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February/March 2019 Vol. 26, Iss. 5
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FIRST DOWN
CONFIDENTIAL

JetsConfidential.com

This issue was mailed January 21.
Our next issue will be mailed in late February.

LINE UP
3 ...........First Down
4 ...........Whispers
6 ...........Question Session: Adam Gase
8 ...........Sam’s Town
10..........Audibles
12..........In His Own Words: Brant Boyer
14..........Quincy Cashes In
16..........Deep Dive Into GM Maccagnan
18..........NFL 2018 Results
20 ........Media Whispers

22 ........Jets Roster
23 ........Jets Depth Chart
23 ........Jets 2018 Schedule
Cover photo by Alan Schaefer
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Meritocracy coming to 1 Jets Drive
The Jets hired Adam Gase as their round picks — which is what James
head coach, and there is so much to was in 2014 — aren’t safe with Gase.
get into about him — his QB acumen,
Gase was asked about what haphis fruitful offensive mind,
pened after the game. He
what happened in Miami,
didn’t offer a canned rehis eyes, the list goes on.
sponse like, “We wanted to
But I don’t want to get
look at other guys.” He told
into any of that. I want to
it like it was.
focus on one thing, and one
“We pulled him out,”
thing only: Accountability.
Gase said after Miami’s 30To paraphrase that line
24 victory over Cleveland.
from Jerry Maguire, “Gase DAN LEBERFELD
In October 2017, Gase
had me at accountability.”
shocked many when he

For eight years I’ve been railing traded talented running back Jay Ajayi
coaches for refusing to pull struggling to Philadelphia. Why? Because Ajayi
players.
refused to spend the necessary time to
Former Jet Trevor Pryce called his get the playbook down. He was misscoach Rex Ryan “loyal to the point of ing holes and assignments.
defiance” for sticking with guys too
“At the end of the day, guys have
long.
got to actually take this stuff home and
And we could apply that to the study it,” Gase said. “They’re not going
coach who followed.
to just learn it all in meetings. We’ve
And also to the GM keeping under- got to find guys that will actually put
performing draft picks, but to his forth effort to actually remember this
credit, he has started to move away stuff and really, it starts with our best
from this.
players.”
For eight years I’ve been ripping my
He also cut ties with Ajayi for being
hair out asking the question to any- more concerned with his workload
body who would listen: “Why not just than winning.
keep the best 53 players and start the
“(Ajayi) complained bitterly about
best 22 at all times?”
not getting the football,” wrote Miami
Anything else is foreign to me.
Herald columnist Armando Salguero.
And to Adam Gase.
“He stormed out of the locker room —
Gase doesn’t walk around with get this, after wins — because he

anointing oil, so maybe I can finally hadn’t gotten what he deemed to be
take off my tin-foil hat.
enough carries.”
Look, I have no idea if Gase will be
So Gase sent him packing.
successful as the Jets’ coach. I don’t
Same with former second-round
have a crystal ball like some radio pick, Jordan Phillips, a defensive tackle
hosts, but I do know one thing: He’s who was cut in early October last seanot a afraid to pull or cut anybody son after complaining about his role
hurting his team.
and getting his playing time cut.
This guy believes that if a player
“DT Jordan Phillps apparently not
isn’t getting the job done, he’s not happy to leave field before that play.
going to play.
Threw helmet angrily on ground on
Just look at his history.
sideline and sat on bench after brief
In September 2016 during a Miami- exchange with a coach,” tweeted Chris
Cleveland game, Dolphins right tackle Perkins, formerly of the Sun-Sentinel,
Ju’Wuan James was benched after during a Patriots blowout win over
causing two hits on the QB. Even first- Miami.

Gase was asked why Phillips’ playing time was cut.
“There’s a reason why we’re doing
that,” Gase said. “There’s a reason
why we’re subbing the way we’re subbing against that team. It’s not a secret
why we’re doing it. Whatever (defensive line coach) Kris Kocurek wants
the D-linemen to do, that’s what we’re
doing.”

In March 2018, Gase traded wide
receiver Jarvis Landry to Cleveland,
which shocked a lot of people, but he
had his reasons.
“They see a player who doesn’t
pay attention to details,” wrote
Salguero. “They see a player who
sometimes runs the right routes and
sometimes doesn’t. They see a player
who sometimes inspires with his
emotions, but sometimes loses control and hurts his team. They see a
player who doesn’t lead in the locker
room although he’s in a great position
to do so. They see a player who
doesn’t seem to respect his coaches
because he often ignores what they
ask.”
In October 2016, Gase also cut
three linemen after a stretch of games
featuring terrible offensive line play.
You get the idea.
The days of players keeping their
jobs regardless of performance are
over in Florham Park.
Past coaches talked about accountability — they all do.
But Gase actually follows through
on it.
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FEBRUARY/MARCH 2019 Jets Confidential 3


The McCarthy Mystery

Some people thought former Green Bay
Packers coach Mike McCarthy was the slamdunk candidate to become the Jets’ next head
coach
Obviously it didn’t happen.
CBS NFL Insider Jason La Canfora announced that the Jets and McCarthy butted
heads over his staff. Considering this information came out a few days after he lost out to
Adam Gase for the job, we have to wonder if
this was an attempt at spin control by his powerful agency looking toward the coach’s future.
On Jan. 8, ESPN’s Adam Schefter announced, “Former Packers head coach Mike
McCarthy doesn’t want to be considered, and
isn’t pursuing, any other head coaching vacancy
other than the New York Jets, per source.”
A day after this announcement, Schefter,
NFL.com’s Ian Rapoport and ESPN’s Jeff Darlington announced that the Jets would hire
Gase as their new head coach.
Losing out to Gase for this job had to be a
little bit of a comeuppance for McCarthy. It certainly wasn’t a good look for the veteran coach
that he lost out to Gase, and we aren’t insulting
the new Jets coach, but just dealing with the reality of the perception.
McCarthy finished his tenure in Green Bay
with a 125-77-2 record in the regular season.

The Packers won the Super Bowl with him at
the helm in the 2010 season, and made the
playoffs nine times (10-8 record) in his 13 years
with the team.
Gase was the Miami Dolphins’ coach for
three years and finished with a 23–25 regularseason record and went 0-1 in the playoffs.
It was a no-brainer the Jets needed to hire a
coach this time around with head-coaching experience after firing four straight head coaches
who came to them as first-time head coaches.
They got a man with head-coaching experience in Gase, but many thought the Jets would
go with McCarthy, who had a lot more experience and the much more impressive résumé.
So why Gase over McCarthy? A few reasons.
First, we just mentioned that résumé, but
some will claim that résumé was embellished
by having one of the greatest quarterbacks of
all time, Aaron Rodgers, at his disposal in
Green Bay.
As one long-time NFL observer once put it,
“An elite QB is like a strong deodorant, it can
cover up other parts of the team that stink.”
4 Jets Confidential FEBRUARY/MARCH 2019

Furthermore, an anecdote that came out
about McCarthy during the Jets’ coaching search
hurt the coach’s reputation a tad.
It was a somewhat shocking revelation that
Rodgers changed McCarthy’s play calls in the
huddle this season. This came from Packers
tight end Marcedes Lewis in an interview with
Yahoo! Sports.

“We were in the huddle,” Lewis said. “I guess
McCarthy called in a play, and Aaron was kind
of like, ‘Nah.’ He gave a direction and a protection to the line, and went. It was a four-minute
offense, he threw a 40-yard bomb for a completion. I’m like, ‘What’s really going on?’ I’ve never
seen anything like that before in my life.”
Neither have we. It’s one thing to audible at
the line based on the defensive formation, but
to change plays in the huddle is incredibly disrespectful. That reflects poorly on the coach,
and gives the appearance he wasn’t in control of
his team.
Another fact that hurt McCarthy’s chances
with the Jets was the perception in some quarters, in an era of new-wave young offensive innovators such as Sean McVay, McCarthy was
running a dinosaur offense.
“They are still running the 1997 Brett Favre
West Coast offense,” Bleacher Report analyst
Chris Simms said recently on “The Peter King
Podcast,” adding that Green Bay’s offense under
McCarthy was “as basic as it gets.”
Simms said opposing coaches in Green Bay’s
division “know that offense just as good as Mike
McCarthy and Aaron Rodgers.”
The offense the Jets ran in 2018, under Jeremy Bates, seemed to be an old-school West
Coast offense that also seemed a tad predictable
at times.
With this hire, the Jets wanted a cutting-edge
offensive playbook, and Gase can provide that.
“(Gase) is intelligent, forward-thinking, aggressive,” said Jets owner Christopher Johnson. “To paraphrase Wayne Gretzky, he’s
coaching to where football is going. And that really appealed to me.”
Something else that hurt McCarthy was that
the Cleveland Browns, also looking for a head

coach, weren’t interested in him. Many assumed
that Cleveland would be all over McCarthy because Browns GM John Dorsey worked with
the former Packers coach for six years in Green
Bay, where Dorsey was a personnel executive.
McCarthy didn’t even get an interview in Cleveland.

Alan Schaefer

WHISPERS

QB CONTROVERSY?
There is speculation that Aaron Rodgers
could have played a role in his former
head coach not getting the job in New York.

We aren’t looking to cast aspersions on McCarthy, who will likely get a head-coaching job
next year after sitting out 2019 and collecting
the final $9 million on his Packers contract.
We’re just trying to get into the weeds on why
the Jets took a pass.
Hey, nobody knows how Gase will turn out
for the Jets, but clearly McCarthy wasn’t the
lay-up candidate some assumed.


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QUESTION SESSION WITH ADAM GASE

Young QB, staying in
division appealing to Gase
Brian Costello, WFAN: Adam, just curious,
what lessons do you feel you learned from your
time in Miami that you will apply now in your
second crack at being a head coach?
Gase: Over three years, you’re going to have
mistakes that you make. You start creating mental notes and a list from year to year.
It really started in the first part of this

process, putting a coaching staff together. First
thing I learned the first go-around is don’t get
impatient. You don’t have to rush into that and
get this guy hired. Go through your process. If
you have to interview guys, you have to interview guys.
That is just a start of many things I learned
in that first go-around. It’s a long list.
Mark Cannizzaro, New York Post: Congratulations, obviously a big reason you were
brought here was the quarterback, Sam
Darnold. I’m just kind of wondering, what have
you seen in him in the short period of time
you’ve had to scout him?
Gase: The majority of the things I’ve already
looked at have been his pro tape, and obviously
(in Miami) preparing for him for two games was
kind of a jump start for me.
He was one of the guys we thought was
going to be way gone before we picked (in
Miami). We focused on some other guys who
could possibly fall to us at 11. The last few days
I’ve been hammering out as much tape as I
could on him, seeing the things he can do really
well and some of the things we can possibly
work on.
It’s going to start with him. That is an obvi6 Jets Confidential FEBRUARY/MARCH 2019

ous statement. I’m excited because this is really
the first time I’ve been able to get with a guy this
young (21), at this stage of his career. We are
going into Year Two, and he’s hungry for knowledge, and he wants to be coached. When you

have a player who has the physical traits, it’s an
exciting thing for me to go through.
Daryl Slater, Newark Star-Ledger: When you
look at this Jets team, one of the issues has been
their inability to finish games. What are you
going to do to fix that?
Gase: Over the last three years, it was something we took a lot of pride in, being 20-6 in onescore games. That was something that group took
a lot of pride in, and it started in practice and our
preparation really developing the mindset that
when we got to that fourth quarter, and we are in
a tight game, we are going to come out on top.
It’s that mental focus, putting in the work and
making sure everyone is on the same page,
whether you need that (defensive) stop or that
two-minute drive, you are able to accomplish
that, but it all starts with the preparation.
Rich Cimini, ESPN.com: In Miami, you had
control of the 53-man roster, which you won’t
have here. Why would you agree to the setup the
way it is here, and how might that impact your
coaching?
Gase: I was good. I don’t even think I asked.
That was not something I was really interested
in. This is just kind of how it worked out in
Miami. That was something that was really offered up, and this is the way we should go. I
knew coming in here it was going to be a team
effort.
My part is to coach the team and do what I
can to help bring in good players, and when my
opinion is asked, give my opinion. That is what

you are looking for, that kind of collaboration.

Courtesy of New York Jets

On Jan. 15, the Jets held a press conference in
Florham Park introducing new head coach Adam
Gase. Here are questions Gase was asked by the
assembled reporters followed by his responses:

MEET THE NEW BOSS
Former Miami Dolphins coach Adam Gase
was introduced as the new coach of the Jets.

Connor Hughes, The Athletic: Now that
you are the head coach, what is your top priority?
Gase: Putting a coaching staff together. That
is where we have to start. We can’t skip steps
and start evaluating the roster before we even
have coaches here. It’s going to be our No. 1
priority, getting coordinators and working our
way down after that. Once we get that accomplished, we will be able to do our (player) evaluations, and we move into free agency.


Tina Cervasio, Channel 5 (NY): What made
the Jets the right landing spot for you?

losses. The preparation that leads up to that
which will be key for us.

Gase: The No. 1 thing for me was a young

quarterback. I also think the knowledge of playing these guys over the last three years. That was
interesting for me to stay in the division where
you know your opponents right out the gate.
(I’ve) been with one of the other teams you will
end up playing.
I have had a chance to work with older quarterbacks late in their career, but not somebody
fresh out of the draft who does have a year experience. I was excited to get that opportunity.

Costello: Adam, you were just talking about
knowing this division and how that appealed to
you. There is a team that has dominated this division for a long time in the Patriots, and you
have been trying for the last three years to topple
them. How do you do it?

Bruce Beck, Channel 4 (NY): Why do you
think you can succeed here where others have
failed with the Jets?
Gase: Really, at the end of the day, it’s going
to be about our staff’s work ethic, the collaboration we are going to have with the front office,
that gives you the best opportunity to have success, and really on Sunday it’s all about wins and

Gase: It’s going to start with putting a good
coaching staff together. It’s a 16-game schedule.
We have to do a good job putting this thing together where we give ourselves a chance to win
the division. You win the division and that gets
you in the tournament. After that, it’s the team
that wants it most.
Obviously, (the Patriots) have had unbelievable success. There is good reason why. I went
against those guys the last three years. It’s a challenge; if you are in coaching you want that, as a
player you want that. It’s about preparing the right

way so when we play them or anybody else we
give ourselves the best chance to win.

Andy Vaszquez, Bergen Record: Why
wasn’t your offense as successful as you wanted
in Miami, and what can you do to make it different here?
Gase: Trust me, I’ve looked at that a lot myself. When you look at rankings, a big focus of
ours was our turnover margin. We knew we
had to play a certain way. We lost some of our
key pieces, and we knew we would have to find
a certain way to win. We sacrificed statistics to
try and get wins. And that is what we did.
We made sure we had great ball security and
getting turnovers on the other end. We were
able to do that and stay in games and make
plays at the end of the game that put ourselves
in position with three games left, where we
were still alive in the playoff hunt. We just
couldn’t finish it out. That is my best answer
for that.
I wish it was top 10, top five (offense in
Miami). I think we have a different set of players here, and hopefully we can be in that upper
echelon of offenses.

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FEBRUARY/MARCH 2019 Jets Confidential 7


SAM’S TOWN WITH SAM DARNOLD

‘We need to look in the mirror’
A: I thought in the beginning of the year, I
took a while to get comfortable. Then once I got
comfortable in the offense, I felt very confident
when I was out there. Again, just going to keep
growing and keep trying to make those strides
and watch the tape. See how I can get better and
move forward from there.
Q: What are your thoughts on the season the
team had?
A: As a team I thought we battled, we fought
hard. Obviously not the record you want coming out of the season, but I just thought we gave
the effort that we were looking for. I feel like we
were just a few plays away from being 8-8 or
maybe having a winning record. It’s just little
things that you look at throughout the year, and
little details that we wish we could’ve been better at. We’ll learn from it and grow from it.
Q: Will having to learn a new offense slow
you down a little?
A: I think anytime you make a coaching
change and anytime new coaches come in on

the offensive side of the ball there is always
going to be a learning process.
Q: What do you guys need to do to take the
next step?
A: We just got to fix some details here and
there with some of the games, in terms of the
losses. You look at the Texans loss, the Titans
loss, Green Bay loss, those games right there
we’re one or two plays away from winning those
games. We just got to look ourselves in the mirror as players and figure out what we can improve, and do that in the offseason and come
here ready to work for whoever is leading us.
Q: What area do you think you improved the
most from college?
A: I thought I did a better job with the
turnovers this year. Threw some picks, but
8 Jets Confidential FEBRUARY/MARCH 2019

(I’m) doing a lot better in the pocket in terms
of keeping two hands on the football. And then
just going about reading the defense and figuring out what the defense is doing pre-snap versus post-snap. All those little things, I feel like
I’m just getting a lot more comfortable out
there.
Q: What did you think of Jamal Adams’ comments after the season about the team needing
more talent?
A: I’m just going to control what I can. I’m
just going to continue to work hard, continue
to push these guys in the locker room and just
try to create the best atmosphere, best team that
we can as players, and we’re just going to continue to push each other in the ways that we do.
Q: Do you guys feel if the team performed

better Coach Bowles would still be coaching?
A: I don’t think about it like that. For me I’m
just very, very confident in the fact that I put my
best foot forward, and every single day I came
in here ready to work. I think a lot of the guys
in this locker room could say the same thing,
and we did the best that we could every single
Sunday to win games.
Q: How tough is it to have a coaching change
after your rookie season?
A: It’s not a good feeling. It’s not something
you want to deal with when you come in here
and coaches are packing up, you’ve got to say
bye to your first-year coaches. So it’s not a good
feeling, but at the same time it is what it is, and
we’re just going to continue to move forward individually as players, as a team, as an offense.
Defense is going to do the same thing — how
we can improve from here.
Q: Do you hope the next head coach will be
your last?
A: Yeah, that’s always the goal. You always
want someone to come in here and provide stability, and hopefully we can win a lot of games
together. That’s always the goal.

Alan Schaefer

Q: What are your overall thoughts on your
rookie season?

FOOTLOOSE

Sam Darnold said he did a better job
settling his feet later in the season.

Q: What got better for you from a technical
standpoint after watching Josh McCown start
three games?
A: I think just settling my feet down. I think
that was a big thing. Just calming my feet down
and understanding where my checkdowns are,
understanding what coverages that I can get the
ball down to the back, what coverages I can expose the defense and possibly hit a receiver
down the field. I think that’s really how I’ve
grown the most, and I’m just going to continue
to try to do that and continue to grow with that.
Q: How did you enjoy Christmas in New
York City?
A: It was awesome. The crowd was something different that I haven’t experienced before.
I got to get out Christmas Eve and go to the city
with my family, which was awesome. It was really good, really fun.



Jets need to load up
on instinctive corners

Memo to Jets GM Mike Maccagnan and his
right-hand man, Jets VP of player personnel
Brian Heimerdinger: It’s time to load up on
cornerbacks with great instincts and routerecognition.
The last couple of years the Jets have been

victimized by too many blown coverages.
This needs to end. How can a team consistently win in a pass-happy league with myriad
blown coverages over the course of a season?
Look, cornerbacks are going to get beat. The
rules are set up to favor the receivers. We understand that.
And let’s be clear, when we say “blown coverages” we aren’t talking about every play on
which a receiver beats a defensive back for a
catch. That would be unfair. We aren’t talking
about situations when a defensive back is in
tight coverage and the receiver comes down
with the ball — like on the first series of the
Houston Texans game when DeAndre Hopkins (who didn’t have a drop the entire season)
made an amazing 18-yard catch down the right
seam with cornerback Trumaine Johnson in
terrific position. Same with the game-winning
14-yard TD when cornerback Mo Claiborne
had solid coverage on the left side of the end
zone, but Hopkins made an insane catch.
These plays are going to happen, and aren’t
“blown coverages.”
So what are we talking about? Just pop in
the tape of the second Jets-Patriots game, and
watch Julian Edelman’s 5-yard touchdown
catch at the end of the game. Or Jake
Kumerow’s 49-yard TD down the right sideline
in the second quarter of the Packers-Jets game.
These players were uncovered. These are
blown coverages.
We aren’t excusing the Kumerow TD, but
sometimes when a team throws to an obscure

player it catches defenders off guard. But how
is Edelman, who is Tom Brady’s favorite target,
left uncovered in the end zone? That is unconscionable.
If the Jets want to take their program to the
next level, the blown coverages in their secondary need to stop.
It’s time for Maccagnan and Heimerdinger
to load up on cornerbacks with top-shelf instincts and great positional awareness. Speed
and leaping ability are great, but what differ10 Jets Confidential FEBRUARY/MARCH 2019

ence do they make if the players are short-circuited by route combinations?
Athletic ability is obviously important at cornerback, but it kind of goes out the window if a
guy is a tick late reacting to what is in front of
him. A 4.4-second 40-yard dash can look like
4.8 when a cornerback has unsophisticated
eyes. The Jets have some corners who possess
limited downfield awareness when their backs
are to the ball. They are sometimes flailing on
passes downfield, and this often leads to long
completions or pass-interference penalties.
The Jets need to improve, not just in man-toman coverage, but zone as well.
Going back to the Houston game, late in the
first quarter, Hopkins caught a 27-yard pass. It
looked like the Jets were playing a zone concept, and Deshaun Watson found a soft spot for
an easy throw and catch. How does the best receiver in football end up wide open for a long
gain? How is he not the focal point of the coverage?
So this offseason, it’s time for Maccagnan and
Heimerdinger to focus on adding cornerbacks
who diagnose quickly — guys who confidently
stick their foot in the ground and drive hard toward the throw.
One thing that made the Chicago Bears’ defense so good this year, aside from the addition

of Khalil Mack, was their defensive backs were
very assignment savvy — not a lot of blown coverages. This is one of the reasons former Bears
defensive coordinator Vic Fangio got the Denver head-coaching job; his defense was so fundamentally sound in Chicago. In addition to
good coaching, hat-tip to Bears GM Ryan Pace
for loading up on smart, instinctive corners.
They Jets need corners who have what scouts
call “fast eyes” that can process information
quickly. Poor instincts limit a player’s ceiling.
The Jets need to stock up on guys who do a nice
job of anticipating routes unfolding and sorting
through route combinations; fewer guys who
get their hand caught in the cookie jar all the
time biting on double-moves.
We didn’t mention safety here because the
Jets should be fine with Jamal Adams, Marcus
Maye (if he can stay healthy) and Doug Middleton, three instinctive players who are generally assignment-sound.
But the Jets have some work to do in the cornerback room, because if all these blown coverages continue, the Jets are going to have a hard
time taking the next step.

Alan Schaefer

AUDIBLES

CORNER THE MARKET
It’s time for Mike Maccagnan to load up
his cornerback room with guys who
possess top-shelf coverage instincts.

Media war on Leo continues


After the season, a writer for USA Today did a
list of the biggest disappointments for the 2018
Jets in the form of a slide show on their website.
Slide shows get a lot of clicks.
We aren’t going to go over the whole list, but
of course Leonard Williams was on the list.
With a Jets media obsessed with sack totals,
Williams continues to get hammered by writers.
He finished the season with five sacks, and some
in the media are focused on this number like a
laser, even though he plays the 3-4 end position,
which is not a big sack spot. The big sack totals
generally come from the outside linebackers in
a 3-4 defense. This isn’t to say 3-4 ends don’t get


AUDIBLES
sacks. Of course they do, but the double-digit
sack guys are generally at OLB, going back to the
early days of this defense and the Giants’
Lawrence Taylor. Look at Denver, with Bradley
Chubb and Von Miller. The Jets haven’t been
able to find a dominant 3-4 OLB for quite some
time. Maybe that will finally happen with the
third pick of the 2019 draft or in free agency.
We think Williams had a solid season, and is
a very good player, not a great player, but a very
good one.
And the best could be yet to come.
While Williams did good things in former

coach Todd Bowles’ 3-4 front that required him
to do a lot of dirty work, former Jets defensive
end Mike DeVito belives he can be “great” in
the Jets’ new 4-3 scheme under coordinator
Gregg Williams.
“I think ‘Big Cat’ up front is great in a 4-3,”
DeVito said as a guest on SiriusXM NFL Radio.
“He’s not the kind of guy you want having to
two-gap. He’s the kind of guy who’s going to
wreak havoc when he can put his hand in the
dirt and put all his weight forward and just get
off the ball and cause problems for the offense.”
Though he had just five sacks this season, he
had a ton of QB pressures, which coaches will
tell you are just as important as sacks. Most NFL
quarterbacks get rid of the ball so quickly, it’s
often hard to get the sack; so if a defender can
get in the QB’s face, get him off his spot and force
a bad throw or incompletion, that is also good.
“When you pressure the quarterback, mistakes happen, turnovers happen,” said Chiefs 34 OLB Dee Ford, who had 13 sacks this year.
Williams had a ton of pressures this year.
There is no exact stat for this, but based on our
film study, he had a truckload.
In the first half of the game against the Texans, Williams had two quarterback pressures. On
the Texans’ first series, Williams hit Watson as
he threw, causing an incompletion to wide receiver DeAndre Carter on the short right side.
Early in the second quarter, Williams ran over
left guard Senio Kelemete and pressured Watson to roll left and throw an incompletion to
Hopkins.
In the Jets’ win at Buffalo, we noticed four QB


pressures where Williams moved Josh Allen off
his spot. One of these pressures collapsed the
pocket, and led to a sack shared by Henry Anderson and Brandon Copeland at the end of the
first half. If this were hockey, Williams would get
an assist on the play.
How could any objective observer discern that
these kind of plays don’t matter?
Sure, his sack total wasn’t gaudy, but he did
sack two future Hall-of-Fame quarterbacks who
don’t often get sacked — Aaron Rodgers in Week
16 and Brady in Week 17.
Williams finished the season strong, and aside
from his efforts, we think there is another reason.
Bowles made a head-scratching decision to
start raw rookie Nathan Shepherd the first 12
weeks of the season, and play Anderson behind
him. It was truly a decision that made no sense.
As we have mentioned in previous issues, Shepherd, coming from a lower level of college competition, needed a ton of technique work, and
wasn’t ready for prime time. The Jets believed that
Foley Fatukasi needed a red-shirt year to get
stronger and work on his technique. In reality,
Shepherd needed the same.

Shepherd struggled mightily, and was often
handled by one blocker, and this led to a lot
more double teams for Williams. Some of the
Jets’ struggles against the run the first three
months can be connected to Shepherd and an inside linebacker who isn’t big enough to stackand-shed in a 3-4 defense. Once that linebacker
was suspended, and Shepherd was made a

backup, the Jets’ run defense improved over the
last month.
Over the final month, Anderson started ahead
of Shepherd, and played on a high level. Anderson and Williams complemented each other
well, and both made a lot of big plays.
So we have some advice for our readers.
Ignore the hate directed at Williams in the
mainstream media over his sack total.
He’s a very good player.
And like we mentioned in the last issue, he
averaged 6.6 sacks in his three seasons at USC,
so he’s never been a big sack guy. It’s very rare
that a player who didn’t have a lot of sacks in college becomes a sack machine in the NFL.
But Williams is a very good player nonetheless — very disruptive to opposing offenses.

Alan Schaefer

CLOSING ARGUMENT
Leonard Williams finished the season strong
with Henry Anderson alongside him.
FEBRUARY/MARCH 2019 Jets Confidential 11


IN HIS OWN WORDS

WITH SPECIAL TEAMS COORDINATOR BRANT BOYER

‘Every kid should see where (Myers, Roberts) came from’

.


12 Jets Confidential FEBRUARY/MARCH 2019

BOWLING

Alan Schaefer

I think it’s awesome for (Andre Roberts and
Jason Myers to make the Pro Bowl). I was
proud as hell of those guys. I think there’s no
bigger honor in this game, other than having a
gold jacket on, than have your peers vote you
for the Pro Bowl. I think that’s well-deserved.
Every kid should see where (Myers and
Roberts) came from. Nine years in the league
with Andre, and he finally gets a Pro Bowl
berth. Jason (and Andre), they took the hard
route. Both of them have grit. Both of them
play and practice their butts off every week.
And that’s what it takes to be a special guy and
to be in that elite company. I couldn’t be
prouder of those guys and Jamal (Adams). I
think it’s a special group that they’re in, something that no one can ever take away from
them.
You got to give credit to the guys blocking
for (Roberts) as well. Dre is a heck of a runner,
got great vision, got great run skill, but those
guys came together to block their butts off.
They believe in him. Just like Jason, it doesn’t
happen without the whole battery of guys that

are blocking for him up front and the holds
with Lachlan (Edwards) and snaps with
Thomas (Hennessy). That’s a whole team effort.
As a (former) player I know how special it
is. And to see their background, I’ve been cut
before, they’ve been cut before and as a former
player I know how hard a route that is. It’s not
like they took the easy route to get there. It
wasn’t like they were highly drafted and came
from big schools. They grinded, they work and
they prepare. That’s the story that every young
kid should see how that is done, from (Myers)
walking on to Marist College and (Roberts)
going to The Citadel (and) playing for five different teams, that is really cool to me as a
coach. To be able to be a small part of that. I
think it’s really neat.
The (99-yard kickoff return TD against
Green Bay) is what it’s supposed to look like.
It’s funny because I actually said it on the sideline, ‘If they give us this, this will go.’ I said it
to (Davis) Webb, the quarterback, I said, ‘This
is going to the house, watch.’ And it did. We
.
were laughing our butts off. They did a great
job of executing it.
.
This year we haven’t blocked a better return

than that. They did everything that you teach.
Guys were battling. Roberts set it up perfectly,
just like he does all the time and did a heck of a

job running the track, and that’s exactly what it’s
supposed to look like.
If you ask me to go find two (kick coverage)
gunners, that’s what I would find, our two guys
(Charone Peake and Trenton Cannon). If they’re
going to be shorter like Trent, he’s got more juice
than anyone else, and they have a hell of a time
blocking him because of it. If not, like Charone,
he’s also fast, but he’s long and he can keep people away from him and use his hands, and
they’re both damn good.
With two legit gunners that have been there,
it has made a huge difference. It’s been good to

Jets kick returner
Andre Roberts
is going to the
Pro Bowl.

have those guys and to see the progress, specifically with Trent and how he’s learning every
day and he’s tackling. I think he is going to do
nothing but get better.
(Eric Tomlinson’s) like our do-all guy. He’s
done a great job. He does kick return, and plays
in some phases for us. He’s one of those guys
that doesn’t need a lot of reps. I call them the
blue guys who can do everything, don’t need
(to give them) any reps. It’s like, “Hey grab him
and go play guard,” and he’ll know it right
there without even taking reps. “Alright go
play, go flip over and play tackle,” and he

knows it because he pays attention in meetings
and is professional. A great quality person,
good professional, hell of a guy.



QUINCY CASHES IN
By Brian Heyman

Quincy Enunwa wanted to tell a joke.
It was in response to this: Why did the
receiver decide to take a pass on becoming a free agent and stay with the Jets?
“I have a young quarterback I can
mold,” Enunwa said about Sam Darnold.
“No, no. Seriously, though, I think
Sam is an amazing player. As a receiver,
that’s who you want to play with.”
Enunwa said that on his big December day. The 26-year-old Nebraska alum
had just signed up for four more years,
receiving a contract extension two days
before the 4-12 season came to a close.
The price tag for the Jets was $36 million, with $20 million guaranteed.
“For me, I’ve dreamt of this day,”
Enunwa said.
His decision was about more than just
Darnold.
“I’ve been here for so long,” said
Enunwa, who was a sixth-round pick in
2014. “This is what I know and this is
what I’ve come to love, and I want to

continue growing with this team.”
The feeling was very mutual, according to the GM’s statement.
“Quincy is a key part of our foundation, and we are thrilled that this contract will keep him here for years to
come,” Mike Maccagnan said.
Adam Gase gets use of these skills now that
he has moved into the head coach’s office. There
had been speculation that Todd Bowles was
going to be fired, but that didn’t play into
Enunwa’s decision to stay.
“I didn’t really want to think about that stuff,”
Enunwa said. “I think just kind of thinking
about the team itself was kind of my focus —
my brothers. … I’m just excited for the future.”
In the past, 69 of his 118 career receptions
went for first downs and 33 went for at least 20
yards.
Enunwa had a breakout season in 2016, starting 13 games and making 58 catches for 857
yards — 14.8 per catch — and four scores. But
14 Jets Confidential FEBRUARY/MARCH 2018

trouble with his ankles.
“It’s exciting to get this (extension)
done, but (the injuries are) always going
to be a frustration,” Enunwa said. “It’s
going to be more motivation for next
year.”
Enunwa suffered a high ankle sprain
in Week 6 and missed two games. He
also missed the final three after spraining
the other ankle.

“It’s been a tough season, but he’s
made some plays,” Bowles said in December. “But there’s some things he can
do better.”
Like staying healthy. Or at least trying.
“The neck, over time, it just kind of
got worse,” Enunwa said. “But the ankles, I think I could do a better job next
year and prevent that and stay on the
field longer.”
He’s 6-2, 225 pounds and plays a
physical, all-out style. But he may have
to pick his spots.
“I’ve just have to know when a play
can’t be made,” Enunwa said. “(Brandon
Marshall) told me a few times, ‘You’ve
got to learn when to get down.’ And so
as I grow, as I become a better player, a
smarter player, I’m still going to make the
big plays. I’m going to strive to make the
big plays.
“But I think I’ve just got to know
when somebody’s on my ankles, it’s probably not
smart to keep trying to drag them.”
Jamal Adams was walking nearby in the
Florham Park locker room after Enunwa said
that. The safety started to sing, “Money, money,
money, mon-ey,” and dropped some on the floor.
Even though Enunwa has his money, he
knows there are still areas to polish.
“I think that I did a good job of when I was
in the game making plays,” Enunwa said. “I

want to continue to do that. You can always find
things to get better at — route running, making
the catches at a key time, making the hard
catches. So those are all things I’ll be working
on to make sure that going into the future, I’ll
be the receiver that I know I can be.”
Alan Schaefer

Jets reward rugged WR
with long-term deal

his 2017 season ended before it started due to a
bulging disk in his neck that required surgery.
“I put my head down and tried to practice perseverance,” Enunwa said.
He felt motivated to make his payday come to
life. Enunwa rehabbed and returned this past season to grab 38 passes, good for 449 yards — 11.8
per catch — and one touchdown. He also served
as a captain. He won the annual Ed Block
Courage Award via a vote by his teammates.
“To come back from an injury, a big one, and
to be able to play like I did when I was healthy, I
appreciate them for voting me for that,” Enunwa
said.
It was just that he was only able to play in 11
games, including 10 starts, because of double



Recently the Jets fired head coach Todd
Bowles, who compiled a 24-40 record over his

four years as Jets head coach. Jets owner Christopher Johnson announced his decision shortly
after the Jets’ season finale in New England.
“After carefully evaluating the situation, I have
concluded that this is the right direction for the
organization to take,” Johnson said in a statement.
However, some people wondered why GM
Mike Maccagnan kept his job when Bowles was
dismissed. Wasn’t Maccagnan, who was hired at
the same time as Bowles in 2015, also to blame
for the Jets’ shortcomings?
Some fans weren’t happy with the decision to
keep one and not the other.
After the Jets’ loss in New England, with speculation flying about who would stay and who
would go, Jets Confidential’s Dan Leberfeld
tweeted from Foxboro, “Mike Maccagnan walked
out of the building with Christopher Johnson.
Read into that what you want.”
The implication of the tweet was that it looked
like Maccagnan was safe because he accompanied
the owner out of Gillette Stadium.
Some fans, who believed the Jets needed a
clean sweep, didn’t love this information.
“Mike needs to go too, they need to clean
house,” tweeted @Debbie36737922.
“I’d rather (Maccagnan) walk out of the building with somebody from HR,” tweeted
@tweets_bland.
So why did Maccagnan stay and Bowles go?
“Because Maccagnan got the Jets a quarterback,” observed one long-time Jets beat writer.
Many have theorized Maccagnan saved his job
with his blockbuster trade to move up in the 2018

draft to pick a quarterback, who turned out to be
USC’s Sam Darnold.
It remains to be seen if Darnold is a true franchise QB, but he certainly has the earmarks of
one. It looks like, at the very least, he will be a
good NFL QB.
But aside from Maccagnan landing a QB, does
he deserve to keep his job based on his entire
body of work over four years?
First off, one can make the argument he has
improved on the job over his four years, learning
from mistakes, moving up the growth curve, and
getting more comfortable in his GM skin.
He’s still got a long way to go, but Maccagnan
is clearly a better GM now than when he stepped
in the building.
16 Jets Confidential FEBRUARY/MARCH 2019

Alan Schaefer

JC Deep Dive: The case for Maccagnan staying

Money, money, money

Right out the gate in 2015, the Jets spent hazardously on four defensive backs, and none of
them delivered. One can argue safety Marcus
Gilchrist was serviceable, but the other players
did not live up to the big money they received.
Some blame Jets co-owner Woody Johnson for
the profligate spending on Darrelle Revis in 2015,
giving the cornerback a five-year deal for $70

million with $39 million guaranteed. The move
was perhaps a mea culpa to the fans, upset the
Jets let the cornerback go in the first place.
But maybe the GM should have put up more
of a fight. People might say, “Why would a new
GM want to get into a dispute with his new
boss?” Simple. Maccagnan has just arrived. He
just got a long-term contract to fix the Jets. What
is the owner going to do right out of the gate if
he fought him over Revis, fire him? And eat the

REVIS AND
WILKERSON
long-term contract he just gave him? Revis was
over the hill, and hurt the Jets in a number of
games during his second stint with the team.
When a GM is trying to fix a program, it’s probably not a great first move to hand a monster
contract to an aging cornerback who has lost a
step.
Whomever takes blame for those four DB
signings, the Jets wasted a lot of money. So
Maccagnan didn’t get off to a strong start.
But to be fair, the Jets finished that season
10-6, so Maccagnan clearly did some good work
in 2015, such as trading for Ryan Fitzpatrick to
be a bridge QB. The signal-caller had a pretty
solid season — even though he didn’t finish that
season strong. He had a rough game at Buffalo
in the season finale (along with Revis), in a Jets
loss to the Bills that knocked them out of playoff

contention. Another good trade in 2015 was for


WR Brandon Marshall, who finished that season
with 109 catches and 14 touchdowns.
But let’s stay on the subject of big-money
contracts for a second. We are going to bounce
around in this deep dive and not just go straight
from 2015 to now, that would be tedious.
Another questionable move by Maccagnan
was giving defensive end Mo Wilkerson a fiveyear deal for $86 million with $54 million guaranteed in July 2016. The issue wasn’t necessarily
paying Wilkerson big money, but rather the timing of it. He still wasn’t 100 percent healed from
a broken leg. Why give a player that kind of
money before he has proven he’s back to his old
self? We wrote that at the time, so this isn’t second-guessing. As it turned out the player wasn’t
100 percent, especially over the first half of the
2016 season.
Last offseason, Maccagnan gave cornerback
Trumaine Johnson a five-year, $72.5 million
contract with $45 million guaranteed. So far the
Jets haven’t got a great return on their investment. Johnson isn’t a bad player, but he runs a
4.62-second 40-yard dash, so he struggles holding up on an island for extended periods against
speedy receivers. Johnson functions best when
there is a good pass rush (so he can jump
routes) like the Jets had in their win at Buffalo
when he had two picks. Johnson played behind
a consistent pass rush with the Rams, and he
shined. The Jets didn’t have a great pass rush in
2018, and this hurt Johnson a great deal. And
aside from having an inconsistent year, Johnson

also missed a late-season practice due to oversleeping, which is hard to fathom when a player
makes $14.5 million a year. This challenged the
sensibilities of many hard-working Jets fans,
who struggle to make ends meet.

plays. There were a couple of plays Kearse would
want back, but he’s still a good receiver. To get a
second-round pick and a starting receiver for a
player on the last year of his contact, who had
some issues in the past, is good value
As for Bridgewater, the Jets got a third-round
pick from New Orleans for a QB they signed off
the scrap heap for $500,000; this was one of
Maccagnan’s best moves. This extra third-round
pick in 2019 could help the Jets land a player with
starting potential. The third round is underrated,
and teams usually get players with a secondround grade on their draft board.
Another terrific 2018 move by Maccagnan was
trading a seventh-round pick to the Indianapolis
Colts for defensive end Henry Anderson. This
turned out to be a major steal. Anderson was one
of the Jets’ best defensive players in 2018; he plays
with excellent technique and a great motor.
Maccagnan helped the Jets turn around their
special teams in 2018 with a pair of grand-slam
signings: returner Andre Roberts and kicker Jason
Myers, both going to the Pro Bowl. Adding linebacker Kevin Pierre-Louis was also a boon to the
Jets’ special teams.
Speaking of Pierre-Louis, Maccagnan also did
a nice job of giving the Jets quality depth at linebacker by signing “KPL” and Neville Hewitt.

The selection of Darron Lee in the first round
of the 2016 draft was a mistake because he didn’t
fit Bowles’ defensive scheme. He’s not good at
shedding blocks, which is a big problem as a 3-4

outside linebacker. While this was a misguided
pick by the GM based on the Jets’ system, to his
credit, Maccagnan went out last offseason and
signed two insurance policies for Lee, in case his
struggles continued.
While Lee did improve in coverage this year
with three picks, his run defense hurt the Jets;
there is no way around it. But Bowles would
never pull him, even when the Jets were getting
gashed by runs straight at Lee, like the first New
England game. Bowles wasn’t big on benching
players, and this hurt his program a great deal.
So while Maccagnan was misguided picking
Lee in the first round, he went out and gave the
coach two replacements, but Bowles refused to
pull him. Based on the Jets’ power structure,
Maccagnan has the final say on the roster and
the coach decides who plays, and Bowles refused
to replace Lee under any circumstance. It took a
league suspension to get him off the field.
Similarly, the coach anointed defensive end
Nathan Shepherd a starter in the spring, WAY
before he was ready, and made Anderson his
backup for 12 weeks. That was ill-advised. The
GM provided the coach a very good insurance

policy in case Shepherd wasn’t ready, which he
wasn’t, but Shepherd started over Anderson for
the first three months anyway, and he struggled
mightily. Once again, the GM has no say in who
plays on game day. Anderson should have started
ahead of Shepherd out of the gate. So once again,
this is on the coach, not the GM.

Let’s get into some of Maccagnan’s better
moves.
The Sheldon Richardson and Teddy Bridgewater trades showed Maccagnan’s improvement
as a GM. He displayed great patience with each
move, instead of panicking early and accepting
low-ball offers. Maccagnan did a good job taking
his time with each move and playing poker with
potential suitors.
For Richardson, Maccagnan got a secondround pick and wide receiver Jermaine Kearse
from Seattle. That second-round pick was used
as part of the package to trade up and get
Darnold. Kearse had a terrific season for the Jets
in 2017, but then was under-utilized in 2018. So
often, rookie quarterbacks throw to their first
read, and Kearse wasn’t the first read on most

Alan Schaefer

Some of the good stuff

ANDERSON
FEBRUARY/MARCH 2019 Jets Confidential 17



2018 AMERICAN CONFERENCE SCHEDULES
BALTIMORE

BUFFALO

2018 NATIONAL CONFERENCE SCHEDULES

CINCINNATI

ARIZONA

ATLANTA

All times Eastern

CAROLINA

Sep 9 ........Buffalo ..................W 47-3
Sep 13 ......@ Cincinnati ........L 23-34
Sep 23 ......Denver ................W 27-14
Sep 30 ......@ Pittsburgh ......W 26-14
Oct 7 ........@ Cleveland ..........L 9-12
Oct 14 ......@ Tennessee ........W 21-0
Oct 21 ......New Orleans ........L 23-24
Oct 28 ......@ Carolina ..........L 21-36
Nov 4 ........Pittsburgh ............L 16-23
BYE WEEK
Nov 18 ......Cincinnati ............W 24-21

Nov 25 ......Oakland ..............W 34-17
Dec 2 ........@ Atlanta ............W 26-16
Dec 9 ........@ Kansas City......L 24-27
Dec 16 ......Tampa Bay ..........W 20-12
Dec 23 ......@ Los Angeles....W 22-10
Dec 30 ......Cleveland ............W 26-24

Sep 9 ........@ Baltimore............L 3-47
Sep 16 ......Los Angeles ..........L 20-31
Sep 23 ......@ Minnesota ........W 27-6
Sep 30 ......@ Green Bay..........L 0-22
Oct 7 ........Tennessee ..........W 13-12
Oct 14 ......@ Houston ..........L 13-20
Oct 21 ......@ Indianapolis........L 5-37
Oct 29 ......New England ..........L 6-25
Nov 4 ........Chicago ..................L 9-41
Nov 11 ......@ New York ........W 41-10
BYE WEEK
Nov 25 ......Jacksonville ........W 24-21
Dec 2 ........@ Miami ..............L 17-21
Dec 9 ........New York ..............L 23-27
Dec 16 ......Detroit ................W 14-13
Dec 23 ......@ New England ..L 12-24
Dec 30 ......Miami ..................W 42-17

Sep 9 ........@ Indianapolis ....W 34-23
Sep 13 ......Baltimore ............W 34-23
Sep 23 ......@ Carolina ..........L 21-31
Sep 30 ......@ Atlanta ............W 37-36
Oct 7 ........Miami ..................W 27-17

Oct 14 ......Pittsburgh ............L 21-28
Oct 21 ......@ Kansas City......L 10-45
Oct 28 ......Tampa Bay ..........W 37-34
BYE WEEK
Nov 11 ......New Orleans ........L 14-51
Nov 18 ......@ Baltimore..........L 21-24
Nov 25 ......Cleveland ............L 20-35
Dec 2 ........Denver ..................L 10-24
Dec 9 ........@ Los Angeles ....L 21-26
Dec 16 ......Oakland ..............W 30-16
Dec 23 ......@ Cleveland ........L 26-18
Dec 30 ......@ Pittsburgh ......W 16-13

Sep 9 ........Washington ............L 6-24
Sep 16 ......@ Los Angeles ......L 0-34
Sep 23 ......Chicago ................L 14-16
Sep 30 ......Seattle ..................L 17-20
Oct 7 ........@ San Francisco W 28-18
Oct 14 ......@ Minnesota ........L 17-27
Oct 18 ......Denver ..................L 10-45
Oct 28 ......San Francisco ....W 18-15
BYE WEEK
Nov 11 ......@ Kansas City......L 14-26
Nov 18 ......Oakland ................L 21-23
Nov 25 ......@ Los Angeles ....L 10-45
Dec 2 ........@ Green Bay ......W 20-17
Dec 9 ........Detroit ....................L 3-17
Dec 16 ......@ Atlanta..............L 14-40
Dec 23 ......Los Angeles ............L 9-31
Dec 30 ......@ Seattle..............L 24-27


Sep 6 ........@ Philadelphia ....L 12-18
Sep 16 ......Carolina ..............W 31-24
Sep 23 ......New Orleans ........L 37-43
Sep 30 ......Cincinnati..............L 36-37
Oct 7 ........@ Pittsburgh ........L 17-41
Oct 14 ......Tampa Bay ..........W 34-29
Oct 22 ......New York ............W 23-20
BYE WEEK
Nov 4 ........@ Washington ....W 38-14
Nov 11 ......@ Cleveland ........L 16-28
Nov 18 ......Dallas ..................L 19-22
Nov 22 ......@ New Orleans ....L 17-31
Dec 2 ........Baltimore ..............L 16-26
Dec 9 ........@ Green Bay........L 20-34
Dec 16 ......Arizona................W 40-14
Dec 23 ......@ Carolina ..........W 24-10
Dec 30 ......@ Tampa Bay ....W 34-32

Sep 9 ........Dallas ....................W 16-8
Sep 16 ......@ Atlanta..............L 24-31
Sep 23 ......Cincinnati ............W 31-21
BYE WEEK
Oct 7 ........New York ............W 33-31
Oct 14 ......@ Washington ......L 17-23
Oct 21 ......@ Philadelphia....W 21-17
Oct 28 ......Baltimore ............W 36-21
Nov 4 ........Tampa Bay ..........W 42-28
Nov 8 ........@ Pittsburgh ........L 21-52
Nov 18 ......@ Detroit ..............L 19-20

Nov 25 ......Seattle ..................L 27-30
Dec 2 ........@ Tampa Bay ......L 17-24
Dec 9 ........@ Cleveland ........L 20-26
Dec 17 ......New Orleans ..........L 9-12
Dec 23 ......Atlanta ..................L 10-24
Dec 30 ......@ New Orleans ..W 33-14

Sep 9 ........Pittsburgh ............T 21-21
Sep 16 ......@ New Orleans ..W 21-18
Sep 20 ......New York ............W 21-17
Sep 30 ......@ Oakland ..........L 42-45
Oct 7 ........Baltimore ..............W 12-9
Oct 14 ......Los Angeles ..........L 14-38
Oct 21 ......@ Tampa Bay ......L 23-26
Oct 28 ......@ Pittsburgh ........L 18-33
Nov 4 ........Kansas City ..........L 21-37
Nov 11 ......Atlanta ................W 28-16
BYE WEEK
Nov 25 ......@ Cincinnati........W 20-35
Dec 2 ........@ Houston ..........L 13-29
Dec 9 ........Carolina ..............W 26-20
Dec 15 ......@ Denver............W 17-16
Dec 23 ......Cincinnati ............W 26-18
Dec 30 ......@ Baltimore..........L 24-26

Sep 9 ........Seattle ..................W 27-4
Sep 16 ......Oakland ..............W 20-19
Sep 23 ......@ Baltimore..........L 14-27
Oct 1 ........Kansas City ..........L 23-27
Oct 7 ........@ New York..........L 16-34

Oct 14 ......Los Angeles ..........L 20-23
Oct 18 ......@ Arizona ..........W 45-10
Oct 28 ......@ Kansas City......L 23-30
Nov 4 ........Houston ................L 17-19
BYE WEEK
Nov 18 ......@ Los Angeles....W 23-22
Nov 25 ......Pittsburgh............W 24-17
Dec 2 ........@ Cincinnati........W 24-10
Dec 9 ........@ San Francisco..L 14-20
Dec 15 ......Cleveland ............L 16-17
Dec 24 ......@ Oakland ..........L 14-27
Dec 30 ......Los Angeles ............L 9-23

Sep 9 ........@ New England ..L 20-27
Sep 16 ......@ Tennessee ......L 17-20
Sep 23 ......New York ..............L 22-27
Sep 30 ......@ Indianapolis ....W 37-34
Oct 7 ........Dallas ..................W 19-16
Oct 14 ......Buffalo ................W 20-13
Oct 21 ......@ Jacksonville ......W 20-7
Oct 25 ......Miami ..................W 42-23
Nov 4 ........@ Denver............W 19-17
BYE WEEK
Nov 18 ......@ Washington ....W 23-21
Nov 26 ......Tennessee ..........W 34-17
Dec 2 ........Cleveland ............W 29-13
Dec 9 ........Indianapolis ..........L 21-24
Dec 15 ......@ New York ........W 29-22
Dec 23 ......@ Philadelphia ....L 30-32
Dec 30 ......Jacksonville ..........W 20-3


Sep 9 ........@ Green Bay........L 23-24
Sep 17 ......Seattle ................W 24-17
Sep 23 ......@ Arizona ..........W 16-14
Sep 30 ......Tampa Bay ..........W 48-10
BYE WEEK
Oct 14 ......@ Miami ..............L 28-31
Oct 21 ......New England ........L 31-38
Oct 28 ......New York ............W 24-10
Nov 4 ........@ Buffalo ..............W 41-9
Nov 11 ......Detroit ................W 34-22
Nov 18 ......Minnesota ..........W 25-20
Nov 22 ......@ Detroit ............W 23-16
Dec 2 ........@ New York..........L 27-30
Dec 9 ........Los Angeles ..........W 15-6
Dec 16 ......Green Bay ..........W 24-17
Dec 23 ......@ San Francisco ..W 14-9
Dec 30 ......@ Minnesota ......W 24-10

Sep 9 ........@ Carolina ............L 8-16
Sep 16 ......New York ............W 20-13
Sep 23 ......@ Seattle..............L 13-24
Sep 30 ......Detroit ................W 26-24
Oct 7 ........@ Houston ..........L 16-19
Oct 14 ......Jacksonville ..........W 40-7
Oct 21 ......@ Washington ......L 17-20
BYE WEEK
Nov 5 ........Tennessee ............L 14-28
Nov 11 ......@ Philadelphia....W 27-20
Nov 18 ......@ Atlanta ............W 22-19

Nov 22 ......Washington ........W 31-23
Nov 29 ......New Orleans ......W 13-10
Dec 9 ........Philadelphia ........W 29-23
Dec 16 ......@ Indianapolis........L 0-23
Dec 23 ......Tampa Bay ..........W 27-20
Dec 30 ......@ New York ........W 36-35

Sep 10 ......New York ..............L 17-48
Sep 16 ......@ San Francisco..L 27-30
Sep 23 ......New England ......W 26-10
Sep 30 ......@ Dallas ..............L 24-26
Oct 7 ........Green Bay ..........W 31-23
BYE WEEK
Oct 21 ......@ Miami..............W 32-21
Oct 28 ......Seattle ..................L 14-28
Nov 4 ........@ Minnesota ..........L 9-24
Nov 11 ......@ Chicago............L 22-34
Nov 18 ......Carolina ..............W 20-19
Nov 22 ......Chicago ................L 16-23
Dec 2 ........Los Angeles ..........L 16-30
Dec 9 ........@ Arizona ............W 17-3
Dec 16 ......@ Buffalo..............L 13-14
Dec 23 ......Minnesota ..............L 9-27
Dec 30 ......@ Green Bay ........W 31-0

Sep 9 ........Cincinnati..............L 23-34
Sep 16 ......@ Washington ......W 21-9
Sep 23 ......@ Philadelphia ....L 16-20
Sep 30 ......Houston ................L 34-37
Oct 4 ........@ New England ..L 24-38

Oct 14 ......@ New York..........L 34-42
Oct 21 ......Buffalo ..................W 37-5
Oct 28 ......@ Oakland ..........W 42-28
BYE WEEK
Nov 11 ......Jacksonville ........W 29-26
Nov 18 ......Tennessee ..........W 38-10
Nov 25 ......Miami ..................W 27-24
Dec 2 ........@ Jacksonville ........L 0-6
Dec 9 ........@ Houston ..........W 24-21
Dec 16 ......Dallas ....................W 23-0
Dec 23 ......New York ............W 28-27
Dec 30 ......@ Tennessee ......W 33-17

Sep 9 ........@ New York ........W 20-15
Sep 16 ......New England ......W 31-20
Sep 23 ......Tennessee ................L 6-9
Sep 30 ......New York ............W 31-12
Oct 7 ........@ Kansas City......L 14-30
Oct 14 ......@ Dallas ................L 7-40
Oct 21 ......Houston ..................L 7-20
Oct 28 ......Philadelphia ..........L 18-24
BYE WEEK
Nov 11 ......@ Indianapolis......L 26-29
Nov 18 ......Pittsburgh............W 20-16
Nov 25 ......@ Buffalo..............L 21-24
Dec 2 ........Indianapolis ............W 6-0
Dec 6 ........@ Tennessee ........L 9-30
Dec 16 ......Washington ..........L 13-16
Dec 23 ......@ Miami................W 17-7
Dec 30 ......@ Houston ............L 3-20


Sep 9 ........Chicago ..............W 24-23
Sep 16 ......Minnesota ............T 29-29
Sep 23 ......@ Washington ......L 17-31
Sep 30 ......Buffalo ..................W 22-0
Oct 7 ........@ Detroit ..............L 23-31
Oct 15 ......San Francisco ....W 33-30
BYE WEEK
Oct 28 ......@ Los Angeles ....L 27-29
Nov 4 ........@ New England ..L 17-31
Nov 11 ......Miami ..................W 31-12
Nov 15 ......@ Seattle..............L 24-27
Nov 25 ......@ Minnesota ........L 17-24
Dec 2 ........Arizona ................L 17-20
Dec 9 ........Atlanta ................W 34-20
Dec 16 ......@ Chicago............L 17-24
Dec 23 ......@ New York ........W 44-38
Dec 30 ......Detroit ....................L 0-31

Sep 10 ......@ Oakland ..........W 33-13
Sep 16 ......Arizona..................W 34-0
Sep 23 ......Los Angeles ........W 35-23
Sep 27 ......Minnesota ..........W 38-31
Oct 7 ........@ Seattle ............W 33-31
Oct 14 ......@ Denver............W 23-20
Oct 21 ......@ San Francisco W 39-10
Oct 28 ......Green Bay ..........W 29-27
Nov 4 ........@ New Orleans ....L 35-45
Nov 11 ......Seattle ................W 36-31
Nov 19 ......Kansas City ........W 54-51

BYE WEEK
Dec 2 ........@ Detroit ............W 30-16
Dec 9 ........@ Chicago..............L 6-15
Dec 16 ......Philadelphia ..........L 23-30
Dec 23 ......@ Arizona ............W 31-9
Dec 30 ......San Francisco ....W 48-32

Sep 9 ........@ Los Angeles....W 38-28
Sep 16 ......@ Pittsburgh ......W 42-37
Sep 23 ......San Francisco ....W 38-27
Oct 1 ........@ Denver............W 27-23
Oct 7 ........Jacksonville ........W 30-14
Oct 14 ......@ New England ..L 40-43
Oct 21 ......Cincinnati ............W 45-10
Oct 28 ......Denver ................W 30-23
Nov 4 ........@ Cleveland ......W 37-21
Nov 11 ......Arizona................W 26-14
Nov 19 ......@ Los Angeles ....L 51-54
BYE WEEK
Dec 2 ........@ Oakland ..........W 40-33
Dec 9 ........Baltimore ............W 27-24
Dec 13 ......Los Angeles ..........L 28-29
Dec 23 ......@ Seattle..............L 31-38
Dec 30 ......Oakland ................W 35-3

Sep 9 ........Kansas City ..........L 28-38
Sep 16 ......@ Buffalo ............W 31-20
Sep 23 ......@ Los Angeles ....L 23-35
Sep 30 ......San Francisco ....W 29-27
Oct 7 ........Oakland ..............W 26-10

Oct 14 ......@ Cleveland ......W 38-14
Oct 21 ......Tennessee ..........W 20-19
BYE WEEK
Nov 4 ........@ Seattle ............W 25-17
Nov 11 ......@ Oakland ............W 20-6
Nov 18 ......Denver ..................L 22-23
Nov 25 ......Arizona................W 45-10
Dec 2 ........@ Pittsburgh ......W 33-30
Dec 9 ........Cincinnati ............W 26-21
Dec 13 ......@ Kansas City ....W 29-28
Dec 22 ......Baltimore ..............L 10-22
Dec 30 ......@ Denver..............W 23-9

Sep 9 ........San Francisco ....W 24-16
Sep 16 ......@ Green Bay ......T 29-29
Sep 23 ......Buffalo ....................L 6-27
Sep 27 ......@ Los Angeles ....L 31-38
Oct 7 ........@ Philadelphia....W 23-21
Oct 14 ......Arizona................W 27-17
Oct 21 ......@ New York ........W 37-17
Oct 28 ......New Orleans ........L 20-30
Nov 4 ........Detroit ..................W 24-9
BYE WEEK
Nov 18 ......@ Chicago............L 20-25
Nov 25 ......Green Bay ..........W 24-17
Dec 2 ........@ New England ..L 10-24
Dec 10 ......@ Seattle................L 7-21
Dec 16 ......Miami ..................W 41-17
Dec 23 ......@ Detroit ..............W 27-9
Dec 30 ......Chicago ................L 10-24


Sep 9 ........Tampa Bay ..........L 40-48
Sep 16 ......Cleveland ............W 21-18
Sep 23 ......@ Atlanta ............W 43-37
Sep 30 ......@ New York ........W 33-18
Oct 8 ........Washington ........W 43-19
BYE WEEK
Oct 21 ......@ Baltimore ........W 24-23
Oct 28 ......@ Minnesota ......W 30-20
Nov 4 ........Los Angeles ........W 45-35
Nov 11 ......@ Cincinnati........W 51-14
Nov 18 ......Philadelphia ..........W 48-7
Nov 22 ......Atlanta ................W 17-31
Nov 29 ......@ Dallas ..............L 10-13
Dec 9 ........@ Tampa Bay ....W 28-14
Dec 17 ......@ Carolina ............W 12-9
Dec 23 ......Pittsburgh............W 31-28
Dec 30 ......Carolina ................L 14-33

Sep 9 ........Tennessee ..........W 27-20
Sep 16 ......@ New York ........W 20-12
Sep 23 ......Oakland ..............W 28-20
Sep 30 ......@ New England ....L 7-38
Oct 7 ........@ Cincinnati ........L 17-27
Oct 14 ......Chicago ..............W 31-28
Oct 21 ......Detroit ..................L 21-32
Oct 25 ......@ Houston ..........L 23-43
Nov 4 ........New York ..............W 13-6
Nov 11 ......@ Green Bay........L 12-31
BYE WEEK

Nov 25 ......@ Indianapolis......L 24-27
Dec 2 ........Buffalo ................W 21-17
Dec 9 ........New England ......W 34-33
Dec 16 ......@ Minnesota ........L 17-41
Dec 23 ......Jacksonville ............L 7-17
Dec 30 ......@ Buffalo..............L 17-42

Sep 9 ........Houston ..............W 27-20
Sep 16 ......@ Jacksonville ....L 20-31
Sep 23 ......@ Detroit ..............L 10-26
Sep 30 ......Miami ....................W 38-7
Oct 4 ........Indianapolis ........W 38-24
Oct 14 ......Kansas City ........W 43-40
Oct 21 ......@ Chicago ..........W 38-31
Oct 29 ......@ Buffalo ..............W 25-6
Nov 4 ........Green Bay ..........W 31-17
Nov 11 ......@ Tennessee ......L 10-34
BYE WEEK
Nov 25 ......@ New York ........W 27-13
Dec 2 ........Minnesota ..........W 24-10
Dec 9 ........@ Miami ..............L 33-34
Dec 16 ......@ Pittsburgh ........L 10-17
Dec 23 ......Buffalo ................W 24-12
Dec 30 ......New York ..............W 38-3

Sep 10 ......@ Detroit ............W 48-17
Sep 16 ......Miami ....................L 12-20
Sep 20 ......@ Cleveland ........L 17-21
Sep 30 ......@ Jacksonville ....L 12-31
Oct 7 ........Denver ................W 34-16

Oct 14 ......Indianapolis ........W 42-34
Oct 21 ......Minnesota ............L 17-37
Oct 28 ......@ Chicago............L 10-24
Nov 4 ........@ Miami ................L 6-13
Nov 11 ......Buffalo ..................L 10-41
BYE WEEK
Nov 25 ......New England ........L 13-27
Dec 2 ........@ Tennessee ......L 22-26
Dec 9 ........@ Buffalo ............W 27-23
Dec 15 ......Houston ................L 22-29
Dec 23 ......Green Bay ............L 38-44
Dec 30 ......@ New England ....L 3-38

Sep 9 ........Jacksonville ..........L 15-20
Sep 16 ......@ Dallas ..............L 13-20
Sep 23 ......@ Houston ..........W 27-22
Sep 30 ......New Orleans ........L 18-33
Oct 7 ........@ Carolina ..........L 31-33
Oct 11 ......Philadelphia ..........L 13-34
Oct 22 ......@ Atlanta..............L 20-23
Oct 28 ......Washington ..........L 13-20
BYE WEEK
Nov 12 ......@ San Francisco W 27-23
Nov 18 ......Tampa Bay ..........W 38-35
Nov 25 ......@ Philadelphia ....L 22-25
Dec 2 ........Chicago ..............W 30-27
Dec 9 ........@ Washington ....W 40-16
Dec 16 ......Tennessee ..............L 0-17
Dec 23 ......@ Indianapolis......L 27-28
Dec 30 ......Dallas ..................L 35-36


Sep 6 ........Atlanta ................W 18-12
Sep 16 ......@ Tampa Bay ......L 21-27
Sep 23 ......Indianapolis ........W 20-16
Sep 30 ......@ Tennessee ......L 23-26
Oct 7 ........Minnesota ............L 21-23
Oct 11 ......@ New York ........W 34-13
Oct 21 ......Carolina ................L 17-21
Oct 28 ......@ Jacksonville ....W 24-18
BYE WEEK
Nov 11 ......Dallas ..................L 20-27
Nov 18 ......@ New Orleans ......L 7-48
Nov 25 ......New York ............W 25-22
Dec 3 ........Washington ........W 28-13
Dec 9 ........@ Dallas ..............L 23-29
Dec 16 ......@ Los Angeles....W 30-23
Dec 23 ......Houston ..............W 32-30
Dec 30 ......@ Washington ......W 24-0

Sep 9 ........@ Minnesota ........L 16-24
Sep 16 ......Detroit ................W 30-27
Sep 23 ......@ Kansas City......L 27-38
Sep 30 ......@ Los Angeles ....L 27-29
Oct 7 ........Arizona ................L 18-28
Oct 15 ......@ Green Bay........L 10-39
Oct 21 ......Los Angeles ..........L 10-39
Oct 28 ......@ Arizona ............L 15-18
Nov 1 ........Oakland ................W 34-3
Nov 12 ......New York ..............L 23-27
BYE WEEK

Nov 25 ......@ Tampa Bay ........L 9-27
Dec 2 ........@ Seattle..............L 16-43
Dec 9 ........Denver ................W 20-14
Dec 16 ......Seattle ................W 26-23
Dec 23 ......Chicago ..................L 9-14
Dec 30 ......@ Los Angeles ....L 32-48

Sep 10 ......Los Angeles ..........L 13-33
Sep 16 ......@ Denver ............L 19-20
Sep 23 ......@ Miami ..............L 20-28
Sep 30 ......Cleveland ............W 45-42
Oct 7 ........@ Los Angeles ....L 10-26
Oct 14 ......Seattle ....................L 3-27
BYE WEEK
Oct 28 ......Indianapolis ..........L 28-42
Nov 1 ........@ San Francisco....L 3-34
Nov 11 ......Los Angeles ............L 6-20
Nov 18 ......@ Arizona ..........W 23-21
Nov 25 ......@ Baltimore..........L 17-34
Dec 2 ........Kansas City ..........L 33-40
Dec 9 ........Pittsburgh............W 24-21
Dec 16 ......@ Cincinnati ........L 16-30
Dec 24 ......Denver ................W 27-14
Dec 30 ......@ Kansas City........L 3-35

Sep 9 ........@ Cleveland ........T 21-21
Sep 16 ......Kansas City ..........L 37-42
Sep 24 ......@ Tampa Bay ....W 30-27
Sep 30 ......Baltimore ..............L 14-26
Oct 7 ........Atlanta ................W 41-17

Oct 14 ......@ Cincinnati........W 28-21
BYE WEEK
Oct 28 ......Cleveland ............W 33-18
Nov 4 ........@ Baltimore ........W 23-16
Nov 8 ........Carolina ..............W 52-21
Nov 18 ......@ Jacksonville ....W 20-16
Nov 25 ......@ Denver ............L 17-24
Dec 2 ........Los Angeles ..........L 30-33
Dec 9 ........@ Oakland ..........L 21-24
Dec 16 ......New England ......W 17-10
Dec 23 ......@ New Orleans ....L 28-31
Dec 30 ......Cincinnati ............W 16-13

Sep 9 ........@ Miami ..............L 20-27
Sep 16 ......Houston ..............W 20-17
Sep 23 ......@ Jacksonville ........W 9-6
Sep 30 ......Philadelphia ........W 26-23
Oct 7 ........@ Buffalo..............L 12-13
Oct 14 ......Baltimore ................L 0-21
Oct 21 ......@ Los Angeles ....L 19-20
BYE WEEK
Nov 5 ........@ Dallas ............W 28-14
Nov 11 ......New England ......W 34-10
Nov 18 ......@ Indianapolis......L 10-38
Nov 26 ......@ Houston ..........L 17-34
Dec 2 ........New York ............W 26-22
Dec 6 ........Jacksonville ..........W 30-9
Dec 16 ......@ New York ..........W 17-0
Dec 22 ......Washington ........W 25-16
Dec 30 ......Indianapolis ..........L 17-33


Sep 9 ........@ Denver ............L 24-27
Sep 17 ......@ Chicago............L 17-24
Sep 23 ......Dallas ..................W 13-24
Sep 30 ......@ Arizona ..........W 20-17
Oct 7 ........Los Angeles ..........L 31-33
Oct 14 ......@ Oakland ............W 27-3
BYE WEEK
Oct 28 ......@ Detroit ............W 28-14
Nov 4 ........Los Angeles ..........L 17-25
Nov 11 ......@ Los Angeles ....L 31-36
Nov 15 ......Green Bay ..........W 27-24
Nov 25 ......@ Carolina ..........W 30-27
Dec 2 ........San Francisco ....W 16-43
Dec 10 ......Minnesota ............W 21-7
Dec 16 ......@ San Francisco..L 23-26
Dec 23 ......Kansas City ........W 38-31
Dec 30 ......Arizona................W 27-24

Sep 9 ........@ New Orleans ..W 48-40
Sep 16 ......Philadelphia ........W 27-21
Sep 24 ......Pittsburgh ............L 27-30
Sep 30 ......@ Chicago............L 10-48
BYE WEEK
Oct 14 ......@ Atlanta..............L 29-34
Oct 21 ......Cleveland ............W 26-23
Oct 28 ......@ Cincinnati ........L 34-37
Nov 4 ........@ Carolina ..........L 28-42
Nov 11 ......Washington ............L 3-16
Nov 18 ......@ New York..........L 35-38

Nov 25 ......San Francisco ......W 27-9
Dec 2 ........Carolina ..............W 24-17
Dec 9 ........New Orleans ........L 14-28
Dec 16 ......@ Baltimore ..........L12-20
Dec 23 ......@ Dallas ..............L 20-27
Dec 30 ......Atlanta ..................L 32-34

Sep 9 ........@ Arizona ............W 24-6
Sep 16 ......Indianapolis ............L 9-21
Sep 23 ......Green Bay ..........W 31-17
BYE WEEK
Oct 8 ........@ New Orleans ....L 19-43
Oct 14 ......Carolina ..............W 23-17
Oct 21 ......Dallas ..................W 20-17
Oct 28 ......@ New York ........W 20-13
Nov 4 ........Atlanta ..................L 14-38
Nov 11 ......@ Tampa Bay ......W 16-3
Nov 18 ......Houston ................L 21-23
Nov 22 ......@ Dallas ..............L 31-23
Dec 3 ........@ Philadelphia ....L 13-28
Dec 9 ........New York ..............L 16-40
Dec 16 ......@ Jacksonville ....W 16-13
Dec 23 ......@ Tennessee ......L 16-25
Dec 30 ......Philadelphia ............L 0-24

CLEVELAND

INDIANAPOLIS

KANSAS CITY


MIAMI

OAKLAND

DENVER

JACKSONVILLE

LOS ANGELES CHARGERS

NEW ENGLAND

PITTSBURGH

18 Jets Confidential FEBRUARY/MARCH 2019

HOUSTON

CHICAGO

IMPORTANT NFL DATES
Jan. 26

Senior Bowl, Ladd-Peebles Stadium,
Mobile, Ala.

Jan. 27

NFL Pro Bowl, Camping World Stadium,

Orlando, Fla.

Feb. 3

Super Bowl LIII, Mercedes-Benz Stadium,
Atlanta, Ga.

Feb. 19

First day for clubs to designate Franchise
or Transition Players.

Feb. 26

Combine Timing and Testing,
Lucas Oil Stadium, Indianapolis, Ind.

March 5

Prior to 4 p.m., ET, deadline for clubs to
designate Franchise or Transition Players.

March 11

During the period beginning at noon, ET,
and ending at 3:59:59 p.m., ET, March 13,
clubs are permitted to contact, and enter into
negotiations with certified agents of players
who will become unrestricted free agents
upon expiration of their 2018 contracts.


NEW YORK JETS

TENNESSEE

NEW YORK GIANTS

SEATTLE

DALLAS

GREEN BAY

MINNESOTA

PHILADELPHIA

TAMPA BAY

DETROIT

LOS ANGELES RAMS

NEW ORLEANS

SAN FRANCISCO

WASHINGTON



How were his drafts?

As for Maccagnan’s drafts overall, Maccagnan
gets mixed reviews, but as Hall-of-Fame GM Bill
Polian points out, even the best GMs can only
expect to hit on 56 percent of their draft picks.
And to his credit, Maccagnan has improved
his draft-pick objectivity. Early on, he refused to
cut any draft picks, holding some too long, even
though they hadn’t panned out. It almost
seemed like he was too concerned with the
media reaction to him cutting picks. Some reporters are obsessed with GM’s draft records and
remind us of them all the time, especially after
picks are cut.
But to Maccagnan’s credit, in 2018, he
showed more of a proclivity to move on from
picks who were not hacking it, such as Dylan
Donahue, Juston Burris, ArDarius Stewart and
Chad Hansen.
It doesn’t do a program any good to hold on
to guys to pad draft records. Win-loss records
are much more important. As long as a GM puts
together a solid 53-man roster, it doesn’t matter
how he got the players. For instance, undrafted
free agent Frankie Luvu performed better than
fifth-round pick Donahue, so going with Luvu
made sense. The Jets viewed street free agent receiver Deontay Burnett as better than Stewart,
so they went with Burnett. Leave the draft record
stuff to the media. Just keep the best players. You
can’t go wrong doing that.

As for his four-year draft history, obviously
he hit on Jamal Adams and Leonard Williams
(who is a very good player no matter what some
beat writers will tell you).
He missed on draft pick quarterbacks Christian Hackenberg and Bryce Petty, but honestly
most drafted quarterbacks flame out. Look at the
data. Playing QB in the NFL is perhaps the hardest job in all of sports, and most guys can’t do it.
But sometimes it’s hard to know until they get
to the NFL because most college quarterbacks
haven’t operated in conventional pro-style offenses, playing under center and having to go
through multiple progressions. Often these college quarterbacks set and throw to their primary
read.
Obviously Maccagnan overdrafted Hackenberg in the second round. Why? From what we
hear, Maccagnan, coming from the Houston Texans, heard a lot of good things about Hackenberg
from his Penn State coach, Bill O’Brien, now in
Houston, and drank the Kool-Aid. It turned out
to be a mistake, but to his credit, he moved on.
In the 2018 draft, aside from landing
Darnold, the Jets got a tight end with first-round
talent in the fourth round with Chris Herndon.

HERNDON
The DWI was a very bad thing, and we hope he
learned from it, but as far as his play, he was superb as a receiver and blocker. He’s a terrific allaround tight end.
Defensive tackles Shepherd and Foley Fatukasi
were both projects, so we will learn more about
them in 2019. While the jury is still out on these
players, perhaps the GM shouldn’t have picked
two defensive line projects, neither one instant
coffee, in the same draft. The Jets needed immediate help on the line with Wilkerson and

Richardson out of the picture. One project? Fine.
But two? Maybe adding one SEC or Big Ten lineman who was ready to roll, to go along with a
project from a lower-level of competition, would
have been a better plan.
Trenton Cannon looks like a very good sixthround pick, and a big reason is something about
him that came out of the blue. This Division-II
running back is a superb kick and punt coverage
player. They picked him to be a third-down back

and returner, but his knack for timing tackles on
kick/punt coverage is a gift. He looks like a potential Pro Bowl special teams cover guy like
New England’s Matthew Slater. Cannon also
looks like he can be a very good multi-purpose
back like former Jet Bruce Harper.
As for other picks, let’s bounce around a little:
Brandon Shell looks like a long-term starting
right tackle; Charone Peake is a terrific special
teams player; Eli McGuire looks like a good platoon back; Jordan Leggett can be a good No. 2
tight end; and Lac Edwards is a decent punter.
It’s hard to attack Maccagnan for the secondround pick of receiver Devin Smith. How could
he predict that a player, who was healthy in college, would blow out the same knee twice in the
NFL? We don’t consider players who get hurt
“busts.” That isn’t fair. Getting hurt wasn’t the
plan.
OLB Lorenzo Mauldin was OK, but was derailed by injuries. Burris should have been
moved to safety because he didn’t have the
speed, hip flexibility and transitional quickness
for cornerback. Jordan Jenkins is a decent player,
and tough as boot leather, but due to his lack of
ideal OLB speed, too often running backs and

scrambling quarterbacks “take the edge” on him.
There were also some good undrafted free
agents such as receiver Robby Anderson, who
has world-class speed and can take the top off a
defense, but he has to prove he can stay out of
trouble long-term and also that he can win more
50-50 balls. Keep an eye on undrafted free agent
linebacker Anthony Wint, who’s a tackling machine.

He bought more time

We think it’s OK that Maccagnan stayed, because he grew on the job. The coach, who’s a
great guy, perhaps didn’t, evidenced by his team’s
penalty-prone nature and his aversion to benching underperforming players, even in his fourth
year.
Also, by keeping Maccagnan, the Jets had a
pure football guy in the room for the coaching
interviews this year, not just business guys or
league consultants with agendas, but a guy who
knows football and had the Jets’ best interest at
heart.
Maccagnan needs to continue improving, and
his program needs to start winning more, but his
maturation as a GM bought him some more time
in New York.
And finally landing an answer at QB, for a
franchise that has been searching forever, didn’t
hurt either.
FEBRUARY/MARCH 2019 Jets Confidential 19



MEDIA WHISPERS
Kid gloves

The relationship between Buster Skrine and
the media is an interesting dynamic.
When he struggles, he is almost never criticized in the press.
Ever wonder why?
Before we continue, we want to make it clear,
we have nothing against him personally. He’s a
super-tough player who gives the team everything he’s got. He is excellent against the run, a
big-timer hitter, and a very good blitzer.
He’s also a terrific guy, who recently gave 500
toys to children in Crown Heights and Prospect
Park after a charity came up short of its goal; it
was a wonderful gesture. He does a lot of charity
work, for which he deserves lot of credit.
But as much as we’d like to gloss over his
struggles in coverage, we can’t do it.
And this shouldn’t be considered an ad
hominem attack on the player. It’s just the reality
of the situation. It’s certainly not a lack of effort.
The season finale in New England wasn’t a
very good game for Skrine in coverage, but
when a huge scrum of reporters surrounded him
in the visiting locker room in Foxboro, it was
just general questions about the state of the Jets
and job status of the coach — no queries about
his rough outing. And this happens all the time
with this player, who has had a number of rough

games in coverage over the last four years. But
when you read the papers, it’s like they never
happened.
Some examples of his play in New England:
• Early in the second quarter, Tom Brady hit
Julian Edelman on a crossing route for a gain
of 18 on Skrine.
• Late in the second quarter, Edelman caught
a pass over the middle for a gain of 17 with
Skrine trailing behind him.
• Skrine was called for holding on a late
third-quarter punt return by Andre Roberts.
• Early in the fourth quarter, Chris Hogan
caught passes of 17 and 20 yards on consecutive
plays with Skrine in coverage.
• Late in the fourth quarter, Skrine seemed to
stop following Edelman on a quick slant for a 5yard TD in the middle of the end zone.
But here is a sample of the post-game interview at his locker. It’s like none of this stuff happened.
Q: What were your thoughts on the game?
Skrine: I feel like our team is what it is. Like
whoever is in there, everyone is a professional.
So you deserve to play when you get a chance
20 Jets Confidential FEBRUARY/MARCH 2019

to play. (The Patriots) had a good game plan, they
did well, they executed.
Q: What are your feelings with the season
over?
Skrine: I enjoyed playing with my teammates.
I enjoyed playing with everybody. It’s not our first

time having a losing season. I understand sometimes it takes some time to get to where you want
to be. I think this group of guys can get there. We
just need to win a couple and get on a roll, and
that type of mentality kind of builds up.
Q: What are your thoughts about coach Todd
Bowles?
Skrine: Yeah, Bowles brought me. I’m extremely blessed. Coach Bowles is a good person,
a good coach. He leads by example, but yet his
wins didn’t add up to where he probably wanted
to be. He’s a good coach, a good person, everybody respects him.
You could understand why Skrine would love
Bowles — the coach stuck by him through thick
and thin.
But why did so many in the media treat Skrine
with kid gloves, even through his coverage ups
and downs throughout his time with the Jets?
We are going to take you behind the curtain
on this one.
First off, Skrine was always extremely cooperative with the press. He was always available to
the media and also very friendly. Being congenial
and cooperative with the press can lead to more
favorable coverage. We see this in all sports.
Players treat reporters like gold, and a lot of
them will focus on criticizing others, who aren’t
as nice and cooperative. It’s human nature.
Also, his agents are very media-friendly, so this
is also a factor. If reporters are getting stuff from
agents, they are less apt to rip the players they
represent, because if they do, the players’ agent
will likely cut them off from information. Stay on

the high road with the player and the information
continues to flow. Rip their players and the information highway is closed.
Considering his uneven play in coverage over
his three years with the team, it surprised some
that Skrine made it to his fourth year. Some
thought the Jets would move on from Skrine after
the 2017 season, when the cap hit on his contract
wasn’t significant, but they didn’t.
Perhaps the Jets also fell into the same trap as
the media — he’s such a nice guy, perhaps they
had a hard time pulling the plug. Also, we hear a
high-ranking figure in the Jets’ personnel department is very close with one of the top figures at

ANSWER MAN
Buster Skrine addressed a throng of reporters
after the Jets’ season finale in New England.

the agency that represents Skrine, so this might
have impacted the thinking a little bit.
When Demario Davis fired this agency, he
didn’t even get a contract offer from the Jets.
Yet Skrine never even took a pay cut. He collected every dime of a four-year deal for $25 million.
The handling of Skrine by the GM wasn’t one
of his best moves. Mike Maccagnan has had
plenty of good moves, as we pointed out in our
“Deep Dive” feature, but this wasn’t one of them.
And the coverage of Skrine by most reporters
who cover this team perhaps hasn’t been their
best work either.
He is a heck of a guy, but to essentially ignore

so many big plays given up because of his goodnatured persona, and the media cooperation of
the player and agent, is kind of a dereliction of
duty.


MEDIA WHISPERS
WFAN host
trashes Jets owner

After it was announced Adam Gase would be
the Jets’ new coach, WFAN host Joe Benigno
wasted no time slinging insults at Christopher
Johnson.
“The owner is an idiot,” Benigno said, Jan. 10.
“He has no clue what he’s doing.”
After a statement like that, most organizations would likely pull the plug on ever providing guests for that host’s show.
Would any team official ever put a player,
coach or GM on a program whose host called the
boss “an idiot?” Not many. It probably wouldn’t
be a great career move for that team official.
That wasn’t all Benigno said after the hire.
“What this team needs is a new owner, because the owners are horrific,” Benigno said.
“They had a terrible owner for years with Leon
Hess, they have terrible ownership now with the
Johnson brothers.”
He also added, “The ownership of this team
is a disaster.”
Powerful stuff.
Look, folks, we are just dealing with reality
of team owners and the people who work for

them — you say that kind of stuff about the big
boss, and the team tells you to pound salt.
It will be interesting to see how the Jets deal
with this show, which has done remotes at their
complex, after one of the hosts said some pretty
nasty things about the man who signs the
checks.
Stay tuned.

writer, and some others in the media, keep attaching to the team.
This “same old Jets” stuff truly has nothing to
do with anything, and is absurd, irrational, ludicrous, unreasonable and daffy.
The Jets have had three losing seasons in a row,
and have missed the playoffs eight straight years,
but it has nothing to do with some sophomoric
saying.
The Jets’ struggles under their last two
coaches, over the last eight years, had to do with
a lack of accountability and discipline, because it
would take the National Guard to be called in for
players to get benched. It also had to do with uneven quarterback play in a QB-driven league.
If Gase can develop Darnold into a franchise
QB, and yank players who are not getting the job
done, while Maccagnan does a great job acquiring
players in free agency and the draft, this will go a
long way to turning the Jets around.
As for this “same old Jets” nonsense, it’s time
for the “same old writers” to move on from this
meaningless pablum once and for all.


Remarkable reporting!

Recently, while appearing on WFAN, Daily
News reporter Manish Mehta was attacked by
host Evan Roberts for a tweet saying he heard
that Johnson and Maccagnan asked great questions to head-coaching candidates.

Here is the tweet, from Jan. 9:
“Now that the #Jets coaching search is over:
I was told that CEO Christopher Johnson and
GM Mike Maccagnan asked good, smart questions during interviews with candidates. Candidates were impressed by both guys. Johnson
certainly opened some eyes.”
Roberts told Mehta some of the “garbage you
tweeted and published” over the past three days
“sounds like you work for the New York Jets.”
He cited Mehta’s tweet about Johnson and
Maccagnan asking great questions as an example.
Mehta pointed out something in his response
to Roberts’ attack that blew us away from a journalistic research standpoint. He said he spoke directly with “three candidates” who interviewed
and were complimentary of Johnson and
Maccagnan.
That is flat-out remarkable reporting. There
is no way around it. For an NFL reporter to
reach out and get three candidates for a headcoaching job on the phone, and get them to talk
about the interview process, is incredibly hard
to do, and rare.
It’s hard enough to get one candidate on the
phone to talk about an interview, let alone three.
So give credit where credit is due. Mehta’s
level of research here is rare, and we tip our hat

to him on this.

Same Old Media

On Jan. 10, ESPN ran a story with the headline, “Adam Gase must groom Sam Darnold, defeat ‘same old Jets’ mentality.”
This writer, who also works for the Jets’
media partner SNY, has been pounding the
“same old Jets” drum for many years.
Yes, Gase needs to groom Darnold. There is
no doubt about that. It’s a big reason he was
hired. However, he doesn’t have to chase windmills to defeat a foolish catch phrase that this

Alan Schaefer

OWNING UP
It was reported that Christopher Johnson asked good
questions during the head-coaching interview process.
FEBRUARY/MARCH 2019 Jets Confidential 21


NEW YORK JETS ROSTER
NO. NAME

2
4
5
10
11
14
15

17
18
19
22
23
25
27
30
31
33
34
35
38
40
41
42
43
45
46
48
50
51
52
54
57
58
61
65
67
68

69
70
75
78
79
84
86
87
89
91

POS

HT

WT

AGE EXP SCHOOL

Jason Myers ................K .....5-10...190 ....27 ...4....Marist
Lachlan Edwards .........P ......6-4....209 ....26 ...3....Sam Houston St.
Davis Webb ................QB .....6-5....225 ....23 ...2....California
Jermaine Kearse........WR.....6-1....209 ....28 ...7....Washington
Robby Anderson ........WR.....6-3....190 ....25 ...3....Temple
Sam Darnold ..............QB .....6-3....225 ....21 ...R ...Southern California
Josh McCown.............QB .....6-4....218 ....39 ..16...Sam Houston St.
Charone Peake..........WR.....6-2....209 ....26 ...3....Clemson
Deontay Burnett.........WR.....6-0....186 ....21 ...R ...USC
Andre Roberts............WR....5-11 ...195 ....31 ...9....The Citadel
Trumaine Johnson......CB .....6-2....213 ....29 ...7....Montana

Terrence Brooks ..........S......5-11 ...200 ....26 ...5....Florida State
Elijah McGuire ............RB ....5-10...214 ....24 ...2....La.-Lafayette
Darryl Roberts ............CB .....6-0....182 ....28 ...4....Marshall
Rashard Robinson......CB .....6-2....177 ....23 ...3....LSU
Derrick Jones .............CB .....6-2....188 ....24 ...2....Mississippi
Jamal Adams ...............S ......6-1....213 ....23 ...2....LSU
Jeremy Clark ..............CB .....6-3....220 ....24 ...1....Michigan
De’Angelo Henderson Sr..RB .....5-7....208 ....26 ...2....Coastal Carolina
Brandon Bryant............S ......6-0....215 ....23 ...R ...Mississippi State
Trenton Cannon .........RB ....5-11 ...185 ....24 ...R ...Virginia State
Buster Skrine..............CB .....5-9....185 ....29 ...8....Tenn.-Chattanooga
Thomas Hennessy......LS .....6-2....246 ....24 ...2....Duke
Parry Nickerson..........CB ....5-10...182 ....24 ...R ...Tulane
Rontez Miles................S ......6-0....203 ....30 ...4....California (PA)
Neville Hewitt..............LB .....6-2....234 ....25 ...4....Marshall
Jordan Jenkins ...........LB .....6-3....259 ....24 ...3....Georgia
Frankie Luvu...............LB .....6-3....236 ....22 ...R ...Washington State
Brandon Copeland......LB .....6-3....263 ....27 ...4....Pennsylvania
Anthony Wint ..............LB .....6-0....224 ....23 ...R ...Fla. International
Avery Williamson ........LB .....6-1....246 ....26 ...5....Kentucky
Emmanuel Lamur .......LB .....6-4....245 ....29 ...7....Kansas State
Darron Lee..................LB .....6-1....232 ....24 ...3....Ohio State
Spencer Long ..............C ......6-5....318 ....28 ...5....Nebraska
Eric Smith ....................T.......6-4....308 ....23 ...2....Virginia
Brian Winters...............G ......6-4....320 ....27 ...6....Kent State
Kelvin Beachum...........T.......6-3....308 ....29 ...7....S. Methodist
Ben Braden ................OL .....6-6....329 ....24 ...1....Michigan
Dakota Dozier..............G ......6-4....313 ....27 ...5....Furman
Destiny Vaeao ............DL .....6-4....299 ....25 ...3....Washington State
Jonotthan Harrison .....OL .....6-4....300 ....27 ...5....Florida

Brent Qvale ................OL .....6-7....315 ....27 ...4....Nebraska
J.J. Jones...................WR....5-10...174 ....26 ...R ...West Georgia
Jordan Leggett............TE .....6-5....258 ....23 ...2....Clemson
Clive Walford ..............TE .....6-4....250 ....27 ...4....Miami (Fla.)
Chris Herndon ............TE .....6-4....253 ....22 ...R ...Miami (Fla.)
Bronson Kaufusi .........DL .....6-6....275 ....27 ...3....Brigham Young

22 Jets Confidential FEBRUARY/MARCH 2019

as of Jan. 20

NO. NAME

92
93
94
96
97
98
99

POS

HT

WT

AGE EXP SCHOOL

Leonard Williams ........DL .....6-5....302 ....24 ...4....USC

Tarell Basham.............DE .....6-4....266 ....24 ...2....Ohio U.
Folorunso Fatukasi .....DL .....6-4....318 ....23 ...R ...Connecticut
Henry Anderson..........DL .....6-6....301 ....27 ...4....Stanford
Nathan Shepherd .......DL .....6-4....315 ....25 ...R ...Fort Hays State
Mike Pennel................DL .....6-4....332 ....27 ...5....Colo. State-Pueblo
Steve McLendon.........DL .....6-3....310 ....33 ...9....Troy

RESERVE/FUTURE
----16
44
64
76

Tim White...................WR....5-10...185 ....24 ...2....Arizona State
Tevaughn Campbell....DB .....6-0....195 ....25 ...R ...Regina (Canada)
Stacy Coley................WR.....6-0....195 ....24 ...2....Miami (Fla.)
Charles Tapper ...........DL .....6-3....270 ....25 ...3....Oklahoma
DeAngelo Yancey ......WR.....6-1....220 ....24 ...1....Purdue
Harvey Langi ..............LB .....6-2....250 ....26 ...2....Brigham Young
Jon Toth .......................C ......6-5....310 ....24 ...1....Kentucky
Dieugot Joseph............T.......6-6....300 ....24 ...1....Fla. International

RESERVE/INJURED
20
21
26
29
36
55
56

71
72
77
81
82
83
85
95

Isaiah Crowell.............RB ....5-11 ...225 ....26 ...5....Alabama State
Morris Claiborne .........CB ....5-11 ...192 ....28 ...7....LSU
Marcus Maye ...............S ......6-0....207 ....25 ...2....Florida
Bilal Powell .................RB ....5-10...204 ....30 ...8....Louisville
Doug Middleton ...........S ......6-0....210 ....25 ...2....Appalachian State
Jeremiah Attaochu......LB .....6-3....252 ....25 ...5....Georgia Tech
Kevin Pierre-Louis ......LB .....6-0....230 ....27 ...5....Boston College
Ben Ijalana...................T.......6-4....322 ....29 ...8....Villanova
Brandon Shell ..............T.......6-5....324 ....25 ...3....South Carolina
James Carpenter.........G ......6-5....321 ....29 ...8....Alabama
Quincy Enunwa..........WR.....6-2....225 ....26 ...4....Nebraska
Rishard Matthews ......WR.....6-0....217 ....29 ...7....Nevada
Eric Tomlinson ............TE .....6-6....263 ....26 ...3....Texas-El Paso
Neal Sterling ...............TE .....6-4....257 ....27 ...4....Monmouth (N.J.)
Josh Martin .................LB .....6-3....245 ....27 ...6....Columbia

COACHING STAFF
Head Coach: Adam Gase
Offensive Coord/QBs: Jeremy Bates
Off. Line/Run Game: Rick Dennison
Asst Offensive Line: David Diaz-Infante

Wide Receivers: Karl Dorrell
Tight Ends: Jimmie Johnson
Off Asst/Asst QBs: Mick Lombardi
Offensive Assistant: Jason Vrable
Defensive Coordinator: Gregg Williams
Defensive Line: Robert Nunn

Asst Defensive Line: La’Roi Glover
Outside Linebackers: Kevin Greene
Defensive Backs: Dennard Wilson
Asst Defensive Backs: Steve Jackson
Defensive Assistant: Robby Brown
Special Teams Coord: Brant Boyer
Strength & Conditioning: Justus Galac
Asst Special Teams: Jeff Hammerschmidt
Asst Strength & Cond: Joe Giacobbe
Asst Strength & Cond: Aaron McLaurin


NEW YORK JETS 2019 OPPONENTS
HOME

AWAY

Buffalo Bills

Buffalo Bills

Miami Dolphins


Miami Dolphins

New England Patriots

New England Patriots

Cleveland Browns

Baltimore Ravens

Pittsburgh Steelers

Cincinnati Bengals

Dallas Cowboys

Jacksonville Jaguars

New York Giants

Philadelphia Eagles

Oakland Raiders

Washington Redskins

NEW YORK JETS 2018 RESULTS

Week 1


Week 5

Week 9

Week 14

6-13

27-23

W

W

L

Week 2

Week 6

Week 10

Week 15

42-34

10-41

22-29


48-17

34-16

L

W

Week 3

Week 7

12-20

L

W
L

Week 12

Week 16

13-27

38-44

L

L


L

Week 4

Week 8

Week 13

Week 17

22-26

3-38

17-21

L

12-31

17-37

L

10-24

L

L

L

FEBRUARY/MARCH 2019 Jets Confidential 23


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