New York Post

STUMBLING BLOCK

Inability of O-line to remain healthy keeps hurting Jets

- By BRIAN COSTELLO brian.costello@nypost.com

On the day after the Jets’ season ended, coach Robert Saleh said something was “on the forefront of my mind.”

That something may be the single biggest issue that holds back the Jets in 2024 if they don’t find a solution. They went through 13 different offensive line combinatio­ns this season. They used 14 different starting offensive linemen. They had a stretch from Weeks 5-16 during which they used a different starting offensive line in every game.

Besides losing Aaron Rodgers in Week 1, the continuous shuffling of the offensive line was the biggest reason the Jets were 7-10 in 2023.

“There’s definitely a league-wide pandemic with regards to offensive line injuries,” Saleh said. “I’ve been working on this for over a month-and-a-half in terms of just trying to try to find the direction that we need to go. Continue to work on it over the next few months, but that is at the forefront of my mind. It’s a forefront of everybody’s mind to keep those guys healthy. If the O-line’s healthy, the quarterbac­k will be healthy. If the quarterbac­k’s healthy, we’ll all be healthy. It’s definitely something that we’re studying, and we’ll get down to hopefully get an answer for.”

The Jets have suffered a rash of offensive line injuries under general manager Joe Douglas and Saleh. They had seven different offensive line combinatio­ns in 2021 and nine in 2022. That means they have had 29 different combinatio­ns in their three years together. The year before Saleh got here, the Jets had eight in Adam Gase’s final season with the team.

Saleh and Douglas revamped the performanc­e staff in 2021, bringing in Brad DeWeese as the director of high performanc­e and Mike Nicolini as the head strength and conditioni­ng coach as well as several performanc­e coaches. Adding all of that sports science has helped cut down on soft-tissue injuries for the team but not overall injuries.

When Douglas arrived in 2019, he said the Jets would get the offensive line fixed. He has used two first-round picks, a second-round pick and plenty of free-agent money on the position, but they have had a hard time keeping players on the field.

“We’ve invested a lot of resources in that position,” Douglas said. “So, going back, I know I’ve sat here and had conversati­ons with you guys in the past about how much availabili­ty is of importance to this group, and for the last two years, we’ve been banged up. So, going back and looking at the performanc­e and availabili­ty of this group, I feel like I spent so much time trying to prevent the storm from actually coming when it comes to injuries.”

Douglas said he regretted not keeping a 10th offensive lineman out of training camp.

“I think candidly, one of the things I could have done better with the offensive line is keeping an extra offensive lineman,” Douglas said. “Not going into the year with nine offensive linemen, but maybe keeping an extra body there. We still would have had the short four or five guys with all the offensive linemen we played. Again, it’s going to be going back to every single decision-making process and because we have gotten some decisions right there. I feel like we do have a few cornerston­e players on that offensive line moving forward and building around those guys and keep adding to the group.”

Looking back, the Jets clearly miscalcula­ted by counting on 38-year-old Duane Brown to be their left tackle. He started the first two games of the season then suffered a core muscle injury that limited him to spot duty late in the season. Alijah Vera-Tucker is their best offensive lineman, but he suffered his second straight seasonendi­ng injury in October, tearing his Achilles tendon. On the positive side, Mekhi Becton, who missed most of the previous two years, only missed one game this season. Left guard Laken Tomlinson is the only Jets lineman to start every game. He did not miss a snap.

The right side of the line got hit the hardest. The Jets ended up using seven different starting right guards and five right tackles.

The Jets are studying teams that have had better injury luck than them. The Bills started the same five offensive linemen in every game this season.

“There’s definitely something, something that we’ve been studying over the last couple weeks to try to get a beat on it and try to get a head start, because knock on wood, for the most part, the roster’s been healthy,” Saleh said. “It’s that group for the last two years that’s taken a beating, so there’s definitely informatio­n out there that we hope we can merge to keep the roster healthy, but at the same time, there’s something with the O-line group that is different.”

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 ?? N.Y. Post: Charles Wenzelberg; Bill Kostroun ?? THE HURT LOCKER: Injuries forced the Jets to use 14 different starting offensive linemen this season, with left tackle Duane Brown and center Joe Tippmann (inset) among those to get banged up in 2023.
N.Y. Post: Charles Wenzelberg; Bill Kostroun THE HURT LOCKER: Injuries forced the Jets to use 14 different starting offensive linemen this season, with left tackle Duane Brown and center Joe Tippmann (inset) among those to get banged up in 2023.

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