Is this the worst Jet team you ever watched ?

Bigmoe

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As you guys know I've been going since '71
The 70s teams were horrendous with 3 years in a row at 3-11 from 75-76- and 77 pretty bad but Joe Willie was there thru 76 and they were still entertaining .

Kotite was bad but the team still played and you know Keyshawn said we were the best 1-15 team ever!! They were !

This is abysmal , no talent they don't play hard , absolutely no enthusiasm .Nothing to look forward to , not even a rebuild . Build on what ? It's a zero .

Is it me am I just getting older and fed up ? I don't think so . This has to be the worst I've ever watched in 50 years .
 

cheaterhater

I've Lost My Fucking Mind
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I thought about starting this same thread. or just one entitled, does this team out do the kotite years?

I actually feel bad for Gase. he might suck, but no one can suck this bad.

you would think, or at least I would think , that if you made it to the NFL , that you must at least be able to compete in an NFL game. but this team. seems to prove that wrong. there seems to be no one here that is in any way competitive. most years, if you watch a Jet game, it really seems to be a step below NFL standards , but this team is way worse. I can't even imagine them screwing up getting the #1 pick by winning a game. any team who would lose to this Jet team would have to be bad beyond imagination.

I'm thinking that anyone who might even have the chance of being the #1 pick in this years draft is looking into staying for grad school right now
 

beresford

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Jet Fanatics
In fairness though it has to be said that whenever somebody is brought in to improve the team that player is almost immediately injured. Last season it was Moseley, Osemele, Williamson. This season Mims , Zunaga and Moseley haven't played a down, Fant is out and now Becton after only 2 1/2 games. Perriman who was supposed to replace Anderson is out. Bell, who was supposed to prosper behind the upgraded O line is out. We are in a situation where anyone with any talent works their ticket off of the team by becoming a nuisance. Flacco doesn't seem to be in any hurry to get out of street clothes.

Elsewhere Jamal Adams is injured after 2 1/2 games. You can take the player out of the Jets but you can't take the Jets out of the player.
 

TebowCan'tThrow

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In fairness though it has to be said that whenever somebody is brought in to improve the team that player is almost immediately injured. Last season it was Moseley, Osemele, Williamson. This season Mims , Zunaga and Moseley haven't played a down, Fant is out and now Becton after only 2 1/2 games. Perriman who was supposed to replace Anderson is out. Bell, who was supposed to prosper behind the upgraded O line is out. We are in a situation where anyone with any talent works their ticket off of the team by becoming a nuisance. Flacco doesn't seem to be in any hurry to get out of street clothes.

Elsewhere Jamal Adams is injured after 2 1/2 games. You can take the player out of the Jets but you can't take the Jets out of the player.

It was a win/win for me yesterday. The Cowboys lost, but not because Jamal had anything to do with it. And I'm not sad he tweaked his vagina.
 

Bigmoe

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nothing else to say
Yea I don't even know how I started this thread

Hello Sack any comments?
You must agree finally this absolutely is the worst garbage shitshow this org has ever fielded .
You can’t possibly defend any of this now .
I guess you picked a good time to bail
There is no defense unless maybe your Clarence Darrow
And I don’t think he’d take the case
 

Europe_for_JETS

Repeat Offender Pro Bowler
Jet Fanatics
The worst I’ve ever watched, yes. Also, Gase is the worst and most inept head coach, by far.

This team has been needing BADLY a real good head coach for a while now. Since Parcells, only Rex showed some flashes (albeit his many weaknesses), and the results were evident before the talent drainage started.

If we (ever) find ourselves “that” coach, things will pick up pretty quickly for us, IMO, and we’ll be able to follow this team with something to get excited about on a weekly basis. Right now, the only suspense the ”eye-rolling” idiot brings is whether we can go 0-16.
 

Bigmoe

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The worst I’ve ever watched, yes. Also, Gase is the worst and most inept head coach, by far.

This team has been needing BADLY a real good head coach for a while now. Since Parcells, only Rex showed some flashes (albeit his many weaknesses), and the results were evident before the talent drainage started.

I totally agree
I liked Rex , warts and all .
And yes , I felt like he was sabotaged with the talent givin to him .
But at least they were fun to watch
This is putrid
I'm running out of derogatory adjectives
 

TebowCan'tThrow

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I totally agree
I liked Rex , warts and all .
And yes , I felt like he was sabotaged with the talent givin to him .
But at least they were fun to watch
This is putrid
I'm running out of derogatory adjectives

Lots of things towards the end of the Rex era were garbage because the GM ruined the team, but Rex was the only coach that truly loved being the HC of the Jets. That was a fun two years before he was sabotaged. Bring back Rex!!
 

cheaterhater

I've Lost My Fucking Mind
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Lots of things towards the end of the Rex era were garbage because the GM ruined the team, but Rex was the only coach that truly loved being the HC of the Jets. That was a fun two years before he was sabotaged. Bring back Rex!!
yes. that's what I've been saying
 

jets82

Curious George
Jet Fanatics
That Rich Kotite team (I believe he was the HC) the year before they drafted Keyshawn Johnson was pretty bad but this one might just take the cake. We’ve had SO MANY HORRIBLE teams that it’s really hard to say.
 

beresford

Franchise Tagged
Jet Fanatics
I can't remember a Jets team so devoid of talent on both sides of the ball as the one we put out against the Colts.
 

hatnlvr

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Jet Fanatics
I don't think I've ever seen a Jets Offense that is actually ranked 32nd. We've seen some pretty inept play calling and bad offensive Jets teams, but this group with Gase just seems completely clueless!!
 

butterscotch

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I totally agree
I liked Rex , warts and all .
And yes , I felt like he was sabotaged with the talent givin to him .
But at least they were fun to watch
This is putrid
I'm running out of derogatory adjectives
Let me help

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butterscotch

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I don't think I've ever seen a Jets Offense that is actually ranked 32nd. We've seen some pretty inept play calling and bad offensive Jets teams, but this group with Gase just seems completely clueless!!
The league should add two more teams so we could set a record at 34
 

butterscotch

Jets/Cards
Jets Global
I really liked the Guardians last year. better football then this & the players really tried...//Good coach too. I have a feeling they may be back in two years. I hope so. Football in that time of year is great also & the rules are great.
 

butterscotch

Jets/Cards
Jets Global
You guys this is bad think if you had two nfl teams made into one & end up 0-10

1944 Card-Pitts
With WWII depleting the roster resources of the NFL in 1943, the league was forced to consider drastic measures in order to field a full schedule during the war.
Eventually nearly 1,000 players, coaches, and other personnel from the league served in WWII, with 21 of that number paying the ultimate price. Back in Chicago with both teams struggling to maintain competitive rosters, the Bears and the Cardinals agreed to merge for the 1943 season. However, that proposal was rejected at the NFL meetings in June of that year. As the Associated Press reported:
Apparently because of the power that would be concentrated should the Cardinals and the Bears consolidate, the league cut off their attempt by passing a rule forbidding the merger of player talent. Later, however, this was relaxed, allowing the Steelers and Eagles to pool their athletes but at the same time retain only a single vote in league affairs. The merger will be effective only for the 1943 season.
While the NFL’s decision made little or no sense, both Chicago teams moved ahead independently. Operating on their own in 1943, the talent-challenged Cardinals stumbled through an 0-10 campaign, while the Steelers-Eagles combination (called the Steagles), finished strong with a 5-4-1 mark. Meanwhile, the Bears captured the NFL championship for the season. Only the Cardinals, it seems, suffered because of the NFL’s decision.
Little had changed prior to the 1944 season with Pittsburgh now seeking another partner after the Eagles regained their own independence. And so, this time, the cellar-dwelling Cardinals were asked to merge with the Steelers where the two clubs would share players, home games, and head coaches. It was an ugly marriage that was destined to falter despite some early fears by future opponents. Turk Edwards, the line coach of the Redskins, swiftly anointed the “new” team as the favorite to win the Western Division by stating: “The war has been a great equalizer among pro teams and any two teams which merge, no matter what their standing the preceding year, have a tremendous advantage.
Edwards was wrong.
In Chicago, the Daily News watched the first few days of training camp in Waukesha, WI and proclaimed that “it looks as if the new combine will have a strong voice in the NFL competition this fall. This bit of prophecy is gathered from a glance at the roster of veterans which the two clubs can throw on the field right now.”
The Chicago Daily News was wrong.
The optimism on all sides evaporated quickly as the Card-Pitts dropped their first three league contests, culminating in a 34-7 defeat at the hands of the Chicago Bears on October 15th. Desperate for players, the Cardinals called lineman Vince Banonis (who was in the military) back for the game against the Bears. For Banonis, it turned out to be both a harrowing and tiring weekend:
The Card-Pitt team was something else. I remember the Cardinals calling me to play against the Bears in Chicago. The only problem was that I was in Wildwood, NJ. Although I wasn’t in football shape, I finally did agree to play and hitchhiked to Philadelphia Saturday morning and then took a train to New York. From there the team arranged for a flight to Chicago but it was hard to get a seat in those days and I couldn’t get a plane out of New York until midnight! We puddle-jumped across the country and didn’t arrive in Chicago until 5:00 Sunday morning. I slept a couple of hours, went to Mass and then went to the field. Although I didn’t know the plays I told myself that I wasn’t there to play much. When the other center went out, I played almost the whole game, which was tough being out of shape. After the game, I took a plane back to New York, then took a train to Philadelphia and managed to be back on the base and ready for work at 8:00 am on Monday morning. After that, someone found out and blew the whistle on me…we weren’t supposed to play pro football while we were in the service!
And then, perhaps not surprisingly, things got worse during the remainder of the schedule as the combined squad finished 0-10, including a final game 49-7 drubbing at the hands of the Chicago Bears. “We were terrible,” said Cardinals’ veteran tackle Chet Bulger. “You’d get beat so bad, you’d cry.” Bert Bell, the co-owner of the Steelers, observed quite honestly that “the season couldn’t have turned out any worse than this one.” With each weekly loss, the club earned the derision of both fans and the media alike.
Aside from the mounting losses on the field, the Card-Pitts experienced some very strange locker room events (mostly on the Chicago side) that obviously impacted the team’s performance on the field. Following that 34-7 loss to the Bears, Johnny Butler, Johnny Grigas, and tackle Eberle Schultz were fined $200 each for indifferent play as well as for missing practice. Butler, the seventh-leading rusher in the league in 1943, was also suspended and offered for trade. These rulings infuriated the players, and the team decided to go on strike immediately, recalled tackle Chet Bulger:
Johnny Butler was accused of not trying and was fined a whole game’s salary. So instead of showing up for practice, we’d go to a bar instead. We did that Monday, then Tuesday, then Wednesday… We did this all week and finally Art Rooney called us all into a meeting and told us that Johnny would get his check. He told us to be ready to practice on Friday. So what do we do? We all get to practice early and hide like a bunch of kids from the coaches so they’d think we wouldn’t be there. We played terrible on Sunday!
Following that game, a 23-0 loss to the Giants in front of 40,734, the name of the team was beginning to shred as well. The Card-Pitts label was evolving into Car-Pits, because the team was “in the pits.” Perhaps the Chicago Tribune was in the forefront of this movement when it described the Giants’ game thusly: “The Card-Pitts played the role of a red plush rug this afternoon as the undefeated Giants paraded over and past them for a 23-0 triumph.” This culminated in the sarcastic re-naming of the team from the Card-Pitts to the “Carpets.” And why not? Like a patch of carpet on the floor, NFL teams simply walked all over them!
Although the season spiraled into a parade of losses, almost every outing contained something of interest for everyone:
  • In a 42-20 loss at Washington, police were called onto the field to stop a near riot when the opposing players encountered some disagreements. Four players were kicked out, including the aptly named “Cactus Face” Duggan and Tony Bova of the Card-Pitts.
  • Although the Lions chomped on his team by the tune of 21-7, Johnny Grigas had one of the finest games in team history by rushing for 123 yards and completing 13 of 30 passes for another 177 yards. He was personally responsible for 300 of the club’s 338 yards (big, big numbers in those days).
  • The Card-Pitts didn’t play their first home league game in Chicago until November 19. The Tribune didn’t help drum up any business with its honest headline of “Nothing At Stake.” Only 3,500 showed up to watch the Rams coast to a 33-6 victory.
  • Before the final game against the Bears in Pittsburgh (a “home game” for the Card-Pitts and a 49-7 loss), Grigas mysteriously disappeared from the team. His roommate, Don Currivan, said he discovered a note in their room from Grigas which simply stated: “This is the end.” Grigas finished second in the league in rushing despite missing the last game. Two teammates insisted that Grigas had indicated that he would not play if the field was frozen. By game time, the field was partly covered by snow. With Grigas gone, the Cardinals finished with minus-two yards rushing as a team.
Following the Bears game, the Steelers and Cardinals broke off their engagement and never dated again. The Cardinals’ losing streak had now stretched to twenty-six games over three seasons with no end in sight…
In a final “tribute” (so to speak) of the Card-Pitts, the NFL record books rightfully indicate that the league’s longest losing streak is 26 games, enjoyed by Tampa Bay during the 1976 and 1977 campaigns…
However, the Cardinals once dropped 29 games in succession from 1942-1945, but “lost” the honor of claiming the all-time mark since the 1944 team was comprised of both Cardinals and Pittsburgh players during the war. The dubious streak began when the 1942 season was capped by six straight losses. The team then lost all ten league games in both 1943 and 1944 to run the losing streak to 26 games. Three more defeats opened up the 1945 schedule before the Cards began receiving an influx of military veterans who had been serving in the war effort. Chief among the early returnees was 27-year-old rookie quarterback Paul Christman, a second-round draft pick of the Cards in 1941. Christman was sorely needed by the Cardinals and was urged by the team “to fly home before the ink was dry on the discharge.” Christman later recalled that “I got as far as Salt Lake City before an army major bumped me. I reached Chicago four days later by train!”
The rusty Christman still managed to lead the Cardinals past the Bears 16-7 on October 14, 1945 to snap the ugly losing streak at 29. As the Chicago Tribune noted: “A speedy group of backfield performers humbled the once mighty Bears. The victory was the first for the Cardinals in 30 National Football League games.”

So how does history remember the 1944 Card-Pitts? There is not much to say about an 0-10 team, but perhaps Art Rooney, the founder of the Pittsburgh Steelers, said it best: “It was the worst team in NFL history.”
 
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