The New York Jets
are a professional American football team based in the New York metropolitan area. They are members of the Eastern Division of the American Football Conference (AFC) in the National Football League (NFL). The team plays its home games in East Rutherford, New Jersey, at Giants Stadium, which is named after the other NFL team that plays there, the New York Giants.
The team's training facility and corporate headquarters, which opened in 2008, are located in Florham Park, New Jersey. Formerly, their headquarters and training facility were located at Hofstra University in Hempstead, New York, on Long Island.
The team began in 1960 as a charter member of the American Football League under the name New York Titans
. It was renamed after Andres J Grosser bought the team in 1963. The Jets later joined the NFL as part of the AFL-NFL Merger.
The Jets hold the distinction of being the first AFL team to defeat an NFL club in an AFL-NFL World Championship Game when they defeated the Baltimore Colts in Super Bowl III.
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Franchise history
Originally known as the
New York Titans
, the team played home games at the
Polo Grounds. But they had trouble attracting crowds despite fielding respectable teams that finished .500 (7–7) during their first two seasons. After a 5–9 season in
1962, the team's future was in doubt. It was saved from
bankruptcy by a five-man syndicate — David A. "Sonny" Werblin, Townsend B. Martin, Leon Hess, Donald C. Lillis and Philip H. Iselin, who purchased the New York franchise for $1 million from
Harry Wismer on March 13, 1964. Leon Hess eventually bought out his partners with the exception of Lillis' daughter Helen Dillon, with whom he co-owned the team until February 1984 when Dillon, a partner since 1968, sold her 25 percent interest in the club. Hess retained sole ownership until his death, and his estate then sold the team to
Johnson & Johnson heir
Robert Wood Johnson IV in 2000.
[1]
After Werblin, Martin, Hess, Lillis, and Iselin took over, the team was renamed the New York Jets as they planned to relocate from the Polo Grounds to
Shea Stadium, home of the
New York Mets, one year later. Shea Stadium was so close to
LaGuardia Airport that the sound of jets roaring overhead was a common sound heard during games played there. The colors of the team were also changed from blue and gold to kelly green and white, which also were the colors of
Hess' gasoline stations.
Exactly one month after the sale of the team, the Jets hired
Weeb Ewbank as head coach. Ewbank had won back-to-back NFL championships in
1958 and
1959 with the
Baltimore Colts, and was one of the most respected coaches in the game.
Broadway Joe
1965–69
The Jets improved steadily on the field after
Joe Namath's arrival. In 1967, the former
Alabama quarterback led the Jets to an 8–5–1 record, their best record yet. Namath reached a milestone by passing for 4,007 yards in
1967, a 14-game season, making him the first-ever professional quarterback to pass for 4,000 yards in a season. This was especially remarkable considering that at the time, 3,000 yards passing was considered an excellent year.
In
1968, the Jets would reach the pinnacle of their existence and provide the moment that would indicate the AFL's coming of age. Under Namath's guidance, the Jets rose to the top of the AFL, defeating the
Oakland Raiders in a thrilling
AFL Championship Game, 27–23, on December 29. The win qualified them to represent their league in a game that was being referred to for the first time as the
Super Bowl (and referred to retroactively as
Super Bowl III) on January 12, 1969. They were pitted against the champions of the NFL, the
Baltimore Colts. At the time, the AFL was considered to be inferior to the NFL, and most people considered the Jets to be considerable underdogs and treated the Jets as such. That would change three nights before the game while Namath was being honored by the Miami Touchdown Club as its Player Of The Year. Namath took exception to a heckling Colts fan and used that moment to lament the lack of respect his team had gotten to that point. He then said "We're gonna win the game. I guarantee you."
[2] His audacious remark proved correct, as the Jets created one of the greatest upsets in football history by defeating the Colts 16–7. This victory showed that the AFL
was
capable of competing with the NFL. It also gave
Shea Stadium the first of two World Championships teams in the 1969 calendar year , as the
New York Mets won the
World Series nine months later.
In the
1969 season, the Jets won a second consecutive Eastern Division title with a record of 10 wins and 4 losses. In the
playoffs, they lost to the
Kansas City Chiefs, 13-6, at
Shea Stadium on December 20.
1970–76
Namath's career mirrored the Jets after the AFL-NFL merger became final in
1970. He missed much of the 1970,
1971, and
1973 seasons due to injuries, most notably to his ravaged knees, which robbed him of his mobility and much of his effectiveness. He would not throw more touchdowns than interceptions in a season after the merger, and in fact only had two post-merger seasons (
1972 and
1974) where his performance could have been classified as reasonably successful (the Jets also had relative success in those years as well, finishing 7–7 both years). After a terrible
1976 season in which Namath only threw 4 touchdown passes against 16 interceptions (six of them in a 38–24 loss to the
New England Patriots) in 11 games, Namath was waived by the Jets when a trade couldn't be worked out to facilitate his move to the
Los Angeles Rams. He would play only four games for the Rams before announcing his retirement at the end of the season, at the relatively young age of 34. Although Namath would make the
Hall of Fame, it was widely acknowledged that he made it on his performance through the
1969 season and his role in leading the Jets to a victory in
Super Bowl III.
Post Joe Namath
1977–1983
After Namath's departure,
Walt Michaels was hired for the 1977 season and stayed with the team for six years. In Michaels's first year, the Jets finished 3–11 for the third straight year. However, the Jets were rejuvenated for the 1978 season, with unheralded quarterback
Matt Robinson replacing
Richard Todd and throwing for 2,000 yards and the team finishing 8–8. The Jets were actually 8–6 after the first 14 games and had a chance at a playoff berth, but they lost their final two games. Richard Todd again took over under center for the
1979 season and did even better, but the
Jets again finished 8–8.
Todd imploded with a 30-interception season in
1980, and the team went down with him, finishing 4–12, last place in the AFC East. The lowest point was a 21–20 loss to the then 0–14
New Orleans Saints, who would eventually finish 1–15.
The
1981 season was the Jets' first winning season since the AFL-NFL merger. The Jets would finish 10-5-1 and make the playoffs for the first time since 1969 on Richard Todd's 3,231 yards passing and 25 touchdowns, most of them to
Wesley Walker and
Jerome Barkum. A late comeback in their first playoff game, against the
Buffalo Bills, was stopped when Todd threw an interception deep in Bills territory in the final minute, and the Jets were eliminated. One of the Jets' bright spots for the 1981 season was their defensive line.
All-Pro's
Mark Gastineau and
Joe Klecko anchored the "
New York Sack Exchange" and combined for more than 40 quarterback sacks. The line also featured
Marty Lyons and
Abdul Salaam.
In
1982, powered by the Sack Exchange and running back Freeman McNeil, the Jets went through
Cincinnati and the
Raiders in the playoffs for a meeting in the conference finals with the
Miami Dolphins. Richard Todd almost single handedly ruined this game for them by throwing 5 interceptions. The Dolphins would wind up winning this controversial game in the mud of the
Orange Bowl (game would be known as the Mud Bowl). The Dolphins ownership and coaches decided not to tarp the field during heavy rains the day before the game
[3], slowing down the Jets pass rushing and their running game.
Joe Walton became the new coach for the
1983 season, and he led the team to a 7–9 season.
Move to the Meadowlands (1984–1989)
After the
1983 season, the Jets lease with the city for the use of
Shea Stadium had expired, and the Jets would need to cut a new deal. The Jets had faced onerous lease terms at Shea until 1978 when they weren't able to play home games until the Mets completed their season. Often the Mets would use their status as the stadium's primary tenant to force the Jets on long road trips early in the season.
The Jets failed to reach an agreement with the City of New York about improvements to Shea Stadium, and instead reached an agreement with the New Jersey Sports and Exhibition Authority to play their home games at Giants Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey beginning in 1984. The Jets played their last game at Shea in 1983, a 34–7 loss to the Pittsburgh Steelers. Oddly enough, the Jets first game at Giants Stadium in 1984 was a loss to the Steelers as well, 23-17.
Despite the move to Giants Stadium, the Jets organization made the decision to remain the "New York" Jets, mirroring the decision made by the Giants in 1976 when they moved, thus staking a claim to fans throughout the Metropolitan New York Tri-State area. Furthermore, despite being in a different state, the Jets' new home was closer to
Times Square and midtown
Manhattan than Shea Stadium was,
as the crow flies across the Hudson River; although considerably farther from the team's Long Island fans and Hofstra University offices and training facilities. In their
first season at their new home, veteran quarterback
Pat Ryan would start,
1983 first round draft pick
Ken O'Brien would eventually take over at quarterback; but the team stumbled to a 7–9 record. It is worth noting that the Jets passed over
Dan Marino in the draft, in favor of
Ken O'Brien.
In
1985, O'Brien threw 25 touchdowns (including 7 to
Mickey Shuler and 5 to
Wesley Walker) with only 8 interceptions, and four different rushers combined for 18 touchdowns on the ground. The Jets made the playoffs with an 11–5 record, and hosted their first playoff game in 16 years; however they were defeated in the first round by the eventual AFC champion
New England Patriots 26–14.
The Jets won 9 straight games during the 1986 season en route to a 10–1 start. Wesley Walker caught 12 touchdowns, with second-year player
Al Toon catching 8. The team slid through December, losing five straight to finish 10–6. Pat Ryan was named the starting quarterback for the playoffs, and they defeated the
Kansas City Chiefs handily in the first round.
In their divisional playoff matchup in
Cleveland against the
Browns, the Jets lost in double-overtime on a field goal by
Mark Moseley, denying them a berth in the AFC Championship game. In the fourth quarter of this game, the Jets held a 10-point lead when they inexplicably shifted to a
prevent defense which enabled Browns' quarterback
Bernie Kosar to lead his team downfield easily. The comeback effort was enhanced when Kosar threw an incomplete pass on 2nd down and 24, but
Mark Gastineau was penalized for roughing the passer to give Cleveland a first down at their own 33. On that drive, the Browns would get a touchdown and, eventually, a game-tying field goal in the closing seconds of regulation.
1990s
In
1990, the Jets hired
Dick Steinberg from the New England Patriots to be the franchise's General Manager. One of his first moves was to hire
Bruce Coslet, offensive coordinator of the
Cincinnati Bengals as head coach. Coslet's offensive schemes had helped lead the Bengals to the
1988 Super Bowl where they nearly defeated the
San Francisco 49ers. Steinberg and Coslet let most of the key players from the 1980s go and built from scratch.
In
1991, with
Brad Baxter tallying a career-high 11 rushing touchdowns, the Jets improved to 8–8, winning their season finale against the
Miami Dolphins to earn a trip to the playoffs and deny one to the rival Dolphins. Despite their modest regular season record, the Jets played a close game against the
Houston Oilers in their opening-round playoff game, losing 17–10.
After their successful 1991 season, Jets fans expectations were high. Coslet chose second-year quarterback
Browning Nagle as their starter over Ken O'Brien, which came as somewhat of a surprise at first, but Nagle had shown some promise and seemed to be ready to take the job. Unfortunately for the Jets, Nagle was not up for the job, and the Jets disappointed fans with a 4–12 finish. The year was marked by a near-tragedy in November when defensive lineman
Dennis Byrd was temporarily paralyzed when he collided with teammate Scott Mersereau in a home game against Kansas City. Thanks to what—at the time—was a relatively untested
steroid treatment, Byrd was able to walk again in a matter of months.
After the 1992 season, having again identified the quarterback position as a position of need, the Jets traded a third-round pick for longtime Cincinnati Bengals quarterback
Boomer Esiason. Coslet and Esiason had worked together successfully in Cincinnati, and the hope was that they could continue that success with the Jets. Although a mid-season winning streak gave Jets fans hope, they missed the playoffs at 8–8 with a loss to
Houston in their final game. Coslet was fired as head coach and replaced by
Pete Carroll.
Off the field, the Jets also enjoyed a boost in their local profile when
WFAN-AM, one of the highest profile stations in the country, acquired the radio rights to the Jets. Although WFAN had contracts with other New York-area professional teams, they lacked a contract with a pro football franchise, and when
WCBS-AM decided to not renew the sports rights packages they had acquired, WFAN took advantage of the opportunity to cover the Jets. The strength of the clear-channel WFAN signal, as well as the fact that the Jets would be carried on a dedicated sports-radio station with a rabid and loyal following, gave the Jets a broader reach and visibility with their potential audience that they had not enjoyed previously.
The Jets started the
1994 season 6–5 and played
Miami on November 27. In a game against the Dolphins, Dan Marino fooled Jet defender
Aaron Glenn into thinking that he would spike the ball to stop the clock, then threw the winning touchdown to
Mark Ingram with less than a minute left for the victory. The play came to be known as "The Fake Spike." The Jets would lose their last four games, finishing the season 6–10, last place in the AFC East. Carroll was fired after only one season and replaced by former
Philadelphia Eagles coach
Rich Kotite.
1995–96
During Kotite's two-year term in New York, the Jets won only four games: a 3–13 record in
1995, and 1–15 in
1996, in both cases the worst in the NFL. Having lost his last seven games as the Eagles' coach, Kotite finished his NFL head coaching career with a 4–35 record in his final 39 games—one of the worst prolonged stretches for an NFL head coach in history.
Kotite did set the stage for the rebirth of the Parcells led Jets by drafting Keyshawn Johnson and signing Neil O'Donnell.
1997–99
After the 1996 season, the Jets would go on to enjoy a sort of resurgence in relatively short order.
New England Patriots coach
Bill Parcells, fresh off of leading the Patriots to a Super Bowl, left
Foxboro to take the Jets' coaching job for the 1997 season. Parcells was attracted not only by a return to the
New York area, where he had enjoyed his greatest success with the Giants, but also by the opportunity to both coach and have full control over personnel decisions. Parcells had craved this dual role in New England, and was quoted as saying that "if (he) cooks the meal, (he) should be able to buy the groceries."
The draft set the stage for a quick turnaround in the late 1990s, most notably
Keyshawn Johnson, a
wide receiver from
USC who was picked #1 overall in the
1996 draft. The pick of Johnson not only gave the Jets a skill position player they desperately needed, but an on-field identity and swagger the team had lacked since the days of Joe Namath. The results of Parcells' takeover were immediate.
Neil O'Donnell, formerly of the
Pittsburgh Steelers, threw for 17 touchdowns in his only full year as the Jets' starting quarterback, and
Adrian Murrell ran for 1,000 yards. The Jets finished 9–7, but missed the playoffs, in part because of a somewhat curious call by Parcells against the
Detroit Lions. Parcells had Leon Johnson throw a halfback option, which was intercepted. After that play,
Barry Sanders took over the game and went over the 2,000-yard rushing mark on the year. Overall, the Jets enjoyed an eight-game turnaround and quickly won back the respect of the league and their fans.
Looking to build on his 1997 success, Parcells signed Patriots
running back Curtis Martin and, which at the time, seemed like a move to secure the backup quarterback position,
Vinny Testaverde as
free agents in time for the
1998 season, which turned out to be the most successful for the team since the 1960s. At Parcells's urging, the Jets also reverted to their classic logo and uniform style, although with a darker shade of green. Parcells said that when he was a young coach, he would see the successful late-60's Jets practice in those uniforms, and Parcells associated that uniform and logo with those of a successful team.
Parcells's personnel moves paid immediate dividends. After starting Glenn Foley in the first couple of games, Parcells went to Testaverde, who ended up throwing 28 touchdowns, Martin ran for 1,287 yards and 8 touchdowns, while both Keyshawn Johnson and
Wayne Chrebet had 1,000 yards receiving. The Jets won 10 of their last 11 games and finished the season 12–4, setting a team record for wins in a season. After a first-round bye, the Jets beat the
Jacksonville Jaguars in their divisional home playoff game, winning 34–24 with a game-ending interception by Keyshawn Johnson, who had previously scored on a pass and a run. The playoff game was the first home playoff game the Jets had since 1986, when they defeated Kansas City 35–15 in a wild-card game. Although New York enjoyed a 10–0 lead in the third quarter of the AFC championship against the
Denver Broncos, Testaverde threw two late interceptions and Denver running back
Terrell Davis burned the Jets for 167 yards and a touchdown as the Broncos won 23–10.
The Jets high hopes for the
1999 season were greatly compromised in their first game against the
New England Patriots, when, on the first play of the second quarter, Testaverde ruptured his
Achilles tendon. Backup QB
Rick Mirer took over, quarterbacking the Jets to a 2–6 record, after which
Ray Lucas became the starter. Lucas sparked the team by winning five of his eight starts, but it was not enough as the Jets finished 8–8 and outside of the playoffs.
Before the 1999 season,
Leon Hess, longtime owner of the Jets, died at age 85. Hess had hired Parcells, and Parcells's role under the new ownership was unclear. As had happened when Parcells was in New England, the ownership that hired him soon was succeeded by new ownership. Despite new owner
Woody Johnson's desire to keep Parcells as head coach, Parcells stepped down as head coach at the season's end. However, he remained the team's Chief of Football Operations.
Chad Pennington era (2000-2007)
In the
2000 NFL Draft, the Jets had four first-round selections. They drafted defensive ends
Shaun Ellis and
John Abraham, tight end
Anthony Becht and quarterback
Chad Pennington. Parcells' handpicked successor,
Bill Belichick, resigned after one day on the job (infamously writing on a napkin "I resign as HC of the NYJ") and ended up taking the head coaching job with the Patriots. The Jets would eventually receive a first-round draft pick for Belichick's rights. After Belichick's departure, Parcells promoted longtime assistant
Al Groh from linebacker coach to head coach for the
2000 season. Once Al Groh became Jets head coach the first move was to trade Keyshawn Johnson to the Tampa Bay Bucs for a first-round pick. Rumors circulated in New York that Groh didn't want to handle a guy like Johnson who had such a strong persona. Keyshawn made a comment before the Jets traveled to
Florida to face the Bucs that he was like a star in the sky and
Wayne Chrebet, his former teammate, was like a flashlight. In the game down in Tampa, Chrebet went on to out-play Johnson, scoring a touchdown on an option pass from Martin to win the game for New York. For the rest of the year Chrebet was known as the Green Lantern. The Jets won 6 of their first 7 games, capped by the biggest comeback in
Monday Night Football
history against the
Dolphins. Down 30–7 entering the fourth quarter, the Jets exploded for 30 points in the last 15 minutes, and
John Hall kicked the winning field goal in overtime. It came to be known as "
The Monday Night Miracle". It was the highlight of the season, but they only won three of their last 9 games, finishing at 9–7 and out of the playoffs. Behind the scenes, the Jets' players, because they felt overworked and fed up with Groh's militaristic style, staged a near-mutiny against their coach. Groh resigned after his first season to coach the
team at his alma mater, the
University of Virginia. Parcells also left the organization after the 2000 season, to be replaced by
Kansas City Chiefs executive
Terry Bradway.
Under new coach
Herman Edwards, who had been the assistant head coach and defensive backs coach under
Tony Dungy with the
Tampa Bay Buccaneers, the Jets were streaky through the
2001 season in a highly competitive AFC East. The team managed to salvage a wild card playoff berth with a 53-yard game-winning field goal against the
Oakland Raiders in the final minute, forcing a rematch with the Raiders in the opening postseason game. The results were different, however, as Oakland running back
Charlie Garner sealed the game with an 80-yard touchdown on third down to extend the Raiders' lead to 38-24 with 87 seconds left. During that play, many Jets fans felt that safety
Victor Green was held to allow Garner to break through the line, but no penalty was called.
The AFC East proved to be even more competitive in
2002, with all four teams in the race well into December. Testaverde was benched early in the season with the team at 1–4, and replaced with Chad Pennington, who proved to be the spark the Jets needed. Pennington threw 22 touchdowns and only 6 interceptions, and a final-week win over the
Green Bay Packers, coupled with a
Patriots win over the
Dolphins, gave them the AFC East title at 9–7. The Jets would cruise through their opening playoff game at home with a 41–0 blowout of the
Indianapolis Colts, but collapsed in the second half and lost the to the eventual AFC champion
Raiders in the divisional playoffs with the score of 30–10.
The Jets lost several players to free agency before the
2003 season, many to the Washington Redskins; these players were known as the "Jetskins", including starting wide receiver
Laveranues Coles (Coles would later return to the team through a trade with the Redskins for another young Jet WR,
Santana Moss.) Additionally, a pre-season injury to Pennington, a broken wrist during a game against the Giants, would adversely affect the Jets throughout 2003. It would be Testaverde (whose injury in the 1999 season opener similarly set the tone for the year) who was called upon to take over. Though Testaverde gave his best effort, and Pennington came back midway through the season, it was not enough. The Jets finished 6–10.
Pennington and the Jets started the
2004 season 5–0 before losing 2 of their next 3. Despite struggling down the stretch and having Pennington miss three games (later revealed to be an injured rotator cuff), the Jets finished with a 10–6 record and earned a wild-card berth. Herman Edwards' team then faced the AFC West champion
San Diego Chargers in the wild-card round, a team that featured
Pro Bowlers
Drew Brees,
LaDainian Tomlinson, and
Antonio Gates. The Jets took advantage of San Diego miscues and what some felt was an overly conservative strategy by the Chargers. But with the Jets leading, 17-10, with less than 20 seconds left in regulation, Jets linebacker
Eric Barton was penalized for roughing the passer, nullifying Brees' fourth down incompletion and giving San Diego a first down from the one-yard line. Brees threw a touchdown to tight end Gates on the following play, setting up overtime. Chargers rookie kicker
Nate Kaeding missed a 40-yard field goal late in the extra period, allowing the Jets to come back down the field. Kicker
Doug Brien won the game for the Jets with a 28-yard field goal with five seconds remaining in overtime to beat the Chargers 20–17.
The game sent the Jets to the divisional round against the 15–1
Pittsburgh Steelers. While the offense struggled producing only a field goal, a punt return by Santana Moss and interception return by
Reggie Tongue kept the Jets in the game. With the score tied at 17–17 late in the fourth quarter, Doug Brien lined up for a 47-yard field goal attempt that would have put the Jets up. However it hit the crossbar of the goal post just short of being successful.
Despite this the Jets came through yet again, with an interception by
cornerback David Barrett on the next play. Rather than try to drive for a touchdown or otherwise get closer for a game-winning field goal, the Jets seemed content to settle for a 43-yard field goal attempt that would have given the Jets the win—ironically, the same unsuccessful strategy the Chargers had employed the previous week. Brien's kick missed, wide left, forcing the game into overtime. The Jets would lose on a 33-yard field goal by Pittsburgh kicker
Jeff Reed, as the Jets fell just short yet again. In the days following the loss, many people and pundits opined that the Jets lost this game by not being aggressive and being too willing to settle for a risky field goal attempt, ignoring the fact that Brien had been 10-11 in field goal attempts between 40-49 yards on the season. Others, however, contend that none of those field goals had been in the notoriously unpredictable winds of Heinz Field, voted by the league's special teamers as the worst field to kick in every year since 2000.
The Jets entered the season with high hopes of contending for the
Super Bowl, but their hopes were dismantled in week three against the
Jaguars when Chad Pennington reinjured his shoulder. Even worse, their backup quarterback
Jay Fiedler was injured six plays after Pennington. They were both placed on injured reserve for the remainder of the season. The injuries caused previous third-string quarterback
Brooks Bollinger to take the role as the team's starter and Vinny Testaverde was brought back out of retirement as Bollinger's backup. After a poor showing by the Jets' offense in a loss, Testaverde would start the Week 5 game against the
Tampa Bay Buccaneers. His steady hand led the offense, and Curtis Martin scored two touchdowns, giving the Jets just enough to earn a 14–12 victory over the previously undefeated Buccaneers.
But the season got very sour after the victory over Tampa Bay. They would lose their next 7 games before finally beating the
Oakland Raiders in Week 14. The injuries of several key players, including running back
Derrick Blaylock and cornerback David Barrett, and season-ending injuries of wide receiver Wayne Chrebet,
tight end Chris Baker,
right tackle Jason Fabini, and
Pro bowl starting
center Kevin Mawae, among others, severely hampered their ability to play competitively.
Even in the victory against the Raiders, the Jets suffered another morale-sagging injury. Running back Curtis Martin did not play in the game due to a season-ending knee injury that required arthroscopic surgery. The Jets' only noteworthy accomplishment of the remainder of the season would be their participation in the final Monday Night Football game aired on
ABC, a 31-21 home loss to the
Patriots. They ended the year with a 4–12 record and "earned" the fourth pick in the
2006 NFL Draft, which they used to select
D'Brickashaw Ferguson.
On January 8, 2006, Herm Edwards ended his time as head coach of the Jets and he signed a 4-year, $12,000,000 contract to become the new head of the
Kansas City Chiefs and succeed his original mentor
Dick Vermeil, who was Edwards' head coach with the
Philadelphia Eagles. The Jets received a 4th round draft pick from the Chiefs as compensation for Edwards, who was still under contract with the Jets at the time. That pick, ended up being used to select the dynamic
running back from
Florida State,
Leon Washington.
On January 17, the Jets-Patriots coaching pipeline reared itself yet again, as New England defensive coordinator
Eric Mangini was hired by the Jets.
The Jets finished the regular season with a record of 10–6, having defeated the
Minnesota Vikings,
Miami Dolphins, and the
Oakland Raiders in their last three games. The Jets earned an AFC Wild Card spot in the playoffs, the number 5 seed and surprised most pundits who predicted a rebuilding year. Players celebrated afterwards by saying the word "playoffs", a word Mangini banished during the regular season to focus players on the regular season.
On January 7, 2007, the Jets played rival AFC East champion
New England Patriots. The Jets had both beaten and lost to the Patriots in the regular season. While the Jets took an early 10–7 lead after a field goal and a 77-yard touchdown catch and run by
Jerricho Cotchery, which was the second longest pass play in Wild Card history, the Jets were not able to score another touchdown, and the Patriots closed out the game after two turnovers by the Jets offense. The Jets postseason ended with a 37–16 loss. One notable aspect of the game was the rivalry between Patriot head coach
Bill Belichick and Jet head coach Eric Mangini. The two were not on good terms, and their relationship was widely publicized before the game. Regardless, at games end, the two embraced.
On September 10, Bill Belichick was accused by the Jets of authorizing his staff to film the Jets' defensive signals from an on-field location, a violation of league rules. The Jets confiscated the video camera used by video assistant Matt Estrella to film the signals during the game and filed a complaint to the league office, detailing the accusations.
The
2007 season opened with high expectations from fans, as the lackluster 2006 running game was boosted by the addition of former
Chicago Bears running back
Thomas Jones. Chad Pennington, who a year earlier had been named
NFL Comeback Player of the Year, having overcome what many thought was a career ending
rotator cuff injury, began to be hampered by his weakened arm as opposing defenses were not forced to stretch their coverage due to Pennington's inability to throw the ball fast or far. After the team struggled to a 1–7 start, second year quarterback
Kellen Clemens replaced Pennington as the starting quarterback. Though Clemens showed himself to be a strong, athletic quarterback, he was unable to turn the ailing team around due to an offensive line that could not keep him safe long enough to throw effective passes. Clemens earned his first professional win on November 18, as the Jets defeated the heavily favored Pittsburgh Steelers, 19–16, in overtime. The Jets would go on to finish the season 4–12 and obtained the sixth overall pick in the
2008 NFL Draft, which they used to select
Vernon Gholston. During the offseason, the Jets made former
Pittsburgh Steelers left guard Alan Faneca the highest paid
offensive lineman in the National Football League.
[4] The Jets then signed former
Arizona Cardinals linebacker Calvin Pace,
[5] former
Detroit Lions right tackle Damien Woody,
[6] fullback Tony Richardson,
cornerback Andre Woolfolk,
tight end Bubba Franks, and
running back Jesse Chatman.
2008: Brett Favre arrives
On August 6, 2008, the Jets acquired quarterback
Brett Favre from the
Green Bay Packers for a conditional 4th round draft pick.
[7] The Jets had originally intended to pick Favre in the
1991 NFL Draft, but the
Atlanta Falcons, who were one spot ahead of the Jets, chose him instead.
[8] On August 7, 2008, the day that
Brett Favre had been traded to the Jets, they decided to part ways with former starting
quarterback Chad Pennington. He was released from the team later on in the day, and eventually went on to sign with the
Miami Dolphins. The Jets finished the regular season with a 9–7 record, eliminated from playoff contention.
The Jets had a league high and franchise record 7 Pro-bowlers (Favre, Faneca, Mangold, Jones, Revis, Jenkins, Washington).
On December 29, 2008,
Eric Mangini was fired as head coach of the New York Jets after 3 seasons, with a regular season record of 23–25.
2009: Rex Ryan and Mark Sanchez
On January 19, 2009, following Baltimore's loss in the AFC Conference Championship, the New York Jets offered
Rex Ryan a four-year deal worth 11.6 million dollars to become their head coach. Ryan accepted the offer and he was introduced as head coach of the Jets on Wednesday January 21, 2009.
On Wednesday February 11, 2009 Quarterback
Brett Favre announced he was retiring from the NFL after 18 seasons. However, Favre came out of retirement for the second time and signed with the Minnesota Vikings on August 18, 2009
[9].
On Friday February 27, 2009 the Jets signed linebacker
Bart Scott to a 6 Year, $48 Million dollar contract.
In the
2009 NFL Draft, the Jets drafted, with the fifth pick, quarterback
Mark Sanchez, from USC. The Jets also traded up in the third round to acquire Iowa running back
Shonn Greene
[10]
On June 9, 2009 the Jets and
Mark Sanchez agreed to a 5-year/$50 million deal with $28 million guaranteed.
Season-by-season records
Last Five Seasons
|
Year
| Regular Season
| Post Season
|
Won
| Lost
| Ties
| Win %
| Finish
| Won
| Lost
| Win %
| Result
|
2004
| 10
| 6
| 0
| .625
| 2nd in AFC East
| 1
| 1
| .500
| Lost to Pittsburgh Steelers in AFC Divisional Game.
|
2005
| 4
| 12
| 0
| .250
| 4th in AFC East
|
2006
| 10
| 6
| 0
| .625
| 2nd in AFC East
| 0
| 1
| .000
| Lost to New England Patriots in AFC Wild-Card Game.
|
2007
| 4
| 12
| 0
| .250
| 3rd in AFC East
| -
| -
| -
| -
|
2008
| 9
| 7
| 0
| .600
| 3rd in AFC East
| -
| -
| -
| -
|
Logos and uniforms
The
uniform design was changed to white helmets, white pants, and either green or white jerseys. The green jerseys had white stripes on the shoulders and white sleeves. The white jerseys had green stripes on the shoulders and green sleeves. The Jets are often nicknamed "Gang Green" due to the color of their uniforms, and possibly a
play on words as well.
The team's logo in 1963 consisted of a green airplane with the word "JETS" written on its side. The logo was changed a year later to a football shaped oval with the letters "NY" superimposed, and superimposed over that, both the word "JETS" and a football in green. In 1965, the logo's colors were inverted so that the oval became green, and the word "JETS" and the football became white.
In 1978, the Jets changed both their logo and uniform design. The new logo consisted of the word "JETS" with a futuristic jet above it. The new uniform design consisted of green helmets, white pants, and either green or white jerseys. The team wore their white uniforms for every home game from 1985 through 1989. The uniform was modified in 1990, when the team added a black outline, green pants and a black face mask. A subtle change took place in 1996 when the green helmet became a metallic kelly green instead of flat green.
In 1998, the team reverted to the 1965 logo, or rather, a modified version, since the oval was now more rounded at the ends and no longer resembled a football. A slightly more modern version of the 1963 uniform design was introduced along with the logo. For both the logo and uniforms, the kelly green of old had been abandoned in favor of a darker shade, essentially forest green. In addition, the face mask color became green (compared to the gray face masks from 1963-1977).
In 2002, the team introduced green pants which are almost always worn on the road with the white jerseys and at home to form an all green combination for 1 or 2 games a season. In that same season the Jets wore white at home for their first three home games, which included two in preseason and their first regular season home game. This was due to the Jets success in 2001 on the road. Since that time, the Jets always wear green at home except for home games in the first week of the regular season due to the heat.
On October 14, 2007, The New York Jets celebrated their heritage with a special “Titans Throwback Day.” The Jets wore the navy and gold uniforms, in honor of the New York Titans (their previous incarnation) during their game against the Philadelphia Eagles at the Meadowlands. They also honored the four original Titans who played as Jets in Super Bowl III. The "Titans Throwback" uniform was again worn on December 2, 2007, when playing against the
Miami Dolphins in
Miami. The Jets went 1–1 in their throwbacks. They dropped a 16-9 decision to the Philadelphia Eagles at the Meadowlands on October 9 and then defeated the Dolphins, 40-13, in Miami on December 2.
The throwback uniforms were also worn during the 2008 season. Originally scheduled for the home opener against the Patriots, the throwback days were changed to the second and third home games, against the Arizona Cardinals and Cincinnati Bengals, respectively.
[11] Victories over the Cardinals (56-35) and Bengals (26–14) improved the Jets to 3–1 in Titan throwbacks. The Jets will wear white titans jerseys with the same pants and helmets to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the old AFL for selected games of the 2009-2010 season.
At the October 26, 2008 home game against the Kansas City Chiefs, the players wore a commemorative 40th anniversary Super Bowl III patch on their left chests to honor the Jets’ 1968 championship team. The team held a halftime ceremony to honor many of the championship alumni.
Cheerleading Squad
The Jets Cheerleading squad was established in 2006 as the
Jets Flag Crew
. The
Jets Flag Crew
where not named cheerleaders intill 2007 because the only thing the squad was doing was carrying only flags. In 2007 it was official that the Jets will have a cheerleading squad named the
Jets Flight Crew
with closed auditions. In 2008 the Jets partnered with
Marc Ecko founder of
Ecko to design the uniforms.
Current roster
|
Quarterbacks
- 11 Kellen Clemens
- 4 Brett Favre
- 5 Brett Ratliff
Running Backs
- 20 Thomas Jones
- 49 Tony Richardson FB
- 29 Leon Washington KR/PR
Wide Receivers
- 17 David Clowney
- 87 Laveranues Coles
- 89 Jerricho Cotchery
- 16 Brad Smith
- 83 Chansi Stuckey
- 15 Wallace Wright
Tight Ends
- 86 Chris Baker
- 88 Bubba Franks
- 81 Dustin Keller
|
| Offensive Linemen
- 66 Alan Faneca G
- 60 D'Brickashaw Ferguson T
- 78 Wayne Hunter T
- 74 Nick Mangold C
- 65 Brandon Moore G
- 75 Robert Turner G/C
- 67 Damien Woody T
Defensive Linemen
- 93 Kenyon Coleman DE
- 70 Mike DeVito DE
- 92 Shaun Ellis DE
- 77 Kris Jenkins NT
- 69 C. J. Mosley DE
- 91 Sione Pouha NT
|
| Linebackers
- 50 Eric Barton ILB
- 96 David Bowens ILB
- 56 Vernon Gholston
OLB
- 52 David Harris ILB
- 94 Marques Murrell OLB
- 97 Calvin Pace OLB
- 53 Cody Spencer ILB
- 99 Bryan Thomas OLB
- 57 Jason Trusnik ILB
Defensive Backs
- 36 David Barrett CB/SS
- 31 Ahmad Carroll CB
- 30 Drew Coleman CB
- 27 Abram Elam FS
- 44 James Ihedigbo FS
- 22 Ty Law CB
- 34 Dwight Lowery
CB
- 23 Hank Poteat SS/CB
- 32 J. R. Reed SS
- 24 Darrelle Revis CB
- 25 Kerry Rhodes FS
- 33 Eric Smith SS
Special Teams
- 85 James Dearth LS
- 3 Jay Feely K
- 6 Reggie Hodges P
- 1 Mike Nugent K
|
| Reserve Lists
- 9 Erik Ainge
QB (IR)
- 22 Jesse Chatman RB (IR)
- 55 Brad Kassell ILB (IR)
- 35 Danny Woodhead
RB (IR)
Practice Squad
- 98 Kareem Brown DE
- 39 Jehuu Caulcrick
FB/RB
- 54 Kenwin Cummings
ILB
- 64 Stanley Daniels G
- 14 Marcus Henry
WR
- -- Ryan Keenan G
- 79 Ropati Pitoitua
DE (Injured)
- 47 Brandon Renkart
ILB
- -- Brian Schaefering
DE
Rookies in italics
updated 2008-12-19
•
53 Active, 4 Inactive, 9 PS
? More rosters
|
Pro Football Hall of Famers
- Weeb Ewbank (coach, 1963–73)
- Don Maynard (WR, 1960–72)
- Joe Namath (QB, 1965–76)
- John Riggins (RB, 1971–75)
- Art Monk (WR, 1994)
- Ronnie Lott (DB, 1993-1994)
- Bulldog Turner (Coach, 1962)
- Ewbank, Maynard, and Namath are recognized based upon their achievements with the Jets, although Ewbank coached the Baltimore Colts to NFL championships in 1958 and 1959. Riggins is recognized primarily for his seasons with the Washington Redskins (1976–79, 81–85), as is Monk (1980–93), who won three Super Bowl championships in his tenure with the team.
Retired numbers
- 12 Joe Namath
- 13 Don Maynard
- 28 Curtis Martin (unofficially)
- 73 Joe Klecko
- 80 Wayne Chrebet (unofficially)
- 90 Dennis Byrd (unofficially)
- - - Weeb Ewbank (Jacket)
Coaches of note
Head coaches
Current staff
|
|
| Front Office
- Owner/Chairman/CEO - Woody Johnson
- Executive Vice President/General Manager - Mike Tannenbaum
- Assistant General Manager - Scott Cohen
- Vice President of College Scouting - Joey Clinkscales
- Director of Football Administration - Ari Nissim
- Senior Personnel Executive - Terry Bradway
- Assistant Director of Player Personnel - JoJo Wooden
- Assistant Director of College Scouting - Michael Davis
Head Coaches
- Head Coach - Eric Mangini
- Assistant Head Coach/Offense/Offensive Line - Bill Callahan
Offensive Coaches
- Offensive Coordinator - Brian Schottenheimer
- Quarterbacks - Brian Daboll
- Running Backs - Jimmy Raye
- Wide Receivers - Noel Mazzone
- Tight Ends/Assistant Offensive Line - Mike Devlin
- Offensive Quality Control - Mike Bloomgren
- Offensive Quality Control - Brian Smith
|
|
|
Defensive Coaches
- Defensive Coordinator - Bob Sutton
- Defensive Line - Dan Quinn
- Assistant Defensive Line - Bryan Cox
- Linebackers - Jim Herrmann
- Defensive Backs - Jerome Henderson
- Defensive Quality Control - Andy Dickerson
Special Teams Coaches
- Special Teams Coordinator - Kevin O'Dea
- Special Teams - Mike Westoff
- Quality Control/Special Teams and Defense - Ben Kotwica
Strength and Conditioning
- Head Strength and Conditioning - Sal Alosi
- Assistant Strength and Conditioning - Mike Jones
- Assistant Strength and Conditioning - Rick Lyle
?
? More NFL staffs
|
Radio and television
As of 2008, the Jets' flagship radio station is
WEPN,
ESPN Radio 1050, with
Bob Wischusen as the
play-by-play announcer and
Marty Lyons as the color analyst. The games are simulcast on
WABC, the former sister station of WEPN and flagship, largely due to WABC's much stronger signal. WABC took over the radio rights from
WFAN, who aired Jet games from 1993–1999 after purchasing those rights from sister station
WCBS following the 1992 season.
Any preseason games not nationally televised are shown on
WCBS-TV, channel 2 (using a slightly modified version of the on-air graphics package used by
CBS Sports for their
national AFC telecasts), and rebroadcast on
SportsNet New York.
Ian Eagle calls the action on those telecasts.
Notable past play-by-play announcers for the Titans/Jets include the legends
Howard Cosell,
Bob Murphy,
Merle Harmon,
Marty Glickman and
Howard David, who has called the
Super Bowl and the
NBA Finals for
Westwood One and
ESPN Radio.
Notes and references
- The Jets Fill One Opening: New Owner at $635 Million
- He guaranteed it - Pro Football Hall of Fame
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NFL_playoffs,_1982-83
- Faneca agrees to five-year $40 million deal with Jets
- Pace to get $22M guaranteed in big deal with Jets
- Woody gives Jets four former first-round draft picks on O-line
- Packers trade Favre to Jets
- Trading places
- http://www.vikings.com/news/article-1/vikings-sign-brett-favre/b52a742d-ebfd-4eff-807b-ba1d8acef18c
- http://www.nytimes.com/2009/02/12/sports/football/12favre.html?_r=1&ref=football
- Yes, Jets Will Be in Green for Patriots
See also
- History of the New York Jets (Greater depth)
- List of American Football League players