Jump to content

Adam Gase.. on the HOT seat...already ? ? ?


kelly

Recommended Posts

New York Jets first-year head coach Adam Gase should already find himself on the hot seat after an 0-3 start to his very first season with Gang Green.

The New York Jets have looked lifeless, hopeless, and downright abysmal through the first three weeks of the season. A once-promising season has swiftly gone downhill and the Jets now sit at 0-3 heading into their bye week in Adam Gase’s first season with the team.

It’s easy to recount where things have gone wrong, however.

The Jets have started a different quarterback in each game following Sam Darnold‘s bout with mononucleosis and Trevor Siemian‘s season-ending ankle injury. The offensive line has been worse than anyone could have imagined.And while the defense is still solid, there are a few glaring holes — mainly at cornerback — that have held the team back. Not to mention a seemingly endless amount of injuries unrelated to the quarterback position.But despite all of these hardships, the Jets haven’t just been beaten in the past two weeks. They haven’t just been outmatched by superior teams. And they haven’t even been solely outplayed.

Rather, many of the Jets failures boil down to one man: Adam Gase.

Gase’s first three weeks with the Jets have gone about as poorly as anyone could have imagined. The Jets sit at 0-3 and haven’t shown any signs of life since Week 1. And acting as though Week 1 was a success is revisionist history.Even with a somewhat-healthy Darnold, Gase’s offense managed just 223 yards and eight points. The team would then subsequently blow a 16-point second-half lead due to the offense’s inability to move the ball downfield.Yes, it could be excused as it was against a dominant Buffalo Bills defense. But that’s just the problem. Through three weeks, Gase has been handed excuse after excuse — some of it warranted.But excuses can only account for so much at the end of the day. They cannot account for a misuse of talent, a lack of originality, and a predictable gameplan.

Gase’s offense is hindered strongly by a poor offensive line and a weak set of playmakers. But other teams manage to at least look like legitimate NFL franchises when their starters go down.This is football, injuries will and do happen. But coaches must be able to adapt to their new personnel and Gase has proven incapable so far.Take this past week in New England for example. Luke Falk excelled at Washington State as a downfield, vertical passer. Yet despite this, Gase stuck with his Week 1 & 2 gameplans opting for shallow patterns and screen passes.It was this conservative, almost scared approach that hurt the Jets offense more this week than any injury could have.

Look around the league. John Harbough, Greg Roman, and the Baltimore Ravens have managed to tailor their offense to suit young quarterback Lamar Jackson‘s strengths. The same could be said for Sean McDermott and Brian Daboll working with Josh Allen.And to prove that this can be changed on a whim, look at what the Pittsburgh Steelers did this week with Mason Rudolph or what the Carolina Panthers did with Kyle Allen.Heck, even Falk’s fellow Washington State product Gardner Minshew has stepped in and done a phenomenal job in Jacksonville. It’s possible to remain competitive with young, backup quarterbacks.This isn’t to blame the Jets lack of success entirely on Adam Gase. But it is to say that he certainly hasn’t gotten the most out of his talent so far — not even close.And the team’s severe lack of energy and their apparent apathy this past Sunday is worrisome given that it’s only Week 3.

Who knows what will happen once the Jets return from their bye week. Perhaps Darnold’s hopeful return — among others — will reinvigorate a team desperately in need of some spark of energy.But if we’re basing expectations off of prior results, it’s hard to have any sort of optimism.

>    https://thejetpress.com/2019/09/23/new-york-jets-adam-gase-already-hot-seat/

  • Post of the Week 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

14 minutes ago, kelly said:

New York Jets first-year head coach Adam Gase should already find himself on the hot seat after an 0-3 start to his very first season with Gang Green.

The New York Jets have looked lifeless, hopeless, and downright abysmal through the first three weeks of the season. A once-promising season has swiftly gone downhill and the Jets now sit at 0-3 heading into their bye week in Adam Gase’s first season with the team.

It’s easy to recount where things have gone wrong, however.

The Jets have started a different quarterback in each game following Sam Darnold‘s bout with mononucleosis and Trevor Siemian‘s season-ending ankle injury. The offensive line has been worse than anyone could have imagined.And while the defense is still solid, there are a few glaring holes — mainly at cornerback — that have held the team back. Not to mention a seemingly endless amount of injuries unrelated to the quarterback position.But despite all of these hardships, the Jets haven’t just been beaten in the past two weeks. They haven’t just been outmatched by superior teams. And they haven’t even been solely outplayed.

 

Rather, many of the Jets failures boil down to one man: Adam Gase.

Gase’s first three weeks with the Jets have gone about as poorly as anyone could have imagined. The Jets sit at 0-3 and haven’t shown any signs of life since Week 1. And acting as though Week 1 was a success is revisionist history.Even with a somewhat-healthy Darnold, Gase’s offense managed just 223 yards and eight points. The team would then subsequently blow a 16-point second-half lead due to the offense’s inability to move the ball downfield.Yes, it could be excused as it was against a dominant Buffalo Bills defense. But that’s just the problem. Through three weeks, Gase has been handed excuse after excuse — some of it warranted.But excuses can only account for so much at the end of the day. They cannot account for a misuse of talent, a lack of originality, and a predictable gameplan.

Gase’s offense is hindered strongly by a poor offensive line and a weak set of playmakers. But other teams manage to at least look like legitimate NFL franchises when their starters go down.This is football, injuries will and do happen. But coaches must be able to adapt to their new personnel and Gase has proven incapable so far.Take this past week in New England for example. Luke Falk excelled at Washington State as a downfield, vertical passer. Yet despite this, Gase stuck with his Week 1 & 2 gameplans opting for shallow patterns and screen passes.It was this conservative, almost scared approach that hurt the Jets offense more this week than any injury could have.

Look around the league. John Harbough, Greg Roman, and the Baltimore Ravens have managed to tailor their offense to suit young quarterback Lamar Jackson‘s strengths. The same could be said for Sean McDermott and Brian Daboll working with Josh Allen.And to prove that this can be changed on a whim, look at what the Pittsburgh Steelers did this week with Mason Rudolph or what the Carolina Panthers did with Kyle Allen.Heck, even Falk’s fellow Washington State product Gardner Minshew has stepped in and done a phenomenal job in Jacksonville. It’s possible to remain competitive with young, backup quarterbacks.This isn’t to blame the Jets lack of success entirely on Adam Gase. But it is to say that he certainly hasn’t gotten the most out of his talent so far — not even close.And the team’s severe lack of energy and their apparent apathy this past Sunday is worrisome given that it’s only Week 3.

Who knows what will happen once the Jets return from their bye week. Perhaps Darnold’s hopeful return — among others — will reinvigorate a team desperately in need of some spark of energy.But if we’re basing expectations off of prior results, it’s hard to have any sort of optimism.

>    https://thejetpress.com/2019/09/23/new-york-jets-adam-gase-already-hot-seat/

You are actually posting an article written by a 13 year old on his website.  Geez, you are useless here.  He's just a kid who is a fan.  Thanks Kelly ?

p.s.  here's a photo of the author:

nxQgo7lA_400x400.jpg

Link to comment
Share on other sites

41 minutes ago, Dcat said:

You are actually posting an article written by a 13 year old on his website.  Geez, you are useless here.  He's just a kid who is a fan.  Thanks Kelly ?

p.s.  here's a photo of the author:

nxQgo7lA_400x400.jpg

..so, a 13 yr old... nevermind  :wacko: 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

56 minutes ago, kelly said:

New York Jets first-year head coach Adam Gase should already find himself on the hot seat after an 0-3 start to his very first season with Gang Green.

The New York Jets have looked lifeless, hopeless, and downright abysmal through the first three weeks of the season. A once-promising season has swiftly gone downhill and the Jets now sit at 0-3 heading into their bye week in Adam Gase’s first season with the team.

It’s easy to recount where things have gone wrong, however.

The Jets have started a different quarterback in each game following Sam Darnold‘s bout with mononucleosis and Trevor Siemian‘s season-ending ankle injury. The offensive line has been worse than anyone could have imagined.And while the defense is still solid, there are a few glaring holes — mainly at cornerback — that have held the team back. Not to mention a seemingly endless amount of injuries unrelated to the quarterback position.But despite all of these hardships, the Jets haven’t just been beaten in the past two weeks. They haven’t just been outmatched by superior teams. And they haven’t even been solely outplayed.

 

Rather, many of the Jets failures boil down to one man: Adam Gase.

Gase’s first three weeks with the Jets have gone about as poorly as anyone could have imagined. The Jets sit at 0-3 and haven’t shown any signs of life since Week 1. And acting as though Week 1 was a success is revisionist history.Even with a somewhat-healthy Darnold, Gase’s offense managed just 223 yards and eight points. The team would then subsequently blow a 16-point second-half lead due to the offense’s inability to move the ball downfield.Yes, it could be excused as it was against a dominant Buffalo Bills defense. But that’s just the problem. Through three weeks, Gase has been handed excuse after excuse — some of it warranted.But excuses can only account for so much at the end of the day. They cannot account for a misuse of talent, a lack of originality, and a predictable gameplan.

Gase’s offense is hindered strongly by a poor offensive line and a weak set of playmakers. But other teams manage to at least look like legitimate NFL franchises when their starters go down.This is football, injuries will and do happen. But coaches must be able to adapt to their new personnel and Gase has proven incapable so far.Take this past week in New England for example. Luke Falk excelled at Washington State as a downfield, vertical passer. Yet despite this, Gase stuck with his Week 1 & 2 gameplans opting for shallow patterns and screen passes.It was this conservative, almost scared approach that hurt the Jets offense more this week than any injury could have.

Look around the league. John Harbough, Greg Roman, and the Baltimore Ravens have managed to tailor their offense to suit young quarterback Lamar Jackson‘s strengths. The same could be said for Sean McDermott and Brian Daboll working with Josh Allen.And to prove that this can be changed on a whim, look at what the Pittsburgh Steelers did this week with Mason Rudolph or what the Carolina Panthers did with Kyle Allen.Heck, even Falk’s fellow Washington State product Gardner Minshew has stepped in and done a phenomenal job in Jacksonville. It’s possible to remain competitive with young, backup quarterbacks.This isn’t to blame the Jets lack of success entirely on Adam Gase. But it is to say that he certainly hasn’t gotten the most out of his talent so far — not even close.And the team’s severe lack of energy and their apparent apathy this past Sunday is worrisome given that it’s only Week 3.

Who knows what will happen once the Jets return from their bye week. Perhaps Darnold’s hopeful return — among others — will reinvigorate a team desperately in need of some spark of energy.But if we’re basing expectations off of prior results, it’s hard to have any sort of optimism.

>    https://thejetpress.com/2019/09/23/new-york-jets-adam-gase-already-hot-seat/

What a dope.  He can't even spell Harbaugh correctly?

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Gase sucks period. Any Payton recommendations is a big Fu to the JETS. F Payton Manning. F Gase. He is an offensive coordinatior trying to act like a coach. We always hire coordinator wanna be coaches. The last decent coach we hired was Edwards and Mangini. Rex first 2 years.

Can Gase now and promote Williams to coach.

  • Upvote 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

28 minutes ago, kelly said:

..so, a 13 yr old... nevermind  :wacko: 

He just looks like 13.  He's a college kid at SUNY Cortland...  probably 18 or 19.  Nice article for a kid actually.  Just felt like busting chops today because this forum as a whole has been utterly stupid since yesterday.

  • Upvote 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 minute ago, Dcat said:

He just looks like 13.  He's a college kid at SUNY Cortland...  probably 18 or 19.  Nice article for a kid actually.  Just felt like busting chops today because this forum as a whole has been utterly stupid since yesterday.

oh..

 

 

:mellow:

Link to comment
Share on other sites

20 minutes ago, Warfish said:

This thread is a bad idea.  I especially find linking images of a 13 year old in this environment to be in VERY bad taste. 

Lock, dump.

it's his twitter pic  for his sports site called "Fansided".  He wants the picture out there. And he's probably not 13 if he's in college. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Who exactly is surprised that we lost yesterday?  Show of hands.  Anyone?  Bueller?

Hell, of the three losses, this is the one that's the easiest to accept.  These "fire Gase" people should have had their pitchforks out after the Bills game.  That would have gone over well.  Some 13 year old clickbaiter's wet dream.

SAR I

  • Upvote 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, kelly said:

New York Jets first-year head coach Adam Gase should already find himself on the hot seat after an 0-3 start to his very first season with Gang Green.

The New York Jets have looked lifeless, hopeless, and downright abysmal through the first three weeks of the season. A once-promising season has swiftly gone downhill and the Jets now sit at 0-3 heading into their bye week in Adam Gase’s first season with the team.

It’s easy to recount where things have gone wrong, however.

The Jets have started a different quarterback in each game following Sam Darnold‘s bout with mononucleosis and Trevor Siemian‘s season-ending ankle injury. The offensive line has been worse than anyone could have imagined.And while the defense is still solid, there are a few glaring holes — mainly at cornerback — that have held the team back. Not to mention a seemingly endless amount of injuries unrelated to the quarterback position.But despite all of these hardships, the Jets haven’t just been beaten in the past two weeks. They haven’t just been outmatched by superior teams. And they haven’t even been solely outplayed.

 

Rather, many of the Jets failures boil down to one man: Adam Gase.

Gase’s first three weeks with the Jets have gone about as poorly as anyone could have imagined. The Jets sit at 0-3 and haven’t shown any signs of life since Week 1. And acting as though Week 1 was a success is revisionist history.Even with a somewhat-healthy Darnold, Gase’s offense managed just 223 yards and eight points. The team would then subsequently blow a 16-point second-half lead due to the offense’s inability to move the ball downfield.Yes, it could be excused as it was against a dominant Buffalo Bills defense. But that’s just the problem. Through three weeks, Gase has been handed excuse after excuse — some of it warranted.But excuses can only account for so much at the end of the day. They cannot account for a misuse of talent, a lack of originality, and a predictable gameplan.

Gase’s offense is hindered strongly by a poor offensive line and a weak set of playmakers. But other teams manage to at least look like legitimate NFL franchises when their starters go down.This is football, injuries will and do happen. But coaches must be able to adapt to their new personnel and Gase has proven incapable so far.Take this past week in New England for example. Luke Falk excelled at Washington State as a downfield, vertical passer. Yet despite this, Gase stuck with his Week 1 & 2 gameplans opting for shallow patterns and screen passes.It was this conservative, almost scared approach that hurt the Jets offense more this week than any injury could have.

Look around the league. John Harbough, Greg Roman, and the Baltimore Ravens have managed to tailor their offense to suit young quarterback Lamar Jackson‘s strengths. The same could be said for Sean McDermott and Brian Daboll working with Josh Allen.And to prove that this can be changed on a whim, look at what the Pittsburgh Steelers did this week with Mason Rudolph or what the Carolina Panthers did with Kyle Allen.Heck, even Falk’s fellow Washington State product Gardner Minshew has stepped in and done a phenomenal job in Jacksonville. It’s possible to remain competitive with young, backup quarterbacks.This isn’t to blame the Jets lack of success entirely on Adam Gase. But it is to say that he certainly hasn’t gotten the most out of his talent so far — not even close.And the team’s severe lack of energy and their apparent apathy this past Sunday is worrisome given that it’s only Week 3.

Who knows what will happen once the Jets return from their bye week. Perhaps Darnold’s hopeful return — among others — will reinvigorate a team desperately in need of some spark of energy.But if we’re basing expectations off of prior results, it’s hard to have any sort of optimism.

>    https://thejetpress.com/2019/09/23/new-york-jets-adam-gase-already-hot-seat/

Dude, you are so useless here.  

 

Try to read what you post first.  

 

Startingto think you are really mehta

  • Upvote 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 minutes ago, SAR I said:

Who exactly is surprised that we lost yesterday?  Show of hands.  Anyone?  Bueller?

Hell, of the three losses, this is the one that's the easiest to accept.  These "fire Gase" people should have had their pitchforks out after the Bills game.  That would have gone over well.  Some 13 year old clickbaiter's wet dream.

SAR I

the mistake was hiring gase in the first place  as many said at the time he was hired-business 101 you dont hire a guy with a bad resume and expect him to do great things-

  • Upvote 4
  • Thumb Down 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

20 minutes ago, SAR I said:

Who exactly is surprised that we lost yesterday?  Show of hands.  Anyone?  Bueller?

Hell, of the three losses, this is the one that's the easiest to accept.  These "fire Gase" people should have had their pitchforks out after the Bills game.  That would have gone over well.  Some 13 year old clickbaiter's wet dream.

SAR I

mark-sanchez.gif

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

46 minutes ago, Dcat said:

He just looks like 13.  He's a college kid at SUNY Cortland...  probably 18 or 19.  Nice article for a kid actually.  Just felt like busting chops today because this forum as a whole has been utterly stupid since yesterday.

Sarcasm and ridiculousness is all a Jet fan has left

  • Upvote 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

59 minutes ago, kmnj said:

the mistake was hiring gase in the first place  as many said at the time he was hired-business 101 you dont hire a guy with a bad resume and expect him to do great things-

fish.jpg

For a team that's 0-3, this resume is actually exactly what we need right now. 

I'd say it takes a special kind of head coach to turn 1-4 into 10-6, wouldn't you?

SAR I

  • Upvote 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

3 hours ago, EdReed22 said:

Gase sucks period. Any Payton recommendations is a big Fu to the JETS. F Payton Manning. F Gase. He is an offensive coordinatior trying to act like a coach. We always hire coordinator wanna be coaches. The last decent coach we hired was Edwards and Mangini. Rex first 2 years.

Can Gase now and promote Williams to coach.

Agreed. Williams head coach and Cooter OC.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

4 hours ago, kelly said:

New York Jets first-year head coach Adam Gase should already find himself on the hot seat after an 0-3 start to his very first season with Gang Green.

The New York Jets have looked lifeless, hopeless, and downright abysmal through the first three weeks of the season. A once-promising season has swiftly gone downhill and the Jets now sit at 0-3 heading into their bye week in Adam Gase’s first season with the team.

It’s easy to recount where things have gone wrong, however.

The Jets have started a different quarterback in each game following Sam Darnold‘s bout with mononucleosis and Trevor Siemian‘s season-ending ankle injury. The offensive line has been worse than anyone could have imagined.And while the defense is still solid, there are a few glaring holes — mainly at cornerback — that have held the team back. Not to mention a seemingly endless amount of injuries unrelated to the quarterback position.But despite all of these hardships, the Jets haven’t just been beaten in the past two weeks. They haven’t just been outmatched by superior teams. And they haven’t even been solely outplayed.

 

Rather, many of the Jets failures boil down to one man: Adam Gase.

Gase’s first three weeks with the Jets have gone about as poorly as anyone could have imagined. The Jets sit at 0-3 and haven’t shown any signs of life since Week 1. And acting as though Week 1 was a success is revisionist history.Even with a somewhat-healthy Darnold, Gase’s offense managed just 223 yards and eight points. The team would then subsequently blow a 16-point second-half lead due to the offense’s inability to move the ball downfield.Yes, it could be excused as it was against a dominant Buffalo Bills defense. But that’s just the problem. Through three weeks, Gase has been handed excuse after excuse — some of it warranted.But excuses can only account for so much at the end of the day. They cannot account for a misuse of talent, a lack of originality, and a predictable gameplan.

Gase’s offense is hindered strongly by a poor offensive line and a weak set of playmakers. But other teams manage to at least look like legitimate NFL franchises when their starters go down.This is football, injuries will and do happen. But coaches must be able to adapt to their new personnel and Gase has proven incapable so far.Take this past week in New England for example. Luke Falk excelled at Washington State as a downfield, vertical passer. Yet despite this, Gase stuck with his Week 1 & 2 gameplans opting for shallow patterns and screen passes.It was this conservative, almost scared approach that hurt the Jets offense more this week than any injury could have.

Look around the league. John Harbough, Greg Roman, and the Baltimore Ravens have managed to tailor their offense to suit young quarterback Lamar Jackson‘s strengths. The same could be said for Sean McDermott and Brian Daboll working with Josh Allen.And to prove that this can be changed on a whim, look at what the Pittsburgh Steelers did this week with Mason Rudolph or what the Carolina Panthers did with Kyle Allen.Heck, even Falk’s fellow Washington State product Gardner Minshew has stepped in and done a phenomenal job in Jacksonville. It’s possible to remain competitive with young, backup quarterbacks.This isn’t to blame the Jets lack of success entirely on Adam Gase. But it is to say that he certainly hasn’t gotten the most out of his talent so far — not even close.And the team’s severe lack of energy and their apparent apathy this past Sunday is worrisome given that it’s only Week 3.

Who knows what will happen once the Jets return from their bye week. Perhaps Darnold’s hopeful return — among others — will reinvigorate a team desperately in need of some spark of energy.But if we’re basing expectations off of prior results, it’s hard to have any sort of optimism.

>    https://thejetpress.com/2019/09/23/new-york-jets-adam-gase-already-hot-seat/

Oh brother...

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

×
×
  • Create New...