Jets must embrace potential QB reality they’ve tried to avoid

Cutting against the grain of franchise tradition, the 2022 Jets have said and done a lot of smart things. Their ranks include many talented and accountable players, and people who know what they are doing in the roles of general manager and head coach. 

But as the Jets prepare for a critical game at Minnesota and the beginning of a six-game playoff push, they are struggling with an elementary concept. Though there’s a chance Mike White will be a career journeyman who gets red hot here and there, there’s also a chance White will be the Jets’ long-term franchise quarterback and, at some point, the first man under center to lead them to a Super Bowl since Joe Namath. 

The Jets need to put out a welcome mat to that possibility, and frankly, it doesn’t sound like they want to. Asked Thursday if he and head coach Robert Saleh are merely open to the scenario that White turns out to be the guy the franchise has been forever looking for — despite the organization’s investment in Zach Wilson, second-overall pick in the 2021 draft — offensive coordinator Mike LaFleur scrambled out of the pocket faster than a confused and/or overwhelmed Wilson ever did. 

“That’s nothing in my thought process; you’d have to ask Saleh,” LaFleur said. “I can’t imagine that’s anything in his thought process right now.” 

Yeah, why would the surprise uncovering of a potential high-level quarterback in the middle of a playoff race ever be in a football coach’s thought process? 

Sure, LaFleur went on to say that everyone’s locked in on the Vikings, something he likely felt obligated to say. But his stated enthusiasm for White’s brilliant work against Chicago in Sunday’s rain was best described as muted, three days after Saleh committed an unforced error by stating that when the Jets “feel like Zach is ready to roll, he’s going to roll.” 

Mike White
Mike White can prove that he’s the Jets’ quarterback of the future.
Bill Kostroun/New York Post

Say what? How about following the lead of the players (who clearly adore White) and the fans (who clearly adore him just as much) and give the 27-year-old veteran a full shot? 

And by the way, since when has Wilson ever looked ready to roll? 

Saleh has seemingly devoted more thought to the idea of restoring Wilson as the starter than he has to the thought that White is never, ever giving back this job. Last year, after White shredded the Super Bowl-bound Bengals for 405 yards and three touchdowns, Saleh was willing to say of the 171st pick in the 2018 draft, “Anything is possible. … I can be the next Vince Lombardi.” 

This time around, when asked if White can put together enough big Sundays to earn the full-time job, Vince Lombardi II maintained he didn’t want to entertain hypotheticals. He did say that his full intent is to get Wilson ready to play. 

So let’s rush to replace the quarterback who’s thrown for more than 300 yards twice in four starts with the quarterback who’s thrown for more than 300 yards once in 20 starts? 

Richard Sherman, a fifth-round pick who became a five-time Pro Bowl cornerback, is among many NFL voices having a hard time understanding this one. “If we just took everything away and swapped the stories of Zach Wilson and Mike White,” Sherman said on his podcast, “and if was just Mike White was drafted No. 2, and he’s playing this well and teammates are saying this about him, you’d be like, they made the right pick. They’ve got a franchise guy.” 

That’s the way it should work, anyway. White had that brutal four-interception outing against Buffalo last year, but he seemed ready the previous week to tear apart Indianapolis (7-for-11, 95 yards, 1 touchdown) before getting hurt early. So that would be three quality starts out of four and a career completion percentage of 68.8, which dwarfs Wilson’s 55.6. 

Robert Saleh must embrace the Jets’ potential quarterback reality.
Bill Kostroun/New York Post

White said he wasn’t focused on winning the starting job for keeps because, someone once told him, “The NFL is 17 one-week seasons. … When you win one week you’re on top of the world. You lose next week and it’s the end of the world.” 

As he headed from the showers to his locker Thursday, with just a towel wrapped around his waist, White passed by the fully clothed Wilson, who was leaving the room. The quarterback who had been waived four times by the Jets — four — was getting ready for the starter’s weekly press conference that used to be scheduled for ol’ No. 2. 

“That’s just the nature of the sport,” White said of the dramatic turnover. 

Zach Wilson looks on at Jets practice on Thursday.
Bill Kostroun/New York Post
Mike White speaks to reporters after Jets practice on Thursday.
Bill Kostroun/New York Post

And once again, like last year, White pounced when the ball bounced his way. LaFleur said Wilson’s replacement “took what the defense gave him” and “just played within the offense” and that the line “protected better than we did [for Wilson] versus New England” and that receivers getting separation “makes the quarterback’s job a lot easier.” 

All true. But neither the coordinator nor Saleh sound terribly eager to accept the possibility that Mike White is just a better football player than Zach Wilson. And they need to get open-minded about that sooner rather than later. 

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Jets look ready to finally in play meaningful December games

The Jets don’t play this Thursday. Thursday will be a practice day, Day 2 of their preparation for a critical game in Minnesota three days later. But in so many ways, Thursday will have profound meaning for the Jets.

Thursday, midnight, the calendar flips from November to December.

It will be Dec. 1. The Jets will be 7-4. They will be in position to make the playoffs for the first time in a dozen years, but best of all they will play games that matter in December. In some NFL precincts that would induce a yawn and a ho-hum.

Around here, it’s big news.

So, sure, disparage Sunday’s opponent, the woeful Bears, as much as you like. Yes, they are a bad team with an abysmal defense. Yes, they were absent the one player who makes them remotely watchable, quarterback Justin Fields, down with a bum shoulder.

But the Jets beat Chicago soundly, 31-10. They shrugged off an uncharacteristically slow start by the defense. They shrugged off the weather, the sky spitting rain from opening kickoff to final gun. They shrugged off a boisterous week in which the fair-haired quarterback of tomorrow became the street-clothes-wearing third-stringer of today.

“We ignored all the noise,” Jets coach Robert Saleh said about 15 minutes after his giddy players sloshed off the MetLife Stadium field. “The guys did a great job executing.”

Mike White
Bill Kostroun

They did. They spotted the Bears a 10-7 lead even after Mike F. White led them on a 75-yard touchdown march on their first series of the game, the defense looking like maybe they still had a bit of a Thanksgiving hangover.

But the moment White hooked up with Garrett Wilson on a 54-yard scoring play with 4:57 left in the second quarter to give the Jets the lead back, the tenor and the feel of the game changed permanently. The defense allowed no more points. The offense worked as efficiently as it has in years, White piling up 315 yards and scattering his 22 completions to 10 different receivers.

Jets running back Ty Johnson (25) celebrates his touchdown with a spike during the third quarter.
Bill Kostroun

“That was too much fun, and it was reflected in the score,” crowed Elijah Moore, a forgotten man for much of the season who caught two balls, one for 42 yards, one a 22-yard touchdown that pushed the Jets’ lead to 24-10 in the third. “That’s real New York Jets football. That’s the definition of team football.”

Moore would get no argument from the other 52 men clad in green or any of the 77,963 inside MetLife who enjoyed a good three-hour soaking but still seemed to be having a hell of a time, chanting both for their J-E-T-S and for their quarterback, presently the leader in the clubhouse for the office of mayor of Florham Park.

“It’s awesome to go out there playing football with your friends,” White said. “It was a complete team win.”

The most encouraging part of Sunday is that the Jets, almost to a man, enjoyed their win without getting carried away by it, with the underlying understanding that there is still work to do, and a lot of it.

Playing meaningful December games is a lot different than winning them, and the assignment next week — against the 9-2 Vikings, at Minneapolis’ U.S. Bank Stadium — kicks off a stout two-week gauntlet that will include a return date with the Bills at Orchard Park.

Jets tight end C.J. Uzomah (87) and guard Laken Tomlinson (78) celebrate the win over the Bears.
Bill Kostroun

“Our guys don’t flinch,” Saleh said, and what’s also clear is they don’t much carry things over week-to-week — positively and negatively — from week-to-week, either. Part of that was undoubtedly the presence of White, who didn’t only play a terrific game but by his mere insertion as QB1 reflected a simple yet essential part of the meritocracy Saleh is trying to establish.

You perform well, you play.

You don’t, you sit. No matter your draft-day pedigree.

It is a fine lesson to teach a young quarterback like Zach Wilson, and it is an even greater message to send to the other folks on the team who have pushed the Jets to where they are, to the doorstep of December, to the precipice of a playoff push. The season stopped being about moral victories months ago. Only the real ones will do now.

“We need to keep the main thing the main thing,” said C.J. Mosely, the soul of the defense who had an interception, repeating a mantra he instills in his teammates often. “We haven’t scratched the surface of how great we can be.”

The best part of that? If he’s right, the Jets have the opportunity to back up those words. Next week in Minnesota would be wonderful place to start.

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Jets’ abysmal offensive day isn’t shaking belief in Joe Flacco

Joe Flacco had been a sitting duck behind a makeshift offensive line and those Jets fans still awake and trapped watching a three-yards-and-a-cloud of dust offense flashed back to last Halloween when Mike White (405 yards, three touchdowns) showed up one afternoon as Cinderella.

And so the “Mike White” chants began with 4:48 remaining in the third quarter of Ravens 24, Jets 9 on Opening Day.

I asked running back Michael Carter if he heard the “Mike White” chant.

“No. I think that’s bulls—, though,” he told The Post. “I love Mike White. I love him, and I know he can spin it and know everything, but you gotta believe in the guys that are rolling out there. I know Mike White would have done a good job, but it is like disrespectful to Joe.

“And you see this in the NFL where vets, and guys who are super-accomplished, the NFL tries to throw ’em to the side. Because it’s a quote, ‘young man’s league.’ He doesn’t deserve that.”

Flacco did not. But when you are the quarterback of a Sominex offense with all the energy and urgency of a turtle, it is inevitably your fault, and

It is rite of football Sundays that when the starting quarterback cannot for whatever reason sniff the end zone, the backup quarterback becomes the people’s choice.

Woe Flacco.

Quarterback of the ALL BRAKE NO GAS offense.

Take Flight?

No. Take Fright.

Joe Flacco is sacked during the Jets’ loss to the Ravens.
Bill Kostroun

Flacco finished 37 of 59 for 307 yards, one garbage-time touchdown and one interception. Flacco was under siege, an anachronism in a league designed for mobile quarterbacks, and victimized by fumbles by Breece Hall and Tyler Conklin, and a slip over the middle by surprise starting tight end Lawrence Cager on his pick.

“We gotta keep him off the ground,” Carter said. “It goes back to that. We gotta keep him off the ground. He is a great quarterback when he’s upright, just like all the quarterbacks — Patrick Mahomes, he’s great when he’s upright. Josh Allen, he’s great when he’s upright. Zach Wilson, he’s great when he’s upright.”

Wishful thinking there on Wilson, who would have been more effective running for his life than Flacco, to be sure.

It is no great surprise that Flacco could not elevate the players around him against these Ravens. For the Jets to win a game like this, Flacco needs greater support from his protectors and playmakers and his defense and special teams. Because he is not Lamar Jackson, or Allen, or Mahomes.

“There were plays when we weren’t helping Joe,” Robert Saleh said, “and there were plays when he wasn’t helping either.”

Ominously, the psychology of results tells us that a team teaches itself what it is on the field (thank you, Bill Parcells), and Ya Gotta Believe has yet to make its way into the franchise.

“I just keep going back to just the belief in ourselves that we’re good,” Flacco said, “and I’m talking to myself too. I think every time we take the field we just have to truly believe that we’re capable, ’cause we are. And I think that’s kinda why we’re missing some of that little juice here and there to kinda get us over the hump. And like I said, I’m talking to myself, not just young guys and things like that.”

Breece Hall fumbles the ball during the Jets’ loss to the Ravens.
Charles Wenzelberg/N.Y. Post

Meet The Losing Syndrome. Try your best not to listen to Same Old Jets.

“When you have young guys that haven’t played in this league, and then when you have a bunch of veterans that just haven’t won consistently over the last couple of years, you have to learn how to win football games, and create that winning culture, and winning on Sundays is a big part of that.”

Of course Flacco did not point a finger on his first-half interception.

“I’m gonna just wish that I just took some of the 5-yard checkdowns earlier in the game,” he said. “The safety [Marcus Williams] was driving, and you have a little miscue on running the route and next thing you know you’re in a bad position.”

Of course he did not throw his offensive line under the bus.

“Those guys fought all day and I thought they played really well together,” Flacco said. “We all have to make little improvements like I talked about for us to take that next step.”

One Jets fan can hardly watch the team’s loss to the Ravens on Sunday.
Charles Wenzelberg/ NY Post

Conklin leaped to Flacco’s defense.

“He’s the same player he was, he can make all the throws, he’s smart, he’s a leader, we all love playing with him,” Conklin said. “We gotta be better for him too.”

Getting dynamic rookie WR Garrett Wilson more playing time in the first half would be a good start, and Forgotten Man C.J. Uzomah as well. Conklin fumbled away an early first down at the Baltimore 21 and Corey Davis had an early drop and Hall a fourth-quarter fumble and time for a talk already.

“We had a talk in the locker room after the game,” Uzomah said. “We’re not going to let it happen again.”

Conklin: “It’s not the same s–t. We got a good team.”

Positive Vibes Only more than ever.

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