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Winless Jets prepare for Jamal Adams, Seattle's chairman of the 'bored'
FLORHAM PARK, N.J. â Whoâs bored now? Certainly not Jamal Adams, who is thriving in his post-New York Jets life. The Seattle Seahawks safety, who faces his old team on Sunday at Lumen Field (4:05 p.m. ET, CBS), is on the verge of breaking the NFLâs single-season sack record for defensive backs.
Gregg Williams? Well, he might be experiencing boredom. The former Jets defensive coordinator, who tweaked Adams and the Seahawks in September by saying the All-Pro would get âboredâ in Seattleâs basic Cover 3 scheme, has plenty of time on his hands now that he is unemployed.
ESPN Jets reporter Rich Cimini sorts through the Gregg Williams situation and is joined by ESPN draft analyst Mel Kiper, Jr. Âť Listen here
Make no mistake, the summer blockbuster trade that sent Adams to Seattle doesnât look too good right now. The Jets (0-12) are enduring the worst season in franchise history, a season that will be remembered for the Adams trade (July 25) and last Sundayâs Cover 0 meltdown that cost Williams his job. With Adams looming, and no doubt looking for revenge, the Jetsâ week is about to get worse.
Adams might try to downplay it, but you know he wants to embarrass Jets coach Adam Gase, whom he excoriated on his way out the door. Surely, Adams will get the last laugh this season, but the Jets â and their fans â have to be thinking about the long game. For them, the trade never was about 2020. (In retrospect, the trade signaled the start of a rebuild.) Itâs all about 2021 and 2022, and whether general manager Joe Douglas can parlay the draft picks into quality players.
The Jets got excellent value from Seattle, receiving 2021 and 2022 first-round picks and a 2021 third-round pick. They also acquired strong safety Bradley McDougald, who was supposed to be Adams Lite but disappointed before having season-ending shoulder surgery. McDougald, due to become a free agent, wonât be back in 2021. That was the worst part of the trade; the Jets thought they had picked up a solid starter in McDougald.
Safety Jamal Adams, traded by the Jets on July 25, has 7.5 sacks in eight games with Seattle this season. Heâs a half-sack shy of the single-season record for defensive backs. Abbie Parr/Getty Images
Right now, the Jets have three of the top 33 picks in the 2021 NFL draft. Maybe they can acquire another top-50 pick by trading quarterback Sam Darnold. That would be a nice way to kick-start the rebuild, assuming Douglas doesnât blow the picks.
As much as the Jets miss Adamsâ playmaking ability, they made the right move because his contract demands were outrageous (for a strong safety, no less) and his presence on defense wouldnât have prevented this disaster. They stink without him. With him, theyâd be stinking just a little less. Truth be told, his volatile personality might have combusted the locker room. Could you imagine him enduring a season like this?
In good times (count them on one hand), Adams was a catalyst for the Jets, an energizer. On Monday, Darnold was asked if Jets players miss Adamsâ passion and presence in the locker room. He paused a few seconds, trying to choose the right words. He wanted to compliment Adams without upsetting his current teammates.
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âWhenever youâve got a guy like Jamal who brings energy every day â itâs tough to say,â Darnold said. âWhen heâs here, you feel his energy. When heâs not, you have other guys step up and other guys were able to lead. So, obviously, thereâs some days where you miss that energy, but we have a lot of good players here and guys who bring a lot of good energy towards the locker room.â
On Sunday, Darnold will have to deal with Adams buzzing around the line of scrimmage. Despite missing four games with a groin injury, he has 7.5 sacks in eight games, a half-sack shy of Adrian Wilsonâs record for defensive backs (eight in 2005). Credit Seahawks coach Pete Carroll, who tweaked his scheme to fit Adamsâ blitzing ability. Thatâs what good coaches do. Thatâs why the Seahawks (8-4) are on the verge of their ninth straight winning season.
Once again, Williams was wrong, thinking Adams would languish once he no longer was part of his sophisticated scheme and all its âcomplexitiesâ (his word). Back in September, Carroll enjoyed a laugh when told of Williamsâ comments. Dripping with sarcasm, he said, âGosh, weâre so simple here and basic that we probably wonât get to any of that stuffâ â i.e. deploying Adams as a blitzer. Carroll also said of Williams, âWe donât make as many mistakes as he does.â
Talk about prophetic.
âObviously, Jamal presents a challenge for everyone, for our tight ends, our receivers, our line, myself, our running backs,â Darnold said. âHeâs a really, really good player, physical player, super smart as well. So, weâve got our hands full there and weâre excited to obviously not just face him, but face a really good Seattle defense.â
Somewhere, Williams will be watching.
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