The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Jets’ Ulbrich focused on the fundamenta­ls

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FLORHAM PARK, N.J. — Jeff Ulbrich knows people are looking at his New York Jets defense right now and laughing.

And deservedly so. The Jets are putting up numbers so bad, they rank among the worst in franchise and league history. Opponents are practicall­y scoring at will lately, marching up and down the field with ease.

“We haven’t been good enough, in any way,” Ulbrich acknowledg­ed Thursday. “We haven’t covered well enough, we haven’t rushed well enough, we haven’t stopped the run well enough. So, it’s a little bit of everything.”

And it all adds up to one big mess.

Their 45-17 loss to Buffalo last Sunday marked the third time in four games the Jets gave up at least 45 points. The previous team to do that was the Giants in 1966.

Opponents have scored 175 points against New York in that span, the second most allowed by any team in a four-game stretch since the 1970 merger.

Here’s more: The 1,890 yards given up by the Jets in the past four games are the most in a four-game span in franchise history.

“It’s a byproduct of, we need better coaching, we need better execution by the players, we need to keep searching and finding answers for them,” said Ulbrich, in his first season as New York’s defensive coordinato­r. “As a coaching staff, trying our best to put them in the positions to be successful.

“We have not done that as of late very well, so we’re going to keep fighting and clawing and scratching and trying to find these inches to help these guys out.”

It’s not just one particular area, either, as Ulbrich pointed out. The Jets are ranked last in the NFL in overall defense, meaning total yards allowed. They’re also 32nd in points allowed, 31st against the pass and 29th against the run.

Ulbrich, who served as Atlanta’s interim defensive coordinato­r late last season, is mixing parts of that system with the San Franciscos­tyle defense Jets head coach Robert Saleh ran with the 49ers.

“We’re not going to make huge, fundamenta­l changes,” Ulbrich said. “And I know that might (tick) some people off because they’re like, ‘Change it, it’s all (lousy).’ But there are some base fundamenta­ls we’re getting better at.”

Ulbrich acknowledg­ed those improvemen­ts are difficult to see on Sundays, especially with the amount of points being scored against them.

There are “tweaks,” as he called them, being made to try to settle the defense. And, no, he isn’t considerin­g overhaulin­g the entire system.

“I’ve been in the NFL a long time as a player and coach and I’ve been around struggling teams before in both capacities where you could lose, in my opinion, absolute belief in anything if you start doing that,” Ulbrich said. “Then you’re just guessing. I don’t think that’s how you can get prolonged success in this league.

“You’ve got to build a foundation.”

The Jets came into this season thinking they at least had that, with playmakers up front and at middle linebacker and a young, athletic group of cornerback­s flanked by veteran safeties.

Well, the defensive line behind Quinnen Williams, John Franklin-Myers, Sheldon Rankins and others hasn’t been the dominant force it was expected to be. Defensive end Carl Lawson, signed to be a spark in the pass rush, was lost for the year in training camp.

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