Jets can’t start hoping again until disastrous season ends

Mets can't afford to hire wrong team president

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“If you’re honest,” Lon Chaney’s character, former marshal Martin Howe, tells Gary Cooper’s Will Kane in “High Noon,” “you’re poor your whole life, and in the end you wind up dying all alone on some dirty street. For what? For nothing. For a tin star.”

Well, I’ll earn my tin star here, Jets fans.

I’m going to be brutally honest with you. Emphasis on the brutal:

The next four weeks are going to be awful. Unbearable. That might describe life as a sports fan in general as we walk with trepidation through “COVID: The Sequel,” but as with most things Jets fans will bear the brunt of the bad stuff. The next four weeks will be gruesome. Grisly. Hideous. Horrible.

But you must endure them. Look at it as a four-week obstacle course. You get a three-week tour through Florida’s highs (Tampa), lows (Jacksonville) and middlers (Miami), then get to trek to Buffalo where, in Week 18, maybe there’ll be a fine ice storm, blizzard or squall to put a fine dusting on things. Close your eyes and grind through it.

Because after that, as of the morning of Monday, Jan. 10?

Then you can exhale. Then you can start to feel like a real football fan again. Yes, yes: The playoffs will go on without you for an 11th straight year, and the only rooting interest you’ll have is hoping against hope that we don’t get sentenced to a Brady-Belichick Super Bowl (and we all know how that’s going to turn out).

Zach Wilson
Zach Wilson
Bill Kostroun

But that’s extraneous. As of Jan. 10, you can start to look to the future again, and you can do it without keeping a hand over one eye and another covering three-quarters of the other one.

You can look forward to the draft, where the Jets are sure to have two of the top-10 picks (if not two of the top seven; thank you, Jamal Adams) and four in the first two rounds. A team can get healthy in a hurry that way.

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