Enjoy an Ads-Free Jets Insider - Become a Jets Insider VIP!
LATEST JI HEADLINES
TOP STORY
New Jets RB Goodson Arrested on Drugs and Weapons
Charges
 
5/16 : Joe McKnight Doesn't Appreciate Questioning His Roster Spot
5/15 : QB Garrard to leave Jets
5/15 : uSTADIUM App Looks to Revolutionize Social Sports Media
5/14 : Idzik's Offensive Game Plan: Depth Along Front Line
Go Back   Jets Insider.com Forums > Archives > Landing Strip Archive
Register FAQ Calendar Mark Forums Read

Landing Strip Archive An archive for all Landing Strip posts older than 90 days

 
 
Thread Tools
Old 01-02-2010, 09:17 AM   #1
rmeyer52
All League
 
Join Date: Apr 2003
Location: Simi Valley, California
Posts: 2,709
The Miracle that never happens

From Times editorial

I’ve been fortunate enough to avoid drug addiction and alcoholism, and I gave up smoking cigarettes a very long time ago. But I am a Jets fan. And being a New York Jets football fan is an illness. So keep that in mind, and please be kind as you read this.

There was a single moment of glory on Jan. 12, 1969, when the great Joe Namath, with his white shoes and long hair and a right arm that could write poetry with a football, led the Jets to the greatest upset in pro football history: defeating the mighty Colts of Baltimore in the Super Bowl, 16-7.

Google it. You’ll see.

I was young and thought that was the start of something big. Once you take that first hit of a powerful drug, you think that exalted, blissful feeling can be repeated. You can spend the rest of your life trying to experience it again.

I should have known the following December that something freakish was afoot. All the Jets had to do was win one more game — just defeat the Kansas City Chiefs — to go back to the Super Bowl. Behind 6-3 in the fourth quarter, the defending world champions had a first down on the Chiefs’ 1-yard line. The 1-yard line!

It was cold. The wind was blowing. And the beginning of decades of unimaginable, humiliating futility for Jets fans was upon us. The Jets could not advance the ball that 1 yard.

They tried and tried and tried again. It never happened. They got within a foot of the goal line, but they couldn’t cross it. They lost, and the Chiefs went to the Super Bowl.

There is something otherworldly about the perennial ineptitude of this franchise. Gerald Eskenazi, a former sportswriter for The Times, called his history of the team “Gang Green: An Irreverent Look Behind the Scenes at Thirty-Eight (Well, Thirty-Seven) Seasons of New York Jets Futility.” That was in 1998, and nothing has changed since then.

I bring this up because now, more than four, long decades after their one brief moment in the sun, Jets fans are setting themselves up for yet another brutal disappointment. A couple of weeks ago, the coach, Rex Ryan, mistakenly thought that his team, playing terribly, had blown any chance to make the playoffs. It turned out that he was wrong.

Then the Jets went on to beat the undefeated Indianapolis Colts, and if they beat the Cincinnati Bengals in a nationally televised game on Sunday night they will enter the postseason countdown to the Super Bowl.

And that’s the specialty of this team. It’s not just that it’s been bad for most of the past half-century. The insidious aspect is that time and again the Jets rise from the ashes of their awfulness, just enough to offer the hope that something wonderful is about to happen. And the fans get all pumped and crazy, and then the roof caves in.

We should know better, but we can’t help ourselves.

There was the time, for example, when my heroes were playing the Dolphins in Miami and the winner of that game would go on to the Super Bowl. The Jets had a good team that year, and I figured they had Miami’s number. But the weather gods opened the skies over South Florida and it rained for days. It poured. The Dolphins refused to protect the field with a tarpaulin. The result was a vast basin of mud that paralyzed the Jets’ high-powered offense. Miami won 14-0.

Things often happen with the Jets that seem inexplicable. After one of their typically dismal seasons, they fired the coach, Pete Carroll, who had lost his last five games. He was replaced with a coach, Rich Kotite, who had lost his last seven.

The owner, the late Leon Hess, said he had made the switch because he wanted to “win now.”

That didn’t happen. Kotite was a spectacularly terrible coach.

Jets fans have come to take a certain twisted pride in their team’s horrendous history, competing to see who has the worst and most vivid memories. Years ago, whenever I had trouble sleeping, I’d listen to Joe Benigno, who then was the overnight guy on WFAN sports radio and as big a Jets fan as I am. He’d tell hilarious stories of his extreme anguish over the team’s amazing capacity to find creative ways to lose. The bigger the game, the more innovative the effort.

So here we go again.

Long-suffering Jets fans will be glued to their televisions on Sunday night, hoping for the win that will shoot their team into the playoffs. So we can begin praying again for the miracle that never happens.
rmeyer52 is offline  
Sponsored Links
Old 01-02-2010, 10:01 AM   #2
Chrisrud
Veteran
 
Join Date: Apr 2003
Posts: 2,279
[IMG]http://207.199.174.56/img/ZEIaJAwjra_2002894349033766821_rs.jpg[/IMG]
Chrisrud is offline  
Old 01-02-2010, 10:04 AM   #3
el_dub80
With the 1st pick of the 2014 draft, the NY Jets select ...
All Pro
 
Join Date: Apr 2003
Posts: 6,294
So, after reading that, we're gonna win, right? :D
el_dub80 is offline  
Old 01-02-2010, 10:06 AM   #4
NYJets4life
Editing Status
Veteran
 
Join Date: Mar 2007
Posts: 1,384
[QUOTE=Chrisrud;3429706][IMG]http://207.199.174.56/img/ZEIaJAwjra_2002894349033766821_rs.jpg[/IMG][/QUOTE]

Too bad, it was a nice read.
NYJets4life is offline  
Old 01-02-2010, 10:09 AM   #5
Roger Vick
Banned
 
Join Date: Sep 2005
Posts: 9,533
[QUOTE=rmeyer52;3429677]From Times editorial

I’ve been fortunate enough to avoid drug addiction and alcoholism, and I gave up smoking cigarettes a very long time ago. But I am a Jets fan. And being a New York Jets football fan is an illness. So keep that in mind, and please be kind as you read this.

There was a single moment of glory on Jan. 12, 1969, when the great Joe Namath, with his white shoes and long hair and a right arm that could write poetry with a football, led the Jets to the greatest upset in pro football history: defeating the mighty Colts of Baltimore in the Super Bowl, 16-7.

Google it. You’ll see.

I was young and thought that was the start of something big. Once you take that first hit of a powerful drug, you think that exalted, blissful feeling can be repeated. You can spend the rest of your life trying to experience it again.

I should have known the following December that something freakish was afoot. All the Jets had to do was win one more game — just defeat the Kansas City Chiefs — to go back to the Super Bowl. Behind 6-3 in the fourth quarter, the defending world champions had a first down on the Chiefs’ 1-yard line. The 1-yard line!

It was cold. The wind was blowing. And the beginning of decades of unimaginable, humiliating futility for Jets fans was upon us. The Jets could not advance the ball that 1 yard.

They tried and tried and tried again. It never happened. They got within a foot of the goal line, but they couldn’t cross it. They lost, and the Chiefs went to the Super Bowl.

There is something otherworldly about the perennial ineptitude of this franchise. Gerald Eskenazi, a former sportswriter for The Times, called his history of the team “Gang Green: An Irreverent Look Behind the Scenes at Thirty-Eight (Well, Thirty-Seven) Seasons of New York Jets Futility.” That was in 1998, and nothing has changed since then.

I bring this up because now, more than four, long decades after their one brief moment in the sun, Jets fans are setting themselves up for yet another brutal disappointment. A couple of weeks ago, the coach, Rex Ryan, mistakenly thought that his team, playing terribly, had blown any chance to make the playoffs. It turned out that he was wrong.

Then the Jets went on to beat the undefeated Indianapolis Colts, and if they beat the Cincinnati Bengals in a nationally televised game on Sunday night they will enter the postseason countdown to the Super Bowl.

And that’s the specialty of this team. It’s not just that it’s been bad for most of the past half-century. The insidious aspect is that time and again the Jets rise from the ashes of their awfulness, just enough to offer the hope that something wonderful is about to happen. And the fans get all pumped and crazy, and then the roof caves in.

We should know better, but we can’t help ourselves.

There was the time, for example, when my heroes were playing the Dolphins in Miami and the winner of that game would go on to the Super Bowl. The Jets had a good team that year, and I figured they had Miami’s number. But the weather gods opened the skies over South Florida and it rained for days. It poured. The Dolphins refused to protect the field with a tarpaulin. The result was a vast basin of mud that paralyzed the Jets’ high-powered offense. Miami won 14-0.

Things often happen with the Jets that seem inexplicable. After one of their typically dismal seasons, they fired the coach, Pete Carroll, who had lost his last five games. He was replaced with a coach, Rich Kotite, who had lost his last seven.

The owner, the late Leon Hess, said he had made the switch because he wanted to “win now.”

That didn’t happen. Kotite was a spectacularly terrible coach.

Jets fans have come to take a certain twisted pride in their team’s horrendous history, competing to see who has the worst and most vivid memories. Years ago, whenever I had trouble sleeping, I’d listen to Joe Benigno, who then was the overnight guy on WFAN sports radio and as big a Jets fan as I am. He’d tell hilarious stories of his extreme anguish over the team’s amazing capacity to find creative ways to lose. The bigger the game, the more innovative the effort.

So here we go again.

Long-suffering Jets fans will be glued to their televisions on Sunday night, hoping for the win that will shoot their team into the playoffs. So we can begin praying again for the miracle that never happens.[/QUOTE]

[IMG]http://media.ebaumsworld.com/picture/petros753/you-make-bunny-cry.jpg[/IMG]
Roger Vick is offline  
Old 01-02-2010, 10:37 AM   #6
sg3
REX AND THE I-MAN - BACK ON TRACK
Jets Insider VIP
 
Join Date: Jul 2009
Location: The Big Apple, USA
Posts: 20,360
it will happen THREE OR MORE times between now and 2020

THE DECADE OF THE JETS is coming
sg3 is online now  
Old 01-02-2010, 12:25 PM   #7
Astoria
Bababa basketball, gimme gimme gimme the ball because I'm gonna dunk it
Veteran
 
Join Date: Sep 2009
Posts: 1,746
Nice read, thanks.
Astoria is offline  
Old 01-02-2010, 12:35 PM   #8
jetfrantik
Rookie
 
Join Date: Nov 2007
Location: Walla Walla, Wa.
Posts: 686
[QUOTE=sg3;3429748]it will happen THREE OR MORE times between now and 2020

THE DECADE OF THE JETS is coming[/QUOTE]

Right On!!
jetfrantik is offline  
Old 01-02-2010, 12:39 PM   #9
steve mcqueen
Banned
 
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: NJ
Posts: 1,146
2002 wasn't enough of a miracle for you? How about John Halls 53 yard field goal from the dirt at the oakland coliseum...talk about a miracle:O
steve mcqueen is offline  
Old 01-02-2010, 01:40 PM   #10
RoadFan
is tired of the Jets missing on their 2nd round picks.
Veteran
 
Join Date: May 2007
Location: Northern Michigan
Posts: 1,855
Nice read. But I really don't think the :hit_the_f

this time.
RoadFan is offline  
Old 01-02-2010, 02:23 PM   #11
southparkcpa
I see the 88 to 97 period all over again.
Jets Insider VIP
 
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: NC
Posts: 15,697
All due respect to the author, and I get it, but Eff him.

He said nothing new, we all know this.

Let's get pumped for Sunday!
southparkcpa is offline  
Old 01-02-2010, 02:50 PM   #12
el_dub80
With the 1st pick of the 2014 draft, the NY Jets select ...
All Pro
 
Join Date: Apr 2003
Posts: 6,294
Rex HAS to be the Coach to break the curse right? Buddy's kid? It all makes so much sense, everything has turned full circle. It's our destiny :yes:
el_dub80 is offline  
Old 01-02-2010, 05:28 PM   #13
Equilibrium
Why you would shoot a man before throwing him off a plane?
All League
 
Join Date: Jan 2006
Posts: 2,548
[QUOTE=el_dub80;3430038]Rex HAS to be the Coach to break the curse right? Buddy's kid? It all makes so much sense, everything has turned full circle. It's our destiny :yes:[/QUOTE]

Like the child of Anakin Skywalker, bringing balance to the universe?
Equilibrium is offline  
Old 01-02-2010, 05:32 PM   #14
Traitor Jay & the Woodies
is down with the cause.
Hall of Fame
Charter JI Member
 
Join Date: May 1999
Location: The Eternal Blackness of My Mind
Posts: 3,703
Jets fans who lived through and remember the SuperBowl don't get to cry.
Traitor Jay & the Woodies is offline  
Old 01-02-2010, 06:02 PM   #15
kdelgado
Veteran
 
Join Date: Aug 2005
Location: Ithaca College by way of New Jersey
Posts: 1,589
We as Jets fans have been getting alot of attention this year and I have to wonder why. We have a documentary about us and more articles than I've seen in recent years and I'm not gonna lie I like it. People are acknowledging us as masochists and all I can say is why this year?
kdelgado is offline  
 

Bookmarks

Thread Tools

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is Off
Smilies are Off
[IMG] code is Off
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump


Enjoy an Ads-Free Jets Insider - Become a Jets Insider VIP!

All times are GMT -4. The time now is 02:38 AM.



Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.7
Copyright ©2000 - 2013, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.
Copyright ©1999 - 2013, JetsInsider.com LTD