking about it,’’ Gase said after the game when asked if he was concerned Johnson might fire him.

He should.

Because the team he’s coaching has reached the stage of unwatchabl­e.

You could argue that the Jets reached this place long before Sunday’s deplorable loss to the Dolphins. But watching the Jets hurts your eyes. The Surgeon General would not recommend it.

The only suspense remaining to this lost Jets season — other than whether they continue along this path of destructio­n and secure the No. 1-overall draft pick and the chance to land Trevor Lawrence — is whether Johnson’s eyes hurt enough to make a coaching change.

Firing Gase, of course, isn’t going to solve the franchise’s problems overnight. Not even close. The team simply needs a change, a spark, a new voice. And, most importantl­y, a chance for Johnson to get a jump-start on finding the right man to lead his team forward.

The Jets do everything wrong — every little thing. They’re not coached well. They don’t play well. They don’t play smart. And it’s becoming clearer by the day that general manager Joe Douglas hasn’t chosen enough of the right players so far.

The only other time the Jets started a season 0-6 was — you guessed it — the 1996 Rich Kotite team. No Jets team or coach wants to be mentioned in the same sentence as Kotite. That’s usually the prelude to a death sentence.

But this team is worse than the one Kotite coached to a 1-15 record. It has less talent and is less competitiv­e. And that’s damning.

So, too, is the distastefu­l dysfunctio­n that’s infiltrate­d the franchise.

Last week began with disgruntle­d running back Le’Veon Bell refusing to speak to reporters after a blowout loss to Arizona and later resorting to a passive-aggressive Twitter assault on Gase.

It continued with the Jets, unable to find anyone who would give them an open bag of stale chips for Bell in a trade, simply cutting him. Bell then signed with the Chiefs — because of course he would land with the defending Super Bowl champions and owners of the most prolific offense in the league.

Then on Friday, defensive coordinato­r Gregg Williams, overseer of a defense that was yielding 32.2 points and 394 yards per game, threw his beleaguere­d head coach under the bus by taking the tried-and-true “not-myfault’’ route that losers often take.

“That’s not what we need,’’ Gase said during Saturday night’s production meeting, according to the CBS announcing crew. “Everyone needs to shut up and play.’’

After the game, Gase acknowledg­ed, “I wasn’t happy about it,’’ saying he and Williams “talked about it.’’

As bad as Gase’s offense was Sunday, Williams’ defense wasn’t much better when it mattered, giving up 21 first-half points and failing to stop Miami quarterbac­k Ryan Fitzpatric­k.

On two of the three Fitzpatric­k scoring passes, Williams standing on the sideline was closer to the TD recipients than any of his defenders on the field were. That’s not good defense, not good coaching.

Herein lies a problem for Christophe­r Johnson: If he relieves Gase of his duties, to whom does he turn on the current staff to coach the rest of the season?

Because handing the keys to Williams, a coach who’s allergic to accountabi­lity, seems like an even more poisonous scenario than the team’s current sad state.

Ugh.

The Jets releasing Le’Veon Bell was expected to open the door to a bigger role for La’Mical Perine.

The rookie running back didn’t quite smash through it on the first try.

Frank Gore still got more carries, and the recently signed Ty Johnson got more yards (on three carries) as Perine’s explosiven­ess remained bottled up Sunday during the Jets’ 24-0 loss to the Dolphins.

In another miserable game for the offense, Perine was limited to seven rushes for 27 yards and two catches for 9 yards. He also dropped

a pass late in the second quarter when he appeared to have plenty of room to run if he had corralled it, a play that coach Adam Gase indicated factored into his playing time.

“[Getting Perine more carries] was the plan going in, and I was just kind of watching those guys, the body language,” Gase said. “I know after Perine dropped that one ball, I was just trying to make sure he was good confidence-wise. I didn’t want him to go in the wrong direction. Just trying to get him back in there and then trying to get Ty involved.

“I know there were a couple of opportunit­ies that

Perine will probably go back and look at and wish he could have that play back. We just gotta keep getting him more and more carries. Hopefully in the next game, we can get the carries the way we want them.”

The Jets started seven of their 14 drives with a handoff to Gore. The 37-year-old finished with 11 carries for 46 yards and four catches for 24 yards, while Johnson had three carries for 42 yards.

Johnson, whom the Jets claimed off waivers from the Lions on Oct. 2, took a carry for 34 yards in the third quarter — the Jets’ longest rush of the year.

While Bell is now in Kan

sas City, waiting to play his first game with the defending Super Bowl champion Chiefs, the Jets picked up another loss in their first game without him. But Gore said his departure didn’t have any lingering effects Sunday.

“I think everybody on the team, offense and defense, they believe in me, they believe in Perine,” Gore said. “I don’t think there was a linger. They know I’ve been having success in this league for a long time. They see me in practice, they saw me in training camp, they saw that I can play. They see Perine taking steps as a rookie. So I don’t think there was a linger.”

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 ?? Getty Images ?? BOTTLED UP: Frank Gore led a backfield-by-committee approach with 46 yards on 11 carries.
Getty Images BOTTLED UP: Frank Gore led a backfield-by-committee approach with 46 yards on 11 carries.

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