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Los Angeles Times
Los Angeles Times
Sport
Sam Farmer

Winless Jets making case for Adam Gase to be first NFL coach fired this season

Two weeks ago, the owner of the New York Jets called coach Adam Gase a "brilliant offensive mind."

The bad news: Evidently, there are 31 more brilliant ones in the NFL.

Yes, the winless Jets are ranked last in total offense, and their only solace is the New York Giants haven't won, either. It's the first time since 1996 that both teams are 0-3.

The Jets are particularly hopeless, and if they embarrass themselves in Thursday night's home game against 0-3 Denver, it's conceivable they could make a coaching change this week. After all, this is one of the few games they actually could win.

It's been rough going for former USC quarterback Sam Darnold, who has started 29 games and is making some of the same mistakes he made early in his career. In Sunday's 36-7 loss at Indianapolis, two of his three interceptions were returned for touchdowns.

That marked the first time since the Geno Smith era that a Jets quarterback had two pick-sixes in the same game. As ESPN's Rich Cimini noted, when it comes to assessing quarterback play, you never want to be in the same sentence as Smith.

But the Jets have failed Darnold. They can't adequately protect him, and they have no real weapons around him. The team's top three receivers were out Sunday, as was running back Le'Veon Bell and, for most of the game, both starting tackles.

Injuries are a reality of football and can cripple the best of teams. The Jets haven't built the necessary depth to weather that storm. For instance, Darnold's first two interceptions were passes thrown for Lawrence Cager, an undrafted rookie playing in his first NFL game. They weren't good throws, but the inexperience doesn't help.

Darnold is under so much pressure to do everything, it looks as if he's pressing. By the end of the season, the Jets will need to make a decision on him. If they have the first or second pick, do they try to find a new quarterback in the draft _ say, Clemson's Trevor Lawrence or Ohio State's Justin Fields _ or do they trade down for more picks and try to stock the shelves for Darnold?

The Jets did make a good choice in drafting Louisville tackle Mekhi Becton, this year's 11th pick. So far, he has been excellent but he suffered a shoulder injury in the first half against the Colts and didn't return.

The franchise let receiver Robbie Anderson go and replaced him with Breshad Perriman, who's brittle (sidelined with a sprained ankle) and one-dimensional. And the Jets used a second-round pick on Baylor receiver Denzel Mims, who missed training camp with a hamstring injury. When finally able to practice two weeks ago, he suffered a hamstring pull in his other leg. Bell and receiver Jamison Crowder also have hamstring pulls.

What's left for Darnold is a group of receivers as green as their jerseys, and a 37-year-old running back in Frank Gore.

Those players eventually will be healthy enough to play, but there's no guarantee the Jets will be significantly better when they do. The franchise finished last in the league in offense last season too.

Through the first three games, the team's points differential is minus-57. That's the worst since 2002, when it was minus-58.

It was that season when coach Herm Edwards gave his impassioned and now-famous "You play to win the game ..." answer in a news conference. That team went on to whip a U-turn and make the playoffs, so anything is possible. But don't bet on it this year.

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