I get this. And I get what @NCJetsfan is saying as well. I’ll always be a Jets fan barring major changes like moving the team away from NY/NJ, but my investment in the team is flexible and trending at an all time low. They can literally win back my time and investment in the team, but right now they’re the cryptocurrency equivalent of dogecoin.
That's certainly your choice, but I feel sorry for you that you're putting a team over your own self.
I was rooting for a Jets loss and hope we go 0-16 to secure the number one pick, and I was joking about hoping we get our own Hail Mary. It’s just in the split second moment of each individual play you want to root on your team even in these circumstances. I understand we owe the Jets nothing but there’s a reason we’re all still here. They’ve been a laughing stock and dumpster fire for a long time, so why haven’t we all left yet? I mean short of something insane, most of us will still be here forever. The Jets keeping a shitty coach another year, while ridiculous and infuriating, would not be a breaking point for me. Almost every season I’ve watched as a fan has been with a shitty head coach if I’m being honest about it
Fair enough but my take is that supporting a football team is not dependent on the win loss record. Either do it or don't. I can understand people getting fed up with a consistently disappointing experience such that they drop their interest in the sport completely. To an extent I can also see why people have a second team allegiance if you go and live somewhere else. What I cannot accept is the concept of switching from one team whose results are bad to another because they are doing better. Even though The Chiefs are good they can get by without my support. My interest in the sport will remain. My support of The Jets will remain with it. I get across from the UK for games regularly enough and will carry on doing so.
https://nypost.com/2020/12/09/marcus-mayes-gregg-williams-critiques-showed-why-jets-must-keep-him/ I've always thought Marcus Maye was the better Safety between him and Adams, and he has certainly not been a diva like Adams, so I'm not going to completely trash him, but this article holding him up as the leader of the team overlooks the fact that while Marcus was quick to call out Williams's call as the wrong coverage, where was he during that call? Wasn't he on the field? Why didn't he call a T.O. if he thought it was wrong? If he was so sure that it was such a bad call, even if the players are under Gase's orders to not call T.O., he should've called one anyway...the refs would've honored it, and then they could've made sure that was what Williams actually wanted. To me, that's what a real leader does.
Umm. Does that also mean that Darnold should have checked off the run on third and six and called a play action pass?