Tag Archive | "jets"

Tebowmania is Not Enough to Oust Mark Sanchez: A…

Can Tebowmania oust Mark Sanchez as the New York Jets‘ starting quarterback? It worked in Denver, when Tim Tebow played for the Denver Broncos, but Denver is not New York. The starting quarterback for the New York Jets is Mark Sanchez, and so far, no one from the Jets organization is saying anything different. If you compare the numbers, it makes sense to start Mark Sanchez.

The stats

Let’s start by comparing wins. Tim Tebow went 7-4, including a win against the Jets. Mark Sanchez went 8-8 and has brought New York to two AFC playoffs. Sanchez has more wins.

Mark Sanchez has a better completion percentage than Tim Tebow: Sanchez 56.7 percent to Tebow’s 46.7 percent. Sanchez had his share of incompletions, but Tebow completes fewer. Again, the stats point to Sanchez as the quarterback.

Passing yards per game really shows where Tim Tebow and Mark Sanchez differ. Sanchez has 217.1 yards per game and Tebow trails behind with 150 yards per game. Mark throws more and completes more passes than Tebow. Even if Rex pulls off returning to “ground and pound,” Sanchez is still the better choice.

Comparing touchdowns to interceptions shows Sanchez with 26 touchdowns to 18 interceptions and Tebow with 11 touchdowns and six interceptions. Sanchez has thrown more than twice as many touchdowns than Tebow so of course he will have more interceptions. Tebow’s stats are a little better than Sanchez’s. However, when taking everything into account, Sanchez is still the better quarterback.

Tebowmania

Will Rex Ryan and Tony Sparano cave into Tebowmania and give the fans the ability to choose the starting quarterback? Probably not. It was one thing for Nick Mangold to ask the fans to name his beard. It is another thing to allow the fan base to make player decisions.

Right now, Tim Tebow is one of the best backup quarterbacks in the NFL. As long as Mark Sanchez performs well, he should be the starting quarterback. If the Jets want to win games this season, they will have to choose a starter and stick with it.

More from the Yahoo! Contributor Network

Why Tim Tebow Chose the Jets: A Fan’s Opinion

New York Jets Give Mark Sanchez a Three-year Contract Extension: A Fan’s View

Tim Tebow Traded to the New York Jets: A Fan’s Reaction

Free Agents and the New York Jets: A Fan’s Perspective

An Update on the New York Jets and Free-Agency: A Fan’s View

Lynda Altman grew up just outside of New York City. She has been a Jets fan all of her life and hopes they have a winning season in 2012. You can contact her @LdyJetsFan on Twitter.

There is the quick update of the day.

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Is Tim Tebow Too Much for the New York Jets? Fan…

The New York Jets seem to be a little confused about what to do with QB Tim Tebow and the media circus that seems to follow him wherever he goes. Now, you think they would have been aware of this when they traded for him, but apparently they were living under a rock during the 2011 NFL season.

While many speculated that the Jets traded for Tebow because of the media attention and the attention it would bring to the team, their recent moves seem to show a bit of confusion when it comes to what to do with all the attention.

First, they schedule a press conference for his signing. As a backup QB, this was a little unheard of but it is Tim Tebow right? Well, the press conference was huge and even required Tebow to move to a location other than the normal room for press conferences. Everyone wanted to hear what Tebow had to say and the Jets set it up so he could say it. They took advantage of attention they knew he would bring.

However, reports from the New York Daily News are now saying that the Jets have decided to limit Tebow’s outside endeavors. In other words, first they bring in all the media attention possible and then they slam the breaks on it. Almost like a “here he is, have at it” and then a “oh no, we were just kidding.”

Now, QB Mark Sanchez already has a regular spot on “The Michael Kay Show” in New York. While there are already rumors about Tebow trying to beat out Sanchez for the starting QB position, are the Jets concerned Tebow would beat out Sanchez on the air too?

So, the Jets say they now want to limit Tebow’s endeavors and media spots. Okay, I can understand that I guess.

Well, that is until we start talking about HBO’s “Hard Knocks” series. According to reports, the Jets are in the running for a spot in this training-camp documentary show again and are just waiting for a formal invitation. So, was the Tebow signing just another way for the Jets to secure another spot on the show? I mean, the Jets already have enough drama for a show, but throw in Tebow and it becomes must-see television.

The Jets had to realize that with Tebow comes the media world. They may try to hold back, but the media will always find a way and I don’t see Tebow dropping out of the headlines during the 2012 season, even if he is just a backup QB.

Deborah Braconnier is a former athlete and avid football fan. She is a freelance writer and Featured Contributor for the NFL and Olympics. She has followed the Denver Broncos since she was a child became a fan of Tim Tebow during his run as a QB for the Broncos. She looks forward to following his career with the New York Jets. Follow her on Twitter at @fwcdeborah.

Not much else going on in the NFL world today.

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With Tim Tebow, The New York Jets Should Never…

With Tim Tebow, The New York Jets Should Never…

If the New York Jets are doing it right, Nick Folk should be dead last in extra points made next season. By right, I don’t mean impersonating the 1976 Buccaneers and rarely scoring, either. I’m talking about using Tim Tebow on two-point conversion attempts after every touchdown, until late game strategy dictates otherwise.

Teams go for the extra point instead of going for two, until mandated by late game situations, for a couple of reasons. The first, tradition and safety, is why coaches make a lot of decisions. Extra points have been around forever; the two-point conversion attempt was not adopted by the NFL until 1994 (the AFL used it until the merger). Thus, the norm is the extra point. It’s also the lower risk strategy, as the point is almost assured. Coaches tend to think about the negative and the potential loss of a point far more than the positive potential gain.

The other reason is that typically, the extra point has the slightly higher value. Last year, kickers made 99.4% of extra points attempted. The two point conversion rate typically hovers around 45%. Of course, that overstates the difference, because a percentage of “two point attempts” are really failed extra points, where the holder tries to run or pass after bobbling the snap. The true rates are closer, but if an average team employed a strategy of going for two instead of kicking the extra point, they would lose about 1 to 2 points over the course of an entire season.

The Jets, though, should press their advantage and disregard tradition when it comes to extra points. They should line up for two point conversions with Tim Tebow at QB after every score, until late game strategy dictated otherwise.

The Jets will surely use Tim Tebow in two point packages when they do attempt them. I’m just taking it a step further. Always use him, because it is a positive advantage for producing points. I would wager you that if the Jets used Tim Tebow on two-point plays, he would convert more than 50%.

Last year, the Denver Broncos were officially 3 for 5 on two-point attempts in games where Tim Tebow started. One of those involved the holder trying to run after a botched snap. In the other four, Denver went 3 for 3 on runs, and 0 for 1 on passes. Current Jets offensive coordinator Tony Sparano witnessed the first of those, when Denver completed a comeback against his Dolphins, after a Tebow run to send the game to overtime. Chris Brown of Smart Football, writing for Grantland, had a breakdown of that play design.

QB Draws, Power O like the play above with Tebow acting as the back, inside draws to the running back, zone reads, sprint outs where Tebow has a run pass option to a fullback or H-back – the Jets should be adding all these plays. Then, they should run them every opportunity near the goal line they get, including two pointers.

In addition to those two point conversions, Tim Tebow’s teams are 4 for 5 in scoring touchdowns on running plays at the 3 yard line or closer. That miss, though, came at the end of the Minnesota game when Denver had no incentive to score, and Tebow centered the ball. When he is actually trying to score from the 3 yard line or closer, Tim Tebow is 7 for 7 on scoring touchdowns on running plays in the NFL. That’s a small sample size, but he was also a very good goal line player in college–almost unstoppable at the stripe.

When he passes, though, different story. Tim Tebow was only 2 of 8 on passes inside the 3. Four of those came on four consecutive plays in the fourth quarter of the playoff game against New England from the 3 yard line. I’m not sure what’s more ridiculous. That Tebow has thrown more passes than runs inside the three, or that in over a full season of action, Denver has only run 13 plays from inside the 3 on offense. Most of Denver’s touchdowns with Tebow have come from further out, but that shows how poorly they have moved the ball. When he gets near the end zone, though, he has been to this point underutilized.

The Jets were at the wrong end of a Tebow rally last year, and also saw him score on a 5 yard run in his rookie year in a goal line package. Sparano witnessed first hand what he could do in the two point conversion last year. If the Jets are smart, they not only adopt it, but go full out Tebow Time after every touchdown.

How much could it matter? Last year, New York scored 30 touchdowns in the first three quarters of games.

Well, if Tebow only converts at the same rate from the 3 yard line or in as he has for his career (9 for 16), then it’s almost 4 points over a season. Coaches obsess over little things, so a strategy that could result in four more points is not inconsequential. It’s not going to win a Super Bowl alone, but it optimizes points.

That percentage, though assumes the same rate, which involved a sub-optimal run/pass ratio. The real Tebow ratio should be more like 80/20, not 45/55. If Tebow can convert two pointers at a 60% clip, that is an extra touchdown over the course of a year. 64% is almost extra 10 points.

I don’t know what Tebow would average, but my guess is that while he wouldn’t be perfect as teams adapted, the chances of him exceeding 60% are better than being significantly below 50% and making the strategy sub-optimal. To this point, he has not been utilized all out. Fox got praised a fair amount last year, but was honestly very conservative in using Tebow in the one area his skills dictated it, short yardage. Denver was a punting machine on 4th and 1 or 2. They only went for two points when they absolutely had to.

The Jets just spent a fair amount on Tebow. They should go all out with him, and commit to going for two after touchdowns. If you are going to get the circus, might as well put on a show.

[US Presswire]

Thanks for reading! .

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New York Jets did not consult Mark Sanchez about…

New York Jets did not consult Mark Sanchez about…

Tim Tebow holds his first news conference with the New York Jets, in Florham Park, N.J., Monday, March 26, 2012. Tebow, who led the Denver Broncos to the playoffs last year, was acquired in a trade Wednesday with Denver and will serve as the backup quarterback to Mark Sanchez.

Mark Lennihan, Associated Press

PALM BEACH, Fla. — Mark Sanchez found out the New York Jets had acquired Tim Tebow on a conference call with team management.

Not at all unusual, coach Rex Ryan says. Nothing to read into it.

“Mark’s job is to play quarterback, not be the general manager,” Ryan told reporters Tuesday at the NFL owners meetings.

Ryan explained that if a current Jet “has a history” with a player, there might be discussion about adding that player to New York’s roster. That was the case when the Jets drafted running back Joe McKnight, a former teammate of Sanchez at Southern Cal.

The closest interaction Sanchez has had with Tebow was when he hosted Tebow on a recruiting visit at USC.

“You don’t focus on one individual. That’s not what’s in the best interest of the team. I see quarterback as being a different (position), but there are three factors when making any decision: team, team and team.”

On Monday, Sanchez also said he had no expectation of being consulted about the move.

“It’s not their job to ask me either, or run it by me,” he said. “That’s not my job.”

His job is starting quarterback, although the number of snaps he takes from center Nick Mangold will decrease in 2012, perhaps significantly.

Ryan’s plan, implemented by former Dolphins coach Tony Sparano — a mastermind of the wildcat offense, Ryan insisted — will call for anywhere up to 20 plays with Tebow at quarterback. That’s a lot of plays fourth-year QB Sanchez, with his three-year contract extension, won’t be handling the ball.

Ryan claims he’s not troubled by that dynamic, or anything else about adding more drama to a team that might lead the league in headlines, particularly negative ones.

“Competition is good. I think you play better with competition,” Ryan said. “But I don’t think Mark cares who is behind him. Mark, in his mind, he will be the guy.

“Mark is a lot more confident than people give him credit for. It’s not like Mark doesn’t have an outstanding resume as a starter.”

But Sanchez didn’t progress last season after leading the Jets to the AFC title game in each of his first two years as a pro. Plus, there was turmoil in the locker room, with Sanchez as one of the focal points.

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Tebow gets what he — and Jets — wanted

(AP) Say this about Tim Tebow: He’s excited to be with the New York Jets.

He sure said so — over and over and over again.

He started with it. He finished with it. He never allowed anyone to get him off message.

If was a deft strategy for defusing those piranhas in the New York media, who surely came with snarling teeth, ready to rip him apart, but got nothing more than how utterly thrilled Tebow was to have been deposed by the team he led to the playoffs last season (that would be the Denver Broncos) and traded to Team Dysfunction (that would very much be the Jets).


He looked questioners in the eye, throwing in the extra touch of bending ever so slightly in their direction from the podium, just to show how much he really cared about their queries. He smiled frequently and easily. It was all so disarming.

Did we mention he’s excited?

But let’s put aside that seven-letter word for a moment and cut to the chase: If the Jets are using Tebow to steal away some of the thunder from their stadium-sharing rivals, the Super Bowl champion New York Giants, don’t view him as an unwitting pawn.

He’s very much using the Jets right back.

Turns out, for all those opinions of Tebow, which range from someone we’d want our daughters to marry to a religious zealot masquerading as a legitimate NFL quarterback, the real answer is not nearly as juicy.

He’s a pragmatist, pure and simple, at least when it came to deciding his post-Denver future.

After the Broncos signed Peyton Manning, Tebow weighed his options. He could return to his hometown of Jacksonville, Fla., just up the road from where he won a national title and the Heisman Trophy, to help resurrect the lowly Jaguars. Or, he could go to the nation’s media epicenter, to play for a better team that already has a starting quarterback, but is so starved for attention it threw out the possibility of significant snaps out of the wildcat. And — this is important — it would give him a much bigger canvas to add much bolder strokes to the Tebow brand, which, to his credit, involves some very significant charity work and willingness to be a role model.

While his most fervent fans probably thought the Jaguars were the logical choice, it appears Tebow had his eye on the bright lights all along, not unlike another Jets quarterback who came along before him, pushing a much different message.

Broadway Tim, he’s not, but Tebow surely knows — as Joe Namath did — that being the Big Cheese in the Big Apple is a chance to become even more of a household name. Think Linsanity would’ve caught fire the way it did anywhere else?  And don’t think a straight arrow like Tebow will necessarily be out of place in a city some view as just a notch above Sodom.

Tebow seemed to get it all along, though he made every effort to pretend otherwise..

That was the part that seemed insincere during a 35-minute news conference, which served as his introduction to New York.

If you didn’t let all the “exciteds” distract you — the unofficial tally was somewhere around 40 — there was clear insight into how this whole thing came down.

For instance, despite Tebow trying to paint himself as a player who just went where he was told, it’s clear the Broncos consulted him and dealt him where he wanted to go.

“Ultimately, they had my contract. They had all the power,” Tebow insisted. Then, he conceded, “They listened to me and what I had to say. That was very gracious of them. They didn’t have to do that.”

If one needed additional evidence this deal came with Tebow’s full endorsement, think about how he went on about his close relationship with fiery Jets coach Rex Ryan — boy, is that an odd couple — and the incumbent quarterback whose job he’ll be trying to take, Mark Sanchez. Tebow said he had no such relationship with the folks in Jacksonville, where there’s a new owner, new coaching staff, and a rebuilding team.

Fair enough. But it wasn’t exactly clear how Tebow became such fast friends with the guys in green, other than sharing an agent with Ryan and an occasional promotional appearance with Sanchez.

On Ryan: “Gosh, I’m trying to remember the first place we met.”

On Sanchez: “Gosh, when was the first time we met?”

The aw-shucks routine wasn’t quite so persuasive on a couple of other points, either.

Tebow acted genuinely surprised that so many reporters, an estimated 200,  showed up for his meet-the-New York-press event.

“Blame the guys upstairs,” he quipped. “They wanted me to do it.”

Asked whether he had instructed some of his endorsement partners to back off, notably Jockey, after it plastered a giant billboard above the Lincoln Tunnel displaying for millions of motorists Tebow’s determined mug and the message: “We Support Tebow &” — oh, yeah — “New York.”

Again, he pleaded no-contest.

“I have not had a chance to talk to them,” he said, “but I guess they are pretty excited.”

Ah, there’s that word again.

Everyone, it seems, is excited.


New York Jets coach Rex Ryan says he's excited…


By Brian Biggane

Palm Beach Post Staff Writer


Updated: 6:03 p.m. Tuesday, March 27, 2012

Posted: 4:43 p.m. Tuesday, March 27, 2012

PALM BEACH — While Rex Ryan said he’s happy to have Tim Tebow on his roster to run the Wildcat this season, the New York Jets coach also took some time Tuesday to talk about another newcomer to the Jets: former Dolphins coach Tony Sparano, Ryan’s new offensive coordinator.

“Everybody looks at this rough, tough football guy, which he is, but he’s very creative also,” Ryan said from the NFL owners’ meetings at The Breakers.

“I’m excited about what he can do with a guy who has a skill set Tim has.”

While Ryan referred to Tebow as the “backup” to Mark Sanchez, he also said Tebow could get as many as 20 snaps per game as the Jets return to the Wildcat after essentially ditching it when Brad Smith signed with Buffalo last season. Ryan said the Jets averaged 8 yards a carry with Smith in the Wildcat.

“Now you put in Tim Tebow, who’s a better inside runner than Brad … (Tebow) can run it up inside, he can play the option and he can throw it. So it’s really a unique skill set, that I feel very fortunate to get.”

Ryan talked about facing Sparano’s Dolphins when Miami ran the Wildcat. When Ryan was defensive coordinator at Baltimore in 2008, he said his decision to put nose tackle Haloti Ngata against Jake Long was the difference in the Ravens beating the Dolphins twice, holding Miami to 52 yards rushing in a 27-9 first-round playoff victory.

When Ryan joined the Jets the next season and faced the Dolphins, “Tony’s got some new wrinkles for us and we were embarrassed by it,” he said. Miami beat the Jets 31-27 and 30-25 that year, with the Dolphins running for 151 yards, including a 2-yard Ronnie Brown touchdown run out of the Wildcat formation in the final minutes, in the first game.

The Wildcat was brought to the Dolphins by quarterback coach David Lee, who had used it with Darren McPherson at Arkansas. Sparano used it out of desperation after an 0-2 start in 2008 and it helped Miami reach the playoffs, the last time the Dolphins made the postseason.

The formation has largely disappeared as teams have put more players on the line of scrimmage to stop the run.

“You couldn’t use it if you couldn’t throw it,” said Buffalo coach Chan Gailey, who plans to reconstitute his Wildcat with Smith this year. “If you can throw it, then you add a different level.”

Pittsburgh coach Mike Tomlin, whose Steelers were bounced from the playoffs by Tebow and the Broncos in a 29-23 overtime thriller last year, said he also expects the Jets to use Tebow in other situations.

“Here’s a guy with a skill set who you use in short-yardage and goal-line situations,” he said. “We’re talking about a guy who can run between the tackles, who is capable of moving the pile and at the same time is a situational quarterback. That raises issues and problems (that) really give an offense a leg up in some of those downs and distances.”

Jacksonville coach Mike Mularkey, who came close to bringing Tebow to his hometown with a trade, said he was excited about the possibilities he could have had.

“We did discuss where and how we were going to use him,” Mularkey said.

John Fox, whose Denver Broncos traded Tebow after they acquired Peyton Manning, said the attention Tebow brings to the NFL is warranted.

“Tim’s a wonderful story,” he said. “Great for our league. He sparked our team, led us to a division championship, got high marks from his teammates.”

As for the guy who has him, Ryan knows he’ll be hearing about the Sanchez/Tebow dynamic for awhile. He said speculation that the move will undermine Sanchez’ confidence is off-base.

“Mark is a little more confident than people want to give him credit for,” he said. “It’s not that he doesn’t have an outstanding resume. He’s 28-20 as a starting quarterback, won four playoff games, two overtime wins on the road, the guy’s done tremendous things. Hitting Year 4, now it’s time for him to really ascend.”

And Tebow?

“(The Broncos) were 8-3 with him as the starter and 1-1 in the playoffs. That’s pretty good,” Ryan said. “I’d sign up for that right now.”

What are your opinions.

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Tebow, Sanchez believe they can coexist with Jets

FLORHAM PARK, N.J. (AP) The message was the same from the New York Jets’ two quarterbacks: We can do this.

And, not only that. Both Mark Sanchez and Tim Tebow think they’re going to have lots of fun along the way.

A brewing quarterback controversy? Not if you ask them.

”I think we’ll have a great working relationship,” Tebow told the sea of reporters at his introductory news conference Monday. ”We talked about that, just supporting one another in our roles. I’m excited about that opportunity. I think we’ll have a great relationship and hopefully we’ll be able to thrive together.”

Sanchez, meanwhile, was nowhere near the Jets’ packed practice facility. He was home in California – and didn’t even watch Tebow smile his way through his first New York close-up.

”I heard he did a pretty good job,” Sanchez said on a conference call five hours later. ”How did he do?”

Well, Tebow handled himself just fine in the spotlight, a situation Sanchez has been accustomed to during his first three NFL seasons.

”As the quarterback of the Jets, I’m getting wins for this team,” Sanchez said. ”That’s my primary focus. If Tim is going to help us win, I’m excited about that.”

They’ve known each other for a few years, and Sanchez even hosted Tebow at the University of Southern California on a recruiting trip.

”He’s a very classy person with a lot of integrity,” Tebow said. ”He’s also fun to hang around. I think our quarterback room will be a lot of fun.”

Sanchez was equally as complimentary, dishing out the praise for his celebrity backup.

”He’s such a good guy, people don’t want to believe it,” Sanchez said. ”There’s no such thing as that good of a guy, but he is. He’s a great guy, a great competitor, and he’s going to make a great teammate.”

Yep, both quarterbacks said all the right things about themselves, each other and the goal they share.

”I would give my whole heart to be the best Jet I possibly can be,” Tebow said, ”and help this team win football games.”

Added Sanchez: ”Our team goal is what’s most important, and that’s winning.”

Sure, it all sounds good, but is it realistic?

Consider that Tebow is a confident and polished rock star who has been a winner on the field. Oh, and he walks in as the Jets’ most popular player, thanks to a huge contingent of fans who have followed him from the University of Florida to the Denver Broncos and now to New York.

”I really don’t feel like it will be too much of a distraction because I honestly will try not to pay too much attention to it,” Tebow said. ”The reason we’re doing this today is because I have bosses, too, and they wanted me to stand up and talk to all of you. I can blame it on them because they made me do it.”

He laughed a few times, grinned throughout and went out of his way to dismiss any speculation that this could be one potential sticky situation. But make no mistake: Tebow is a competitor whose desire is to be a starting quarterback in the NFL. His shortcomings are well-documented with his flawed mechanics, questionable decision-making and 46.5 percent completion rate last season. Tebow also has a resume filled with stirring comeback victories and a playoff win – all last season with the Broncos.

The game plan – at least for now – is to have Tebow serve as the backup to Sanchez, who coach Rex Ryan and general manager Mike Tannenbaum insist is the unquestioned starter. Tebow is also going to have plenty of playing time, in all kinds of roles. And, if that comes from under center, that sounds good to him.

”I think, first and foremost, I’m a football player first and then a quarterback, although that is my dream, that’s what I want to be,” he said. ”That’s what I believe I am, is a quarterback. But however I can help the team, however I can make a difference, however they can use me, I’ll be open to it and work as hard as I can every time I step on that field.”

Ryan has suggested that Tebow could see as many as 20 plays a game, a massive amount for a backup quarterback. That means Sanchez will have to head to the sideline for a good handful of those, and that’s something that doesn’t exactly excite him. But, also not looking to stir any controversy, Sanchez chose his words carefully.

”It’s well-documented that I’m not thrilled about playing wide receiver or coming off the field,” he said. ”But that’s just how I’m programmed, and any quarterback is programmed like that. The way I feel about the wildcat really is secondary. I’m a team guy and I’ll do whatever it takes to win. If changing a few things up a couple times a game is what we need to do, I’m totally on board.”

That’s exactly what the Jets want to hear. But will the harmony last? After all, it’s only March. The situation the Jets put themselves in will play out over the next several months, leading up to training camp sometime in late-July or early August in quaint Cortland, N.Y., which will likely overflow with fans eager to see Tebow in person.

And, if Sanchez slips up or struggles? That’s when the real test will be. After all, the Jets committed to Sanchez when they signed him to a three-year extension a little more than two weeks ago.

”We’re adding another player,” Sanchez said of Tebow’s arrival. ”We’re not replacing anybody. I mean, he’s here to help us. I’m confident in my abilities. I know the team feels the same way about me. They have belief in me. … So, yeah, I’m not worried about losing my spot.”

Now, the Jets have to try to make it all work. They have to decide how much they use the wildcat with Tebow, what they do if Sanchez struggles, how they manage the subsequent public outcry for Tebow and how they keep two young quarterbacks who want to start happy together.

”I really don’t pay too much attention to it,” Tebow said. ”I think the exciting thing is that me and Mark have a great relationship. We have had a great relationship for the last three years. We’ve been friends. We’ve texted back and forth. We’ve talked already. I think we’ll have a lot of fun together.”

That’s all the news for today.

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Column: Tebow gets what he _ and Jets _ wanted

Say this about Tim Tebow: He’s excited to be with the New York Jets.

He sure said so _ over and over and over again.

He started with it. He finished with it. He never allowed anyone to get him off message.

If was a deft strategy for defusing those piranhas in the New York media, who surely came with snarling teeth, ready to rip him apart, but got nothing more than how utterly thrilled Tebow was to have been deposed by the team he led to the playoffs last season (that would be the Denver Broncos) and traded to Team Dysfunction (that would very much be the Jets).

He looked questioners in the eye, throwing in the extra touch of bending ever so slightly in their direction from the podium, just to show how much he really cared about their queries. He smiled frequently and easily. It was all so disarming.

Did we mention he’s excited?

But let’s put aside that seven-letter word for a moment and cut to the chase: If the Jets are using Tebow to steal away some of the thunder from their stadium-sharing rivals, the Super Bowl champion New York Giants, don’t view him as an unwitting pawn.

He’s very much using the Jets right back.

Turns out, for all those opinions of Tebow, which range from someone we’d want our daughters to marry to a religious zealot masquerading as a legitimate NFL quarterback, the real answer is not nearly as juicy.

He’s a pragmatist, pure and simple, at least when it came to deciding his post-Denver future.

After the Broncos signed Peyton Manning, Tebow weighed his options. He could return to his hometown of Jacksonville, Fla., just up the road from where he won a national title and the Heisman Trophy, to help resurrect the lowly Jaguars. Or, he could go to the nation’s media epicenter, to play for a better team that already has a starting quarterback, but is so starved for attention it threw out the possibility of significant snaps out of the wildcat. And _ this is important _ it would give him a much bigger canvas to add much bolder strokes to the Tebow brand, which, to his credit, involves some very significant charity work and willingness to be a role model.

While his most fervent fans probably thought the Jaguars were the logical choice, it appears Tebow had his eye on the bright lights all along, not unlike another Jets quarterback who came along before him, pushing a much different message.

Broadway Tim, he’s not, but Tebow surely knows _ as Joe Namath did _ that being the Big Cheese in the Big Apple is a chance to become even more of a household name. Think Linsanity would’ve caught fire the way it did anywhere else? And don’t think a straight arrow like Tebow will necessarily be out of place in a city some view as just a notch above Sodom.

Tebow seemed to get it all along, though he made every effort to pretend otherwise..

That was the part that seemed insincere during a 35-minute news conference, which served as his introduction to New York.

If you didn’t let all the “exciteds” distract you _ the unofficial tally was somewhere around 40 _ there was clear insight into how this whole thing came down.

For instance, despite Tebow trying to paint himself as a player who just went where he was told, it’s clear the Broncos consulted him and dealt him where he wanted to go.

“Ultimately, they had my contract. They had all the power,” Tebow insisted. Then, he conceded, “They listened to me and what I had to say. That was very gracious of them. They didn’t have to do that.”

If one needed additional evidence this deal came with Tebow’s full endorsement, think about how he went on about his close relationship with fiery Jets coach Rex Ryan _ boy, is that an odd couple _ and the incumbent quarterback whose job he’ll be trying to take, Mark Sanchez. Tebow said he had no such relationship with the folks in Jacksonville, where there’s a new owner, new coaching staff, and a rebuilding team.

Fair enough. But it wasn’t exactly clear how Tebow became such fast friends with the guys in green, other than sharing an agent with Ryan and an occasional promotional appearance with Sanchez.

On Ryan: “Gosh, I’m trying to remember the first place we met.”

On Sanchez: “Gosh, when was the first time we met?”

The aw-shucks routine wasn’t quite so persuasive on a couple of other points, either.

Tebow acted genuinely surprised that so many reporters, an estimated 200, showed up for his meet-the-New York-press event.

“Blame the guys upstairs,” he quipped. “They wanted me to do it.”

Asked whether he had instructed some of his endorsement partners to back off, notably Jockey, after it plastered a giant billboard above the Lincoln Tunnel displaying for millions of motorists Tebow’s determined mug and the message: “We Support Tebow &” _ oh, yeah _ “New York.”

Again, he pleaded no-contest.

“I have not had a chance to talk to them,” he said, “but I guess they are pretty excited.”

Ah, there’s that word again.

Everyone, it seems, is excited.

___

Paul Newberry is a national writer for The Associated Press. Write to him at pnewberry(at)ap.org or http://www.twitter.com/pnewberry1963

That’s all the news for today.

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Why Didn't the New York Jets Wait for Tim…

The New York Jets have signed backup quarterback, Drew Stanton, to a one-year $1.25 million deal. They may have jumped the gun in signing a quarterback before Peyton Manning made his decision. Rumors are that the Denver Broncos are looking to trade their former starting quarterback. Would Tim Tebow be a good choice for a New York quarterback?

Tim Tebow’s stats

In his two years as an NFL quarterback, Time Tebow has played in a total of 23 games. In 2011, he threw for 1,729 yards, had 12 touchdowns and 6 interceptions. His quarterback rating in 2011 was 72.9. His lifetime rating is 75.1

Drew Stanton’s stats

In 2011, Drew Stanton did not start or play in a single game. Since the 2008 season, he has started in four games and played in a total of six games. Prior to being picked up by the Jets this year, he played for the Detroit Lions. His lifetime rating is 63.1. Explain to me why he is worth $1.25 million?

Mark Sanchez‘s stats

Statistically, 2011 was the best year yet for Mark Sanchez. He has a quarterback rating of 78.2 for 2011 and a lifetime rating of 73.2. In 2011 he threw for 3,474 yards with 26 touchdowns and 18 interceptions. If the New York Jets’ front office is looking for someone to challenge and push Sanchez, they missed the mark with Stanton. The Jets would have been better picking up a rookie in the draft and leaving Greg McElroy as second.

Does Mark Sanchez need a push?

Tim Tebow on the other hand, is someone who could push Mark Sanchez to greatness or take over the starting position. Tebow is hungry and he is not afraid to put it all on the line. The Jets have made a vote of confidence in Sanchez, but if they are looking for someone to challenge him, Tebow would have been a better choice. If the Jets were to bring in Tebow, it could be a show-down for the starting position in 2013. I’m not sure why the Jets feel Sanchez needs pushing–he is holding his own.

Would the New York Media embrace Tebow Time?

Right now, the New York media is having a love/hate relationship with Mark Sanchez and so are the fans. When the team is winning, the fans tolerate a lot more. The media in New York is brutal. Unless the Jets were to win the Super Bowl with an undefeated season, the media will always have something negative to say about them.

Tim Tebow might be a good choice for a quarterback to get Mark Sanchez riled, but I do not think that he is a good fit for the New York in general. New York fans will boo their own teams if they are not performing well. I do not see Tim Tebow handling the New York culture well.

Everything else set aside, I am not sure that the Jets have room in their salary cap to bring in Tim Tebow. Wherever he goes, it will be for more than a mere $1.25 million for one year. If you look at what the Jets have done so far in the free-agency period–they are picking up second rate players on the cheap. Even if New York could afford him, I’m not sure that Tebow would want to play in Sanchez’s shadow.

More from the Yahoo! Contributor Network

New York Jets Give Mark Sanchez a Three-year Contract Extension: A Fan’s View

How Peyton Manning Influences the New York Jets’ Choice for Quarterback: A Fan’s Opinion

Latest Coaching Additions to the New York Jets: A Fan’s Opinion

Free Agents and the New York Jets: A Fan’s Perspective

Coach Rex Ryan Fined for Cursing at a Spectator: A Fan’s Reaction

Lynda Altman grew up just outside of New York City. She has been a Jets fan all of her life and hopes they have a winning season in 2012. You can contact her @LdyJetsFan on Twitter.

What do you guys think about this.

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Free Agents and the New York Jets: A Fan's…

March 13 starts the free-agent signing frenzy for the 2012 season. The New York Jets have a total of 13 free-agents available after agreeing to sign Sione Pouha on Monday. With little wiggle room left in the salary cap, New York will not be going after big names like Peyton Manning.

They could benefit from letting the current unrestricted free agents go and picking up a few key players.

The Jets’ top free-agents

Running back LaDainian Tomlinson most likely will not receive an offer from the Jets. He has been highly critical of the team and is a major part of the discord New York has in their locker room.

Wide receiver Plaxico Burress states that he is open to all options, but in reality he wants to go to the Philadelphia Eagles. If he wants out, let him go. Another team could pick him up on the cheap.

Losing safety Jim Leonhard would not be terrible although the Jets are weak in this position. They may have to part ways in order to keep the salary cap under control.

Line backer Aaron Maybin is a restricted free-agent. The Jets would be ill-advised to lose him. This is one of the few free-agents that the Jets should keep if they can afford to.

Who to watch

Running backs Brandon Jacobs and Benjarvis Green-Ellis are available. Jacobs has stated that he would love to play for the Jets. Green-Ellis has never fumbled the ball in his career. If I had to choose between the two available running backs, Green-Ellis would be my choice.

Quarterback Chad Henne is looking for a new home. The Jets need depth in the quarterback position. They may be able to pick him up at a bargain price toward the end of the free-agency period. Signing Henne is one way to score a younger, lackluster backup to replace the aging Mark Brunell.

New York’s roster only needs a few tweaks in order to get things going. Most of their salary cap is tied up in contracts to veteran players. The Jets should focus on getting a front line that can protect Mark Sanchez and removing the problem children who are creating a toxic situation in the locker room.

More from the Yahoo! Contributor Network

New York Jets Give Mark Sanchez a Three-year Contract Extension: A Fan’s View

New York Jets Give Bart Scott Permission to Seek Trade: A Fan’s Opinion

Latest Coaching Additions to the New York Jets: A Fan’s Opinion

Could Peyton Manning go to New York: A Fan’s Opinion

Coach Rex Ryan Fined for Cursing at a Spectator: A Fan’s Reaction

Lynda Altman grew up just outside of New York City. She has been a Jets fan all of her life and hopes they have a winning season in 2012. You can contact her @LdyJetsFan on Twitter.

Note: This article was written by a Yahoo! contributor. Sign up here to start publishing your own sports content.

Feel free to leave your comments below.

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Joe Namath Backs Mark Sanchez, Says No To Peyton…

There’s a growing sentiment in the tri-state area that Peyton Manning should be the next quarterback of the New York Jets, but that sentiment is far from unanimous. Jets legend Joe Namath says the team should stick with Mark Sanchez, according to Metro New York.

“These guys — the Jets — thought Sanchez was a championship quarterback,” Namath said. “Has that suddenly changed now? I haven’t heard that. Let them come out and say it. I haven’t heard that, and I don’t think they should.”

Sanchez completed just 56.7 percent of his passes last season and threw 18 interceptions, leading to a disappointing 2011. The Jets went 8-8 and missed the playoffs for the first time in Sanchez’s career.

But Namath wants to stick with Sanchez, who was the No. 5 overall pick in the 2009 draft and led the Jets to two AFC title games in his first two seasons.

“Mark’s going to be around a while,” the former QB said. “His demeanor was angry last year with all the things going on behind the scenes. His feelings were clearly hurt. I hope they work through all that because I’m rooting for him. I don’t see Peyton coming to the Jets.”

Not much else going on in the NFL world today.

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Report: Jets No Longer Interested In Randy Moss

Free agent wide receiver Randy Moss is looking for a job — but sources tell ESPN New York that while the New York Jets pursued the veteran last year, they’re no longer interested in him in 2012.

The Jets went after Moss last year as a replacement for Braylon Edwards, who left New York for San Francisco in 2011; Moss said no. Now Moss is coming out of retirement, and the Jets could still use a fast wideout option opposite Santonio Holmes, but ESPN’s Rich Cimini says there’s zero interest from the Jets.

Cimini did, however, hear one endorsement of Moss from Chad Pennington, a former Jets quarterback and also former teammate of Moss at Marshall.

“He’s a phenomenal athlete,” Pennington said. “Randy Moss at 35 is better than most at 25 to 28 years of age. In addition, on top of that, he wants to prove people wrong and prove he can be special again.”

What are your opinions.

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Joe Namath Says Jets Need to Fix Problems Before…

Joe Namath Says Jets Need to Fix Problems Before…


By
Eben Novy-Williams
-

Fri Mar 09 05:00:01 GMT 2012

Enlarge image
Joe Namath

Joe Namath

Joe Namath

Jemal Countess/Getty Images

Former NFL player Joe Namath on Aug. 30, 2011 in New York City.

Former NFL player Joe Namath on Aug. 30, 2011 in New York City. Photographer: Jemal Countess/Getty Images

Enlarge image
Peyton Manning

Peyton Manning

Peyton Manning

Peyton Manning #18 of the Indianapolis Colts in the first quarter against the New York Jets in Indianapolis.

Peyton Manning #18 of the Indianapolis Colts in the first quarter against the New York Jets in Indianapolis. Photographer: Andy Lyons/Getty Images

The only quarterback to lead the New
York Jets to a Super Bowl championship said he doubts Peyton Manning would be interested in trying to match his feat.

Joe Namath told Bloomberg News that Manning wouldn’t want
to join the Jets with their present roster and locker-room
dysfunction, and said current quarterback Mark Sanchez has the
ability and work ethic to be the signal-caller of the future.

Manning, 35, was released two days ago by the Indianapolis
Colts after 11 Pro Bowl appearances, four league Most Valuable
Player awards and a Super Bowl title following the 2006 season.
The Jets finished 8-8 in 2011, the end of the season marred by
locker-room controversy including verbal altercations between
Sanchez and receiver Santonio Holmes.

“The Jets have to get things together on their own turf
before someone with his background would be interested in
coming,” Namath, 68, said yesterday in a telephone interview
from his Florida home.

The Reno, Nevada-based Cal Neva sports book gives the Jets
a 9.5 percent chance of signing Manning. The Arizona Cardinals
are favorites with a 19 percent chance, followed by the Miami
Dolphins at 16.5 percent.

“We appreciate Joe and he is entitled to share his
opinions,” Jets spokesman Bruce Speight said in an e-mail.

Running back LaDainian Tomlinson, a free agent after two
years in New York, told the NFL Network that Manning could help
the Jets win. He called the team’s locker-room issues last
season the worst he’d seen in his 11-year National Football
League career.

Sanchez, 25, will be entering his fourth NFL season.

Desirable Free Agent

Manning’s release by the Colts made him one of the most
desirable free agents in NFL history. He won 141 games in
Indianapolis, where he helped the Colts become one of the
league’s elite teams with a $720 million stadium.

Manning turns 36 on March 24 and is working his way back
from at least three operations on his neck that kept him
sidelined for all of last season. He said he has no plans to
retire and is eager to play again.

By cutting Manning, the Colts avoided having to pay him a
$28 million bonus. The team has said it will select Stanford
University quarterback Andrew Luck with the No. 1 pick in next
month’s draft.

Namath said that with Manning’s absence last year, the
bonus and Luck’s availability, he wasn’t surprised the
quarterback was released.

“Your heart might be in one place, but business is
business,” he said. “The No. 1 question is, ‘Is he going to be
satisfied with the strength in his throwing arm?’”

Namath’s Prediction

Namath led the American Football League in passing in 1966
and 1967, and became a national celebrity after he delivered on
his prediction that the Jets would beat the heavily favored
Baltimore Colts in the 1969 Super Bowl. He retired after the
1977 season and was elected to the Pro Football Hall of Fame in
1985.

Namath changed teams late in his career. In 1977, at age
33, he was waived by the Jets and signed with the Los Angeles
Rams, where he played four games in one season.

Namath started eight games for the Jets in 1976, and said
yesterday that he didn’t think he would have regained the
starter’s spot and wanted to play with a contender. He said the
process of leaving New York was “excruciating,” and that he
struggled to adjust to the new life and team in Los Angeles.

‘Wasn’t Prepared’

“What was difficult for me, that I didn’t anticipate, was
how much all the newness could get in the way and be a
distraction,” he said. “I wasn’t prepared for that feeling.
The new faces, new places, new system.”

Namath said Manning’s attention to detail and preparation
may allow him to adjust faster to a new team.

“He’ll handle it much better than I did,” Namath said.

If he could do it again, Namath said, he would have stayed
in New York. Due to knee and hamstring injuries, he found out in
Los Angeles that he was no longer physically able to play to his
satisfaction.

“I didn’t know that when I made the decision to make the
move,” Namath said. “Knowing that I wasn’t up to par
physically, I wouldn’t have left the Jets, absolutely not.”

To contact the reporter on this story:
Eben Novy-Williams in New York at
enovywilliam@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story:
Michael Sillup at
msillup@bloomberg.net

Feel free to leave your comments below.

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Jets reportedly interested in reuniting with WR…

As one wideout eyes his exit from the New York Jets, another reportedly could be on his way back to the Big Apple.

Harrison: Substantial subplots

Assuming he’s healthy, the Jets are interested in bringing back wide receiver Braylon Edwards at the right price, a source told The New York Daily News Wednesday. Edwards was a central part of the Jets’ aerial attack during the 2009 and 2010 seasons when the Jets made back-to-back AFC Championship Game appearances.

Edwards, who signed a one-year deal with the San Francisco 49ers in 2011 and was released prior to the start of the playoffs, caught 11 touchdowns in 28 games with the Jets. The source told the Daily News that it’s not clear at this point if Edwards is interested in a reunion with Rex Ryan & Co.

The Jets could face a hole at the wideout spot, as Plaxico Burress already appears to have one foot out the door. Burress, who is set to become a free agent in March, told a Philadelphia radio station on Tuesday that he would love to sign with the Philadelphia Eagles and team up with Michael Vick.

Not much else going on in the NFL world today.

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