-Got rid of Cotchery and didn't re-sign Braylon.
-Tried to replace with aging Mason and Plax.
Fail.
I keep thinking about how badly Sanchez regressed in years 3 and 4 and have been pondering the reasons why.
- The detoriation of the Jets o-line and the increasing amount of hits he took.
- The regression of the running game.
- The departure of high quality, veteran skill players on offense.
- Defenses adjusting to him, exploting his weaknesses.
- Being on a defensively oriented team that might not be able to properly mold a young QB.
- Changing to a new offensive system under Sparano.
- The Teebow deal.
- Other, high-profile distractions the Jets managed to create.
- Self-inflicted distractions (serial dating trophy women).
- The intensity of being a pro QB in NYC (all of the above stuffed into a pressure cooker, set on "high").
Please feel free to add to the above list, if I've missed anything.
When taken in sum, it shouldn't surprise anyone that Mark Sanchez regressed.
Most of the above isn't within his control. It's about the environment he's in.
-Got rid of Cotchery and didn't re-sign Braylon.
-Tried to replace with aging Mason and Plax.
Fail.
Switched to a gluten-free diet.
he hasn't looked the same since the ravens game last season IMO. it seems like he's afraid of getting out of the pocket and trying to extend plays with his feet as well
Birth
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Remember when he would feel the pressure, and back peddle his way out of trouble?
Where has that guy gone?
He did become incredibly reluctant to run with the ball. Hard to figure out if that's him, or the scheme.
He's a fumble machine whether he's in the pocket or scrambling, so I'm not sure it matters in that regard. But he did make plays with his feet in years 1 and 2, and that gave the Jets an extra dimension on offense that probably won a few games for them.
Forgot some pretty major ones:
- No dump-off scatback a-la Washington/Tomlinson as an emergency outlet.
- Revolving door of receiving targets with no time to bond with any of them.
- Offensive line that can't stop a rush straight over center.
- Handicapped by the worst offensive coordinators in the NFL.
The first point is the most damning, to me. How Tannenbaum could go into this season with such poor skill players and such a questionable OL and not give his QB at least someone out of the backfield as a consistent dump-off threat is astounding.
SAR I
We don't need to be in the business of making excuses for the guy anymore. He was never good. Perhaps he regressed a bit from being below average, but a few big drives and wins made us think he had potential when were expecting nothing from the team. A number 1 ranked defense and running game masked his poor accuracy and situational awareness issues for his first two seasons.
Some guys have "it" and some guys don't. Sanchez doesn't have it, we thought he did, but he never did and never will. Good QBs make the players around them better. Do you think Jordy Nelson, Lance Moore, TY Hilton or Antonio Brown make Sanchez that much better? Whatever happened to Mario Manningham? He is worthless now that he doesn't have a good QB throwing to him.
I will be unbelievably disappointed if Sanchez starts another game for this team. Now that the door has opened for his exit, he needs to be pushed out.
Maybe he is wearing a Knock Off Jersey and it is effecting his play!
One word.
COACHING
Go look at his stats from the first two years. He sucked then and he sucks now.
The price the Jets paid for beefing up the #1 Defense and #1 Rushing Attack in the NFL was that they ignored the passing game.
This isn't rocket science. It's high finances. Where will you invest your money. All teams operate within the same financial constraints. The Giants have a great front seven and a powerful passing game, no money left to shore up a terrible secondary. Same for the Patriots. Go team by team, you'll see the glaring weaknesses where money was simply not spent.
Our team is imbalanced. The investment on defense is over-the-top, the investment on offense paltry. Joe Montana couldn't succeed in this offense.
SAR I
I think I covered all of those in more general terms.
Highly subjective. Considering the Jets (and Sanchez) had some offensive success under Schotty, I can't really condemn the guy as one of "the worst offensive coordinators in the NFL." Sparano...I don't have enough time watching his play calling to judge him as that.- Handicapped by the worst offensive coordinators in the NFL.
Agreed.The first point is the most damning, to me. How Tannenbaum could go into this season with such poor skill players and such a questionable OL and not give his QB at least someone out of the backfield as a consistent dump-off threat is astounding.
You don't draft QB high and then not have a verifiable offensive mind to mentor him...Schottenheimer, Cavanaugh and now Sparano are NOT guys that are known as developers of QBs..and with Rex as HC? Sanchez never had a chance here.
We should have figured that out when Rex sprang his 'red,yellow and green' system on Sanchez during the first or second season. They wanted him to be a QB some weeks, and a game manager next. Rex and his boys MIGHT have been OK for a QB with an impressive college resume with a lot of game experience but that was NOT Sanchez..he needed a mentor or a tutor, and we didn't give one.
JMO
Look at Sanchez's stats. It's scary EXACTLY how similar they are each year. He's never been good, and now he has worse skill position players, so he looks even worse. I think you'd be hard pressed to identify one area where he has clearly improved since his rookie year.
You would think the 5th pick in the draft had the ability to lift the talent around him.
While agree the talent around Sanchez is not as good as his first two years, its no excuse to be a turnover machine. Even if the offense was poor, if he didn't turn the ball over so much, this team would have more wins.
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