The jets that lost to Bill were miserable everywhere

2021-11-16 21:16:52 By : Mr. Tieping Wu

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Jet fans can thank the following three things: 

1. They are still playing in a league featuring the Detroit Lions. Although the Steelers tried their best to get their first victory on Sunday, the Lions politely refused and decided to tie. As long as the Lions are still in the league, the Jets are not the worst football team on earth. 

2. The archive footage of Super Bowl III still exists. That really happened. 

3. Anxious to get the rest of Mike White to join his Hall of Fame jersey in Canton, Ohio. In the past few weeks, the Jets have not traded, waived or released Zach Wilson. We were reminded of the 60 Minutes Mets Life Football is and is still their future quarterback on Sunday. We can attack any quarterback controversy. 

Yes, Wilson was the only one on the Jets who had a pleasant day on Sunday, when the Bills defeated the home team 45-17. The 28-point gap does not represent the complete dominance of the Buffalo team. After being humiliated by the Jaguars for a week, the Bills left 53 tire marks on their 53 players in no way inferior. too disgusting. In modern blasting terms, this is a thorough rowing game. 

White rushed back to Earth, threw four interceptions, collected a bunch of ugly imperfections, and was eventually kicked out of the game after being hit hard late in the fourth quarter. If a great game does not consolidate his immortality, a bad game should not make him unable to play. But now everyone seems to be able to take a deep breath for him. 

"You hope you can learn from it and don't let it happen again," White said. "You have to be able to make adjustments. This is the National Football League. Good guys." 

Besides, White is not alone. The tragedy is everywhere. The defense is again regrettable, making Bills' offense almost useless against Jacksonville. As the game was still in the competition zone late in the half, Corey Davis missed after receiving the ball, and the Jets dragged the Jets into the goal. 

"We are trying to do things the right way," Jets coach Robert Saleh said. "Obviously it's not good enough. That starts with me. We have eight games left and we have to figure it out." 

For this, Saleh expressed his gratitude: He would not happily talk about his own way during these endless suffering Sundays. He comes from the defensive end of the ball, and he has coached a good defense, so what he sees from the Jets' defense must put him on the verge of disgusting week after week. But he understands that players can only bear so much responsibility. 

"Ideally, in our system, we will get better over time," he said, "but obviously this will not happen." 

The quarterback question is always an interesting question, a talkative question, a question that dominates the drinking fountains, cars, and driving time talk broadcasts. The cruel fact is that Wilson and White (as well as Josh Johnson, and Sunday’s trash-time score-driven, special guest Joe Flacco) can play Dan Marino in 1984, which is no big deal. With wit: 

Now, these numbers may be the best four home run years for Mickey Mantle or Ken Griffey Jr. or Jimmie Foxx. Then these four numbers-43.8 on average-will be happy numbers. These are not happy numbers. These are the points earned by the Jets in the past four games, namely New England, Cincinnati, Indianapolis and Buffalo. 

In some ways, this free fall does not know where it came from; in the first five games of the season, the Jets allowed a large number of yards, but only once surrendered as many as 27 points in a game. The defense is tough and disciplined. Even though the offense (led by Wilson) tries to ignite itself in every game, it seems proud to keep the Jets in the game. 

There is no relief now. If the offensive is fighting each other - and "dog fighting" is the most affectionate word you can find to describe Sunday - then the defense is now an ugly mature co-conspirator. Not only because they are bad, they have not been competitive. This is a difficult capsule for any coach, especially those who make bones on the side of the ball. 

"We have proven that we can be a good football team," White insisted. 

They also showed the other side of the coin. a lot of. Too often. All day on Sunday.