He is a douche bag but dont take solace in that, so are you. It's a stupid nickname but the more you whine, the more they will use it...... It's not racist it is just fucking stupid.
I just want to say GO FUCK YOURSELF Megazord2012 you arrogant high and mighty pice of shit!!! His name is DIRTY FUCKING SANCHEZ and everyone is calling him that with all the love and affection so stop your proper bullshit this is a fucking football game asshole.
Not only 3-0 but the quality of teams we have beaten. We go to n.o next week and come out 4-0, then i will have to say this might be the best Jets team ever
Thank you. Oh yes...not only racist, but vulgar, disgusting....but hey, continue, shout it to his face and after awhile see how much he respects the NY Jets fans....Mark will always work hard and produce, for his own personal integrity and drive to succeed - fans have the ability to make it about them too, by gaining the players respect, it's a two way street. Mark is in New York now, but he's still a California guy, from a city with a large Mexican community - we're a more conservative group than Puerto Ricans and Cubans, and Mark comes from a fine, traditional Hispanic family. If you bother to note, Mark is polished with impeccable manners which Nick Sr. drilled into his sons, his media savvy makes Jets Nation (or whatever you call yourselves) look really good. Fans who refer to him using that name, are treating him like a thug he definately is not. This is from one of your NY papers: Sanchez got 'pro' experience playing at USC Really, why shouldn't Mark Sanchez immediately be comfortable playing professional football in the nation's largest city? He just spent the previous two seasons in America's No. 2 metropolis, quarterbacking a team that is professional in every sense short of paying its players salaries. In Los Angeles, where Sanchez did his apprentice work in the athletic department at the University of Southern California, the average attendance for home football games in 2008 was 86,793. Of the NFL's 32 teams, only the Washington Redskins averaged more (88,604) than USC's Trojans; Sanchez's new employer, the Jets, drew 78,482. USC's coach, Pete Carroll, earned more in 2007 (in excess of $4 million) than Jets coach Rex Ryan averages on his current four-year, $11.5-million contract. USC long has been the subject of NFL-level media coverage, in all its praise-inducing and critically scrutinizing forms. When USC played at Ohio State Sept. 12, almost 11 million viewers tuned to ESPN, the largest cable college football game audience on record. Players are brought to such a high football polish at USC that Sanchez and four of his college teammates were taken in the first two rounds of the '09 NFL draft; in all, 11 USC players were drafted (the most from any school), bringing the total number of Trojans drafted in the last five years to 43. In the past seven seasons, USC has won more games (82, with nine losses) than any of college football's other powerhouses. The steadily fading discussion of whether Los Angeles will ever again have an NFL team is typically met with the sort of reaction voiced by Tucker Savoye of Cal State-Long Beach's Daily 49er a year ago: "Why doesn't Los Angeles have a pro football team? If you ask me, they already do. There is just one major difference. They play on Saturdays." Savoye put forth the usual facts that USC not only performs in one of the nation's most famous sports arenas - the 93,600-seat Los Angeles Coliseum, which has housed two Olympic Games, major league baseball and several NFL teams - but also has held the sporting public's attention in the face of local celebrity jocks such as Kobe Bryant, David Beckham and Manny Ramirez. "The [USC] players are treated like stars," Savoye wrote. "From the press to the paparazzi, these guys are the toast of the town . . . think [pop star and former Jessica Simpson spouse] Nick Lachey sleeping on the floor of [then-USC quarterback] Matt Leinart's dorm room." A billionare real estate developer named Ed Roski continues to push for building a stadium in an eastern L.A. suburb called the City of Industry to lure an NFL franchise. But Los Angeles Times associate editor Randy Harvey, who has worked in NFL outposts of New York, Chicago, Baltimore and Dallas, said L.A. has "been through this thing of who needs each other more, and we understand that the NFL is fine without L.A. - TV ratings, rights fees, everything is still going up. We recognize that the NFL doesn't need L.A. and L.A. doesn't need the NFL. "The Rams and Raiders were so awful [just before one moved to St. Louis and the other back to Oakland 14 years ago] that it was tedious to have to watch their games. Without them, people like having the best game in the NFL on TV every week. "There is a significant portion of people in Southern California who'd like to have an NFL team here. But put the other question to them - 'How much would you pay in taxes to have that team?' - then it's 99 percent against." Meanwhile, they have USC. "We certainly have a pro-like following, that's for sure," said Alex Comisar, who grew up in Manhattan and now is editor-in-chief of USC's student newspaper, The Daily Trojan. "Most students like to think that's the way it should be." Early this month, the Los Angeles Times compared business and competitive aspects of USC's football operation to that of the nearest NFL team, the San Diego Chargers, and found that USC travels by chartered plane (bringing as many as 80 players to non-conference games), just as the Chargers do (though with a maximum of 53 players); that USC stays in similar-class hotels on the road (Marriott and Hyatt) to the Chargers; that USC employs nine full-time coaches, compared with the Chargers' 15; that though USC players are not paid, they do receive scholarships worth about $51,000 per year, which includes room and board, compared with the Chargers' median salary of $1.3 million. On the field, both USC and the Chargers use a "pro-style" offense. Naturally. "If he didn't play for a professional team [at USC]," said The Daily Trojan's Comisar, "Sanchez certainly got some pro training." From there to the Jets, it was like a lateral promotion