A look back at the Tim Tebow to Jets trade on the 3-year anniversary

Elias

The Invisible Man
Big Fish
Jet Fanatics
Jets Global
It is three years removed now, to the day, of the madness that was Tim Tebow in a New York Jets uniform.

Three years since a quarterback competition with Mark Sanchez played out daily in the backpages, three years since he ran in the rain shirtless and stopped social media, and three years since he had to defend his teammates liking him.

Three years, and the move still seems as shocking as it was that overcast March afternoon when the rumors began to trickle out that Tebow, the most polarizing player in the NFL, might be traded from the Denver Broncos to the Jets.

The Jets were coming off a 2011 season where they faded down the stretch and their offense under quarterback Mark Sanchez seemed stagnant. They had lost wide receiver Brad Smith that offseason, a converted college quarterback who ran their Wildcast offense to perfection. The Jets loved the offense as a change of pace, something that opposing teams had to scheme for that week. And that Smith was a wide receiver who had played quarterback at Missouri meant that he was a legitimate threat to pass the ball.

So during the offseason before the 2012 season, general manager Mike Tannenbaum told Metro this past spring that he wanted to find someone who could bring the Wildcat back. And when Peyton Manning signed a free agent deal with the Broncos, suddenly Tebow became available.

Tebow, for all his flaws and inadequacies as a pure, pocket-passer could still run the Wildcat – or some version thereof - arguably better than anyone in the league.

At one point in March, then special teams coordinator Mike Westhoff piped up. Well-respected around the league as an innovator, Westhoff leaned back in a chair during a conference with former head coach Rex Ryan and the rest of the coaching staff to discuss acquiring Tebow. He said he thought that Tebow would be great as a “personal punt protector” for special teams.

Tebow, thickly built like a fullback, had a good build for it. But he could also step in front of a long snap and turn a punt into a fake. Westhoff loved the idea. So too did the coaching staff.

When the Broncos officially signed Manning to a contract that made Denver instant favorites to win the Super Bowl, the Jets quickly got on the phone with the AFC West team. They wanted Tebow but they needed to act fast.

They knew for sure that the St. Louis Rams had interest in Tebow and the Jets wanted to land the player to help replace the production lost by Smith. They felt, in the words of Tannenbaum, that they “had a real vision for Tim.”

And they knew that the Rams wanted Tebow for the same reasons; not to start at quarterback for them but to be a wrinkle to the offense.

After Manning made the move to the Broncos, Tannenbaum and management went to talk with owner Woody Johnson about the possibility of making the trade. Knowing the magnitude of the move and the scrutiny that would be placed on the team, the front office wanted to get an initial blessing from ownership.

The deal went along rather smoothly with negotiations between the two teams and the terms were forged out.

“We told Mark that he was the starter – we had just signed him to an extension after all,” Tannenbaum said. “We felt like it was another club to add to our bag.

“Rex made a great point, saying that it was an advantage for Mark. He said that for opposing defenses, it would be a challenge in that they would have to prepare for two quarterbacks, two different offenses. You've got to spend some time for Tim Tebow. That's less time to spend on the regular offense.

We knew it would draw a lot of scrutiny. But a couple years before, we had been through everything with Brett Favre. We were a season removed from the playoffs, those back-to-back AFC Championship Games. We were an established team. We thought we could weather any storm.”

The storm that came, however, was a move that brought derision and mocking along with curiosity from around the league.

Almost instantly, a quarterback controversy was manufactured as a title bout of Sanchez v. Tebow, even though the Jets and Tannenbaum and Ryan all made it clear that their incumbent was the starter. Tebow was going to add something to the offense the same way Smith did and he was going to make the punt team unpredictable.

As history shows us, it didn't play out that way. But what is interesting is that the Jets tried to do right by Tebow, even before they made the deal official.

Before the Jets even traded for Tebow, they gave him a call and spoke to the young quarterback. They talked with him openly about what his role was, what it would be and look like.

Clearly, Sanchez was the starter, they said, but there was a big role for Tebow if he was willing to come on board. They saw him extensively used in the 'Wildcat Offense' in a way that the Jets didn't even use Smith. His arm was an asset to them, as were his feet.

What the Jets wanted to make sure was that Tebow knew that this wasn't a quarterback battle. He wasn't set for a competition with Sanchez. Their incumbent was No. 1 and Tebow was coming in to be an asset, be a part of the team.

It was a huge sales job by the Jets and for the Jets. After all, Tebow came in with 23 games played over the previous two seasons, including 12 starts the year before. He was loved in Denver, in large part due to his playoff win over the Pittsburgh Steelers in the AFC Wild Card just a season before. But the Jets were open and honest bout their vision.

And Tebow was interested.

“He responded favorably to the idea and his role and that Rex would want him to wear many hats,” Tannenbaum said. “At no point on the call did Tim ask if he would be able to start or what his role would be. On the call he simply indicated that he was on board.”

http://www.metro.us/sports/a-look-back-at-the-tim-tebow-to-jets-trade-on-the-3-year-anniversary/zsJocv---hIRKGfcyi9OTk/
 

TebowCan'tThrow

Supersize!
The Mod Squad
Jet Fanatics
Jets Global
This was almost the last straw as a Jets fan!! Dumbest trade in history!! Thank god those buffoons are no longer employed with the Jets!!
 
U

ucrenegade

Guest
and yet they still screwed him over.................unreal
 

NYJDraftKing

King of Quieens
Jet Fanatics
One of the draft picks was ....Danny Trevathan who look like a damn good player and projected starter for the Bronco's
 

Jet Fan RI

Pro Bowl 1st Team
Jet Fanatics
I thought for sure since he had bulked up the Jets were going to convert him to a TE and try to use him like Gronkowski. At least that would have made more sense than what they did use him for, which was just about nothing.
 
M

Mainejet

Guest
A complete disaster move that Tanny was completely responsible for. He DESERVED to be fired after that psychotic move.
 

jets82

Curious George
Jet Fanatics
Looking back at the trade it was a disaster that never should have happened. Rex and Tanny were such clowns and destroyed this team after two years of success. I don't think something like that has ever happened in football. Losing is one thing but to destroy a team with dumbass decisions is inexcusable. Obviously it got no better when Idzik came along. If Sanchez ever had a chance if being a half way decent QB, it wasn't going to happen here under that regime, including Idzik. Same goes for Geno. He just may have a chance now. Unless ofcourse we draft Winston (especially), Mariota (maybe) and obviously he would have no chance if we traded for Rivers or Breez.
 

jetfandreamer

Jets Groupie
Jet Fanatics
A complete disaster move that Tanny was completely responsible for. He DESERVED to be fired after that psychotic move.

Like this says, and a lot of whatever anyone else said..this move was the beginning of the end. It was stupid, unneeded, sign of "Jet insecurity) Giants won SB, had no potential football benefit, lost draft picksd (that Tanny would have blown most likely anyway) and ruined ANY chance Sanchez had to have a good solid secure foothold on the sitution. I dont care how "secure" he was, this move had to get in his head...and the laughable part was

at the time..some Jet fan morons were actually endorsing it...idiots, he was the beneficiary w Denver of a great defense that kept games close while he stunk it up the whole game and then he had a cpl games where he pulled it out. Funny thing is..he did play well in playoff game but it was an abberration and Pittsburgh should have been embarrassed.

(I KNOW I should tell you how I really feel :smiley-angry046:
 

jetfandreamer

Jets Groupie
Jet Fanatics
A complete disaster move that Tanny was completely responsible for. He DESERVED to be fired after that psychotic move.

Like this says, and a lot of whatever anyone else said..this move was the beginning of the end. It was stupid, unneeded, sign of "Jet insecurity) Giants won SB, had no potential football benefit, and ruined ANY chance Sanchez had to have a good solid secure foothold on the sitution. I dont care how "secure" he was, this move had to get in his head...and the laughable part was

at the time..some Jet fan morons were actually endorsing it...idiots, he was the beneficiary w Denver of a great defense that kept games close while he stunk it up the whole game and then he had a cpl games where he pulled it out. Funny thing is..he did play well in playoff game but it was an abberration and Pittsburgh should have been embarrassed.
 

OCCH

Pro Bowl 1st Team
Jet Fanatics
Like this says, and a lot of whatever anyone else said..this move was the beginning of the end. It was stupid, unneeded, sign of "Jet insecurity) Giants won SB, had no potential football benefit, and ruined ANY chance Sanchez had to have a good solid secure foothold on the sitution. I dont care how "secure" he was, this move had to get in his head...and the laughable part was

at the time..some Jet fan morons were actually endorsing it...idiots, he was the beneficiary w Denver of a great defense that kept games close while he stunk it up the whole game and then he had a cpl games where he pulled it out. Funny thing is..he did play well in playoff game but it was an abberration and Pittsburgh should have been embarrassed.

While I wouldn't say I "endorsed" the trade, I'll openly align myself with the "idiots" that thought a 4th rounder wasn't too exorbitant a price to pay for someone with Tebow's unique talent set -- the fact that we did NOTHING to utilize those talents is where the true idiocy existed.

I still think the guy has a role in the league -- he just seems to refuse to accept what that role ideally is . . .
 

jetfandreamer

Jets Groupie
Jet Fanatics
While I wouldn't say I "endorsed" the trade, I'll openly align myself with the "idiots" that thought a 4th rounder wasn't too exorbitant a price to pay for someone with Tebow's unique talent set -- the fact that we did NOTHING to utilize those talents is where the true idiocy existed.

I still think the guy has a role in the league -- he just seems to refuse to accept what that role ideally is . . .

Sorry maybe "IDIOTS" was too strong..but thats how much I think this kid will NEVER be an NFL QB..he is thick headed..he should change to H-BACK, TE, ILB but hes stubborn to a fault..his game was good for college..but it is not good for pros....and we did nothing w his talents because he was so reluctant to change positions, and maybe that would have worked somewhere else..but NEW YORK was the wrong place for him..especially with a young QB there...I think wild cat is useless for the most part...it ruins a teams momentum if they are driving well and for the most part..you are telegraphing to the defense you are going to run, even if you do have a potential extra blocker...I think occasionally with a Rb is might be OK but thats w an athlete accustomed to finding holes cutting back etc

Im sure the times he came in..the defense was breathing a sigh of relief..whats the worst he can do..run for 10 yards??
 
U

ucrenegade

Guest
Like this says, and a lot of whatever anyone else said..this move was the beginning of the end. It was stupid, unneeded, sign of "Jet insecurity) Giants won SB, had no potential football benefit, lost draft picksd (that Tanny would have blown most likely anyway) and ruined ANY chance Sanchez had to have a good solid secure foothold on the sitution. I dont care how "secure" he was, this move had to get in his head...and the laughable part was

at the time..some Jet fan morons were actually endorsing it...idiots, he was the beneficiary w Denver of a great defense that kept games close while he stunk it up the whole game and then he had a cpl games where he pulled it out. Funny thing is..he did play well in playoff game but it was an abberration and Pittsburgh should have been embarrassed.

(I KNOW I should tell you how I really feel :smiley-angry046:


well i was one who didn't think he got a fair shot and i still don't..............the jets and the nfl are screwing him because people like jhim and he endorses jesus and his religion.
 

SackExchange

Jet Fanatic
The Mod Squad
Jet Fanatics
Jets Global
While I wouldn't say I "endorsed" the trade, I'll openly align myself with the "idiots" that thought a 4th rounder wasn't too exorbitant a price to pay for someone with Tebow's unique talent set -- the fact that we did NOTHING to utilize those talents is where the true idiocy existed.

I still think the guy has a role in the league -- he just seems to refuse to accept what that role ideally is . . .

I will own up for being someone who felt this way about the deal. I knew Tebow was not a legit starting QB. But the cost in picks wasn't that high, his salary was relatively low, and the Jets needed help at QB and in providing multiple looks.

I'll never bash them for the trade, since I was relatively on board. I will bash them for how they used Tebow. Then again, I'll also bash Tebow for not being remotely realistic about his potential role in the NFL.
 

OCCH

Pro Bowl 1st Team
Jet Fanatics
I will own up for being someone who felt this way about the deal. I knew Tebow was not a legit starting QB. But the cost in picks wasn't that high, his salary was relatively low, and the Jets needed help at QB and in providing multiple looks.

I'll never bash them for the trade, since I was relatively on board. I will bash them for how they used Tebow. Then again, I'll also bash Tebow for not being remotely realistic about his potential role in the NFL.

+1

From the moment we signed him I NEVER looked at him as a potential replacement for Sanchez. Yet as a change of pace? Or converted to another position? I won't pretend to know what to do with him, but there should have been SOMETHING we could have done to take advantage of his physical abilities, and I was willing to risk a mid-rounder to try.

If we tried and he refused, so be it -- but he doesn't strike me as the kind of guy who would directly disobey orders. MUCH more likely is the theory that we had no idea how to use him, which makes the whole thought of even CONSIDERING trading for the guy mind-boggling . . .
 

hobson54

Transition Tagged
Jet Fanatics
well i was one who didn't think he got a fair shot and i still don't..............the jets and the nfl are screwing him because people like jhim and he endorses jesus and his religion.


i think the reason tebow isn't in the nfl has a lot more to do with his inability to throw a forward pass at a level that resembles a professional QB and nothing at all to due with his religion.
 

hobson54

Transition Tagged
Jet Fanatics
i'm often one accused of being a jets homer and cheerleader (an accusation that probably has some truth to it), but this was one deal that i absolutely loathed from the second i heard it. i knew it was a disaster waiting to happen, and sadly, i was proven right.
 

OCCH

Pro Bowl 1st Team
Jet Fanatics
i'm often one accused of being a jets homer and cheerleader (an accusation that probably has some truth to it), but this was one deal that i absolutely loathed from the second i heard it. i knew it was a disaster waiting to happen, and sadly, i was proven right.

We like to act like the Tebow era was one of the darkest ones in Jets history, but the reality is we barely heard a peep from the guy, and the only time his name came up was when we ran him up the middle for 2.5 yards.

Maybe it's just me, but I can't call that experience "a disaster". Gholston was WAY worse. Holmes was WAY worse. Kyle frickin' Wilson was WAY worse. (Don't make me invoke the name of Kotite).

If that phantom 4th rounder was destined to be the next TB, so be it. I'll chalk it up as one more bad decision in a LONG list of ones this franchise has made, and NOWHERE near the top of that list . . .
 

hobson54

Transition Tagged
Jet Fanatics
We like to act like the Tebow era was one of the darkest ones in Jets history, but the reality is we barely heard a peep from the guy, and the only time his name came up was when we ran him up the middle for 2.5 yards.

Maybe it's just me, but I can't call that experience "a disaster". Gholston was WAY worse. Holmes was WAY worse. Kyle frickin' Wilson was WAY worse. (Don't make me invoke the name of Kotite).

If that phantom 4th rounder was destined to be the next TB, so be it. I'll chalk it up as one more bad decision in a LONG list of ones this franchise has made, and NOWHERE near the top of that list . . .


well the tebow trade being a disaster should be evaluated separately from other poor decisions. but i don't look at the "cost" of it as just the squandered future draft pick.

i also factor the distraction it caused to the team. starting from the press conference held to introduce the backup QB and the questions ad naseuem faced by the players on the team. add to that the practice reps which were taken away from running the base offense to install the tebow wildcat plays. and to that, you have the disruption to the offense caused by play-calling trying to get tebow into the game. i'm sure splitting mark out wide so they can run tebow for a 2 year gain was the best way to help mark develop as a QB. and it certainly seemed to kill momentum whenever they went with the gimmick play.

now was it the worst move in the history of the team? no, sadly it's not even close. but that doesn't make the idiotic decision to trade a useful pick for a gimmick player and "punt protector" any less of a disaster.

and finally, for those of us who like to frequent jets messageboards, it brought along the masses of tebow faithful who inundated our old scout board (and i'm sure other boards people here posted on at the time), only to never be heard from again when their messiah was let go.
 
U

ucrenegade

Guest
well the tebow trade being a disaster should be evaluated separately from other poor decisions. but i don't look at the "cost" of it as just the squandered future draft pick.

i also factor the distraction it caused to the team. starting from the press conference held to introduce the backup QB and the questions ad naseuem faced by the players on the team. add to that the practice reps which were taken away from running the base offense to install the tebow wildcat plays. and to that, you have the disruption to the offense caused by play-calling trying to get tebow into the game. i'm sure splitting mark out wide so they can run tebow for a 2 year gain was the best way to help mark develop as a QB. and it certainly seemed to kill momentum whenever they went with the gimmick play.

now was it the worst move in the history of the team? no, sadly it's not even close. but that doesn't make the idiotic decision to trade a useful pick for a gimmick player and "punt protector" any less of a disaster.

and finally, for those of us who like to frequent jets messageboards, it brought along the masses of tebow faithful who inundated our old scout board (and i'm sure other boards people here posted on at the time), only to never be heard from again when their messiah was let go.

everything you mentioned is beause we had idiot coaches and coaching staff nothing tebow did at all but yet he gets blamed.

I am sure pitt saw some of his passes yes they aren't like manning or anyone else but he had more success at the qb spot than we have had in oh 6-8 years now.
 
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