December 3, 2008

A bit from New York's under-the-radar team...

Since someone liked this statistic I used in the paper this morning, I’ll throw it out again here:

5,152: Miles traveled by the Jets in 2007 (includes a "road" game @ Giants).
14,246: Miles the Jets will travel this season.

Actually, I did that mileage tally on mapquest (I alternate with googlemaps if you must know) back in April when the schedule came out and blogged it, but it bears repeating with the third of four West Coast trips coming up this weekend.

* In looks increasingly likely David Harris will be back out there Sunday. Eric Smith, probably not.

* So Calvin Pace didn’t exactly give a cliché answer when asked about the significant drop recently in sacks, both for him and the team.

“We have been playing a little bit more coverage,” Pace said. “I know I have (been playing) more coverage than rushing. Obviously that is not my decision that is more game plan. I guess sometimes that happens, but based on how they see us matching up and how they want to scheme things. We were winning with it. Ideally, me personally, I like to rush a little bit more, but it’s not a problem. Whatever is called I am willing to do, but I envision the numbers picking back up. It’s not that we are getting blocked up we have just been covering a little bit more.”

* Asked if the level of anger in the locker room is similar to what it was after the Oakland loss, Pace said it was.

“Yes, it’s definitely there. I just think we came out too flat. We just didn’t have the energy. For whatever reason we didn’t get started well. Sometimes you are not going to win them all. Ideally you want to, but to play against a team of that caliber who has been to the playoffs and who is looking to go again to the playoffs this year, you can’t come out like that. For whatever the reason we just didn’t match whatever they did. Everything they did against us, our answers just didn’t match and we have to be better than that.”

* Eric Mangini all but said Abram Elam would start again at safety. It’s a combination of Eric Smith not being ready and Mangini not quite ready to toss Elam under the bus for a singular bad performance.

“With Abe…there’s a lot of weeks where he’s made positive, positive plays,” Mangini said. “Everybody faces a game where you don’t.”

* Mangini on the secondary:

“I think everybody needs to improve. When we talk about the pass defense, to me, it’s never just the secondary. And the linebackers play a big role in that; and our ability to get to the passer, our ability to keep the passer in the pocket so that plays don’t go longer than they should; our ability to convert on sack opportunities.”

As we talked about extensively during yesterday’s Live Chat – from the World’s Most Futon no less – what Pace spoke of is a problem. The Jets have to get to the passer. Period. The personnel in the secondary, other than Kerry Rhodes and Darrelle Revis, simply isn’t good enough, frankly, to survive on its own. Shaun Hill will go all Matt Cassel and throw for 400 yards, too, if he’s not pressured.

* The quote of the day came from Favre when he was talking about how he’s holding up physically.

“At some point, I’ve got to fall apart,” Favre said. “I’m not going to lie to you. It’s like any car. You drive it long enough, it’s going to fall apart; you’re going to have a flat tire, something’s going to happen. At some point, I’m going to fall apart.”

Favre also made clear that, “I feel fine,” and that the "falling apart" thing wasn't imminent. He was speaking hypothetically, a few years down the road.

* We had interim 49ers coach Mike Singletary on conference call and he said he still can’t believe he’ll be coaching against someone he played against – twice – in 1992. That was Singletary’s final season with the Bears and Favre’s first full season as a starter.

“It’s an amazing thought to be honest,” Singletary said. “It’s really an amazing thought to think that I played against him. But I just remember…thinking to myself, this guy’s going to be special. You could literally hear the ball coming by. It was a very cold day and I remember playing against him in December and it was cold that day and the ball passed by me and I literally heard the ball. The guy had leadership, he had something about him.”

* Singletary on the Jets’ front seven, which obviously didn’t play well Sunday but had before then.

“They’re about as good as any front seven you want to look at in the league,” Singletary said. “They look the part and they play the part. It’s been pretty interesting watching them. Wow. They really come off the ball.”

* Yes, Singletary was asked about his shorts-drop from a few weeks back and if he might try that avenue of inspiration again.

“Absolutely not,” Singletary said with a laugh.

Though he added a point he had made before: that what happens in the locker room should stay there.

“That was a shock treatment no one else was supposed to know about,” Singletary said.

I might have to ask Mangini if he would consider that kind of motivational tactic for the Jets.

Talk to you tomorrow.

Bounce back week for the Jets and, look, a neat picture!

I just sailed through traffic this morning from Long Island so I arrived at Fort Florham at just after 7 a.m., which even beat Jets interns Matt Hintz, Christie Upton and Jeanette Owusu to the facility.

Shocking.

Anyway, that leaves me with lots O’ time, not that you’ll benefit any.

Wednesdays, as you know, means Favre Day out here, which always draws a larger-than-usual media gathering. In addition to Favre, we’ll hear from Eric Mangini, players in the locker room, 49ers interim coach Mike Singletary and a 49ers player to be named.

This is an interesting week for a variety of reasons, with storylines abound.

Can the Jets play a decent game on the West Coast? How will they respond to getting spanked at home last week? Will the Jets be able to mount a pass rush against a team that has allowed 43 sacks this season?

We’ll do more dissection later in the week but here’s a few numbers on the 49ers:

On defense they’re ranked 23rd in the league (347 ypg), including 28th against the pass (239.8). The 49ers rank tied for 27th in scoring defense, giving up 26.1 ppg. On offense, the 49ers are ranked 26th in total offense (304.4) and 21st in scoring (21.8).

49ers quarterback Shaun Hill doesn’t have a cannon, but he’s played pretty well since replacing the turnover-prone J.T. O'Sullivan. Hill this season is 84-for-139 for 1,067 yards with eight TDs and three INTs.

Is this a team stocked with talent? Not really, but any team has to be considered dangerous considering the way the Jets played last week. I think players will approach it that way. The handful of players we saw in the locker room Monday were a bit ticked with how things went against the Broncos, which is the way many of them were after the last time the Jets lost, Oct. 19 in Oakland. The Jets won five straight after that defeat so who knows…
SUPER%20BOWLAFL.JPG
* By the way, the picture to the right of the programs from Super Bowl III and the AFL Championship that preceded it was emailed to me by Richard Kaufman, a throwback DJ if there ever was one. Check out his site if you’re a fan of 60’s radio, or even if you’re not. Pretty good stuff. Fox News even did a feature on him.

Kaufman lives in Texas, but grew up in Livingston, N.J., is a Jets fanatic and, most germane to me, has been a fan of this blog since training camp. The first, to my knowledge, celebrity reader of the blog. I heard Larry David checks things out here on occasion, but I haven’t been able to confirm it. I might have just made that last part up, but I can't confirm that either.

But back to Kaufman. He apparently collects memorabilia of all kinds and possesses – among other things – those programs from Super Bowl III and that season's AFL Championship. I, being obsessed with old things [hence the frequent mentions of Bob Glauber], enjoyed the photo and decided to share. Kaufman tells me there will be more.

* Some random stuff, but only because there’s time:

* Throughout the Favre-to-the-Jets rumors and ultimate completion of the deal – with all the long hours and circus-like elements surrounding the story, which was fun to cover for the most part – I occasionally received rather humorous emails from colleagues like Glauber and Giants beat guy Tom Rock, and even the great Judy Battista from the Times. The tenor of the emails was basically “having fun yet?” which is a reporter’s parlance for “hahahahahahaha.”

Not sure why this week I thought of that…

* 80's song of the morning heard while driving in: "Take on me" by A-ha.

* Maybe I don’t fully understand the whole “conduct detrimental to the league thing,” but Sean Avery getting suspended for what amounts to stupid speech is absurd to me. The comments were tasteless and classless, yes, but that’s a mighty steep slippery slope the NHL just put itself on.

And with that, check back here later for a report on the day and video from Favre’s press conference.


December 2, 2008

Live chat with Erik Boland

Erik Boland answers your Jets questions today in a live chat at 11 a.m.

December 1, 2008

Another wakeup call

In no particular order…

One Denver player all but admitted the Broncos fudged a bit on their “injuries” that seemed to take place at opportune times – for Denver – to disrupt the Jets’ no-huddle offense.

You’ll remember that third quarter stretch when the Broncos’ Spencer Larsen, Ebenezer Ekuban and Dre Bly stayed down on three straight plays.

“Just a bruise on my shin,” Bly said, according to the Rocky Mountain News. “You know (Jets quarterback) Brett (Favre), him being a savvy vet, when he sees somebody down, he likes to do a no-huddle, catch a defense off balance. I knew that, so I just laid on the ground and let the pain go away. . . . But that’s one thing you have to do - you have injuries, anything that’s bothering you, stay on the ground, don’t try to be Superman and rush back up because it can hurt your defense.”

Rules say a player who is tended to on the field must sit out one play. Ekuban and Bly returned; Larsen did not.

“It seemed like every time we had a little momentum or something like that, one of those guys was going down,” linebacker David Bowens said today.

This is a gray area in the rule book because if a guy is down, what’s the litmus test in that moment to test if he’s really faking it? There isn't one.

* Eric Mangini said Sunday that he wasn’t thrilled with the week of practice leading up to the game.

But…

“We had a decent week of practice and things like that,” tight end Chris Baker said today. “It just didn’t click for us yesterday. Sometimes that happens, you go out and sometimes it’s not your day and that was one of those days.”

Baker said while the New England loss benefited the Jets in terms of keeping them one game ahead in the division, Sunday’s loss stung a bit more with the knowledge that a Jets victory would have given then a two-game lead over the Patriots with four to go.

“Obviously looking back and seeing they lost as well…to have a two game lead at this point of the season would have been big but at the same time we just have to worry about what we can control,” Baker said. “We have four games coming up and we’re in control of that. If we take care of business there, we’ll be fine.”

“I’ll tell you what, it’s a wakeup call,” said Laveranues Coles, using the phrase Bowens uttered after the loss in Oakland. “Anytime you get in a situation like this where you lose a ballgame, you’re all hurting. You get on a roll and you finally get something going and…from top to bottom, again, the coaches are going to take a look at themselves and what they’re doing, the players need to take a look at what they’ve been doing and the approach they’ve been taking into the ballgame.”

* Eric Mangini has sometimes, to the point of strained credibility, gone to great lengths to laud the progress of Vernon Gholston this season. Not today.

“He had a significant shot yesterday,” said Mangini, asked if Gholston maybe could have gotten some more playing time against the Broncos. “You know, there were plays to be made. You know, his opportunities were based on his ability to make those plays.”

And how did he do with that “significant shot” a reporter asked.

“I think he needs to continue to improve,” Mangini said through what appeared to be semi-clenched teeth.

It was honest.

* Mangini also could barely contain his irritation [disgust might be a better word] when asked what his film showed of the blown call by officials that led to Denver’s first touchdown, when replays showed Jerricho Cotchery had recovered his own fumble but was ruled not to have had control.

“He was laying on the ground,” Mangini said. “Looked like he had possession of the ball. Defender came in, rammed into him, lost possession of the ball. That’s what it looks like to the untrained eye.”

That last sentence came with the proper amount of dry, dry sarcasm always appreciated in this space.

* Mangini on the defense Sunday:

“What made it difficult yesterday is we weren’t very effective against the run. And when you can run the ball effectively, that then changes things in terms of what you have to do defensively, which now opens up even more things in the passing game.”

And with that, Live Chat XIV coming up tomorrow (Tuesday) morning at 11 a.m.


To quote Bill Parcells...

Our NFL person Bob Glauber has used this old Bill Parcells line a couple of times this year, but given the last week with the Jets, the quote really captures things perfectly.

In New York, Parcells said, it’s either “euphoria or disaster.”

After blowing out the Titans in their fifth straight victory, the Jets were Super Bowl caliber. After yesterday’s hideous defeat at home to the Broncos, they're leaking major oil.

The reality of what the Jets are rests somewhere in between those two extremes and I still think this year’s Jets team is closer to the positive one rather than the negative. Big picture-wise, the Jets are a more than respectable 8-4, they lead the AFC East by one game and have a relatively soft schedule the rest of the way. On paper their toughest remaining game is Miami, and that’s at home. There was talk of running the table after the Tennessee game, but finishing the season on a 10-game winning streak was probably a bit much to ask. Especially in this year’s NFL where the “any given Sunday” thing has never seemed more apt.

There are real problems, of course, not the least of which is a pass defense that I question has the personnel to get appreciably better. I’m not sure there’s a magic formula to be found in the final four games, other than the Jets, at all costs, have to find a way to get more pressure on the quarterback. It’s basically a two-man secondary with Rhodes and Revis, but at least those other weak spots can get covered up to a degree with a fierce rush. There, obviously, was not a fierce rush yesterday. On another note, there’s a long way to go in this season and much that can still be accomplished, so I’m not starting Draft Day hype quite yet…but secondary help ought to be high on the “needs” board, as should some assistance at linebacker.

* There was an element of yesterday’s game that can be thrown out to “it was just one of those days.” The tackling was atrocious, but the Jets have shown themselves to be a pretty good tackling team overall. Missed tackles are among the “correctable errors” that players talk about after watching film. I don’t think you’ll see another tackling performance like that out of the Jets.

* Eric Mangini made it clear, publicly, that yesterday was unacceptable. That was the first time he’s called out his team since the second week of training camp when he was irritated with an afternoon practice at Hofstra.

"I think that we've established a certain way to play football around here, we've established a certain identity, and it was nothing close to that today,” Mangini said yesterday. “I don't think we played well in any of three phases. I don't think we coached very well and I think when you have that, this is what you get."

Even after bad losses to Oakland and San Diego, Mangini found something positive to say. Not yesterday.

“I'm not really looking for a motivator or a silver lining here," Mangini said. "I'm looking for good football."

* Driving in I heard some criticism of Brett Favre [there was some in writing as well] for saying he would rather play in the snow than the rain. Here’s my problem with the media on this one: we, meaning the press, just kill guys for giving cliché, boring answers that shed much light on anything. But we’ve trained them to do so. Favre gives an honest answer – in which he wasn’t excusing his poor play, by the way – and he gets hammered for it. It’s a lose-lose scenario that causes athletes – and coaches, too – to err on the side of saying nothing. And it’s hard to blame them.

* Now, to today’s schedule. For the first time in over a month there will be player availability in the locker room. On Victory Mondays, players are off and we get a few of them on a conference call. So that will be upcoming after Mangini’s 2:35 p.m. press conference.

* A reminder: Live Chat XIV is coming up tomorrow morning at 11 a.m.


* Oh, and a last thing regarding several season ticket holders who emailed me about this last week: the Jets just sent out invoices for the playoffs in which they requested money for three games when the most the Jets could host is two games. I’ve seen a copy of the invoice and there’s not much in the way of ambiguity: it’s pretty much asking for money for three games. So the team was made aware of the error and on Nov. 25 season ticket holders received a clarification email.

“It has come to our attention that there is some confusion with this year’s Playoff invoices,” the email states. “This week you will be receiving Playoff invoices in the mail. The invoice is also available online. The invoice will contain prices for the Wildcard, Divisional and Championship games. As a season ticket holder you should ONLY play for the Divisional and Championship events. ”

And on it goes in repeating the firm due date for payment and acceptable payment methods.

Nice non-apology and total abdication of responsibility from the organization.

“It has come to our attention that there is some confusion with this year’s Playoff invoices,” is arrogant.

The team caused the confusion, not the fans. So open the damn email by saying, “Our wording was incorrect in the playoff invoices we sent to you, our valued season ticket holders, recently and for that we apologize. What the invoices should have said was…”

C’mon, it’s not that hard.

Back in a bit.

November 30, 2008

Gameday Live 12: Bronocs at Jets

FirstNameOnly Stephen here (remember me?) to chat with you.

It’s natural in sports fandom. With every win, expectations raise and so does greed. With each checkpoint and benchmark reached and surpassed, the focus becomes the next. Right now, with the Jets on a five-game winning streak, nothing less than everything will be enough.

Before the season, if you’d told the Jets fans the team would win 10 games and make the playoffs, coming off that dreadful 2007 season (deliberately avoided reminding ya’ll of the record), they’d have taken it. If you’d told them the Jets would win the division (and slap the Patriots in overtime along the way), they’d have been ecstatic. But now that they're in position to do that, it’s not enough for them to just do that. After the last two wins, you guys caught a whiff of elite. I’d assume it smells something like potpourri or “Lilac Spring” Glade. Those are some good scents.

Going toe-to-toe with New England and having the Jets step on the Pats’ little piggies, then embarrassing the previously undefeated and power rankings-leading Titans in Tennessee, the Jets have sipped the Armand de Brignac. So now, anything short of the second seed in the AFC will be the equivalent of Korbel. They want the whole shebang.

At 8-3, the Jets currently hold the three seed. They’re behind the Steelers because of the difference in conference record. Still, that No. 2 is attainable (via the difficulty of the teams’ respective remaining schedules), and though unlikely, the Jets have an iota of a slither of an outside chance to catch the Titans for the top spot. Rewind your minds to Oct. 19, around 5 p.m., a little after the overtime loss to the Raiders. Who’d have thunk this? I don't even think Ira (who I’ve had the pleasure of meeting), was too optimistic after that one.

But here they are. And here they are, with a relatively "soft" schedule remaining and everything within reach.

Of course, with each win, each foot advanced towards the mountain’s summit, the next game becomes more important. At least if you’re thinking about quenching that near-insatiable thirst for great. So the Broncos game, in that sense, is almost a must-win. They’re probably the weakest division leader in the NFL. They’re 6-5, but 2-3 in their last five games and -44 in net points. The only reason they’re in first place is because the West is weak and the Chargers, the early favorites to take it, have managed to trip over their feet at every turn.

The Jets, without getting real technical, should win this game. Let's see how it goes...

1st Quarter
- Touchdown Broncos. Vernon Fox recovered a Jets fumble (from the Wildcat formation) and returned it 23 yards for the score at 8:40. Brad Smith missed on the flip to Jerricho Cotchery, fumbling the wet ball at the Jets 39. It deflected back to the 23, where Cotchery covered it up, but the ball was ripped away from him while on the ground and taken back for the touchdown. The Jets tried to challenge that Cotchery had recovered the loose ball, but the call, according to the referee, could not be challenged.
7-0, Broncos.
- Touchdown Jets. Thomas Jones broke a 59-yarder off right tackle (similar to Washington's long run against the Titans last week) and ran up the right sideline untouched for the answer-back score at 8:32. The drive was that play alone. With the run, Jones goes over 1,000 yards for the season. Right now he's at 1,014 with 10 rushing touchdowns. 7-7.
- Touchdown Broncos. Jay Cutler hit Eddie Royal along the right sideline on a go route and the receiver shook off a tackle and eluded Ty Law, kept his feet inbounds along the sideline, and raced in for the 59-yard answer-back to the answer-back score at 6:44. The Jets challenged that he stepped out of bounds, but the call was upheld. 14-7, Broncos
- Field goal Broncos. Matt Prater hit a 25-yarder, capping the eight-play, 52-yard drive. 17-7, Broncos

2nd Quarter
- Touchdown Jets. Jones scored from 29 yards out on a run up the middle. He was tackled, but he landed on a Bronco's back (therefore, wasn't down) and rolled off, landed on his feet and sprinted into the end zone. The Broncos, thinking he was down, gave up on the play. Denver challenged, but the call was upheld. His run capped a 7-play, 76-yard drive. 17-14, Broncos
- Touchdown Broncos. Peyton Hillis (10 carries, 85 yards) scores from a yard out at 4:29 to cap a 7-play, 68-yard drive. The drive was setup by Dre Bly's interception of Favre and the big play was a 22-yard pass to Tony Scheffler that got the Broncos to the 1. 24-14, Broncos
- Field goal Broncos. Prater hit from 35 yards out with 0:08 left in the half. The big plays on the drive (67 yards on 12 plays) were catches of 16 and 20 yards by Brandon Marshall. His 20-yarder (Cutler scrambled right then threw across the field to Marshall over the middle) put the Broncos at the 17 and set up the field goal. 27-14, Broncos.

Halftime: 27-14, Broncos
It was an ominous begining for the Jets, with the Broncos scoring on defense after a fumble, and except for a couple bright spots (Thomas Jones, pretty much), it has been a horrible half. The offense has turned it over twice, leading to two Broncos touchdowns, and the defense has been ripped for 316 yards in a half. Brett Favre is just 6-for-12 with 66 yards and an interception while Cutler is 18 of 28 for 230 yards and a touchdown to Eddie Royal. Rookie RB/FB Peyton Hillis has 12 carries for 86 yards and scored on a 1-yard plunge. The Jets have gotten no pressure on Cutler. The lone standout for the Jets has been Jones, with 108 yards and two touchdowns (105 of those and both scores came in the first quarter). Captain Obvious says: The Jets have to make some adjustments for the second half.

3rd Quarter
Field goal Jets. Jay Feely hit from 30 yards, capping the 10-play, 68-yard drive. Leon Washington was key on that drive, catching three consecutive passes for a total of 60 yards. The Jets reached the Broncos' 7, but stalled. A sack and strip of Favre (recovered by Brandon Moore) on third down forced the field goal attempt. 27-17, Broncos.

4th Quarter
Touchdown Broncos. Brandon Stokley scored from 36 yards at 9:37. Stokley snuck behind the secondary and was left wide open on a go route. The drive went 61 yards on 5 plays. 34-17, Broncos.

Final: 34-17, Broncos
Consider it the back-to-earth loss for the Jets. Their five-game winning streak has been snapped and, most likely, the Super Bowl talk in the media will be 86'd after this horrible loss to the inferior Broncos. And, with this loss, the Jets fall to 8-4. They're still #1 in the AFC East, but they missed an opportunity to put two games distance between themselves and the Patriots (lost, 33-10, to the Steelers). The Jets are now a full game + tiebreakers behind the Steelers for the second seed in the conference, tied for third with the Ravens and Colts.

Jay Cutler threw for 357 yards, 2 TDs and an INT... Favre threw for 247 yards (on 23-for-43) and an interception... Jones was the game's leading rusher with 138 yards and two touchdowns on 16 carries. Washington had just four yards on two carries, but he caught three passes for 60 yards on one drive.... Hillis ran for 129 yards and a TD for the Broncos... The tight ends were the game's leading receivers. Tony Scheffler caught seven passes for 90 yards and Dustin Keller had 7 for 77.... Abram Elam led the Jets with 12 tackles and Dwight Lowery had an interception... Dre' Bly had three tackles and an interception of Favre that set up a touchdown; Elvis Dumervil had three tackles, a sack and a fumble forced that forced the Jets to settle for a red zone field goal in the third quarter.


Bailey to miss another game for Broncos

Time for my favorite part of game day - and yours, too - the inactives.

No surprises for the Jets:

Mike Nugent
Brett Ratliff (3rd QB)
David Clowney
Marcus Mason
Drew Coleman
Eric Smith
David Harris
Bubba Franks

The Broncos, meanwhile, will be without CB Champ Bailey for the fifth straight week.

The rest:
S Marlon McCree
RB Selvin Young
FB Andrew Pinnock
LB D.J. Williams
LB Nate Webster
DT Nic Clemons
DE Tim Crowder

We’ll have a live-blogger in this space in a bit.

It is still raining rather firmly here at the Meadowlands. Enjoy the afternoon.

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