Robert Saleh, Zach Wilson’s Jets honeymoon period is over

Joe Judge's process needs to start really working for Giants

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The honeymoon is over. 

The house money has been spent. 

A few minutes after 7:30 p.m. Sunday in the raw, rainy and freezing January weather of Western New York, the scholarship period for Robert Saleh and Zach Wilson came to an end. 

The Jets 27-10 loss to the Bills at Orchard Park — a game much closer than the final score indicated against the AFC East champions who’d shredded them 45-17 in the teams’ first meeting this season — represented the final act of 2021 for Saleh and Wilson. 

Surely, for Saleh, the Jets’ first-year head coach, and Wilson, the Jets’ rookie quarterback, it was fun at times, even while compiling just four wins to go with 13 losses. Both men gained invaluable experience at their respective crafts. That was what this season — particularly for Wilson — was going to be all about in the first place. 

The 2021 season was never supposed to be about wins and losses for the Jets, it was about the first-year head coach implementing his program and developing his rookie quarterback. 

That changes in 2022 for Saleh and Wilson. 

More will be not only expected but demanded. 

More will be expected from Zach Wilson and Robert Saleh in Year 2.
More will be expected from Zach Wilson and Robert Saleh in Year 2.
Charles Wenzelberg/New York Post

Another 4-13 finish — or anything close to it — won’t be acceptable for the Jets in 2022. Not with Saleh and Wilson in their second season, not with four picks in the first two rounds of the upcoming NFL draft (Nos. 4 and 10 in the first round and two in the second round) and some $60 million to spend in free agency. 

If Saleh and Wilson and general manager Joe Douglas believe they’ll be treated in 2022 with the relative kid gloves that were applied this season, they don’t have to look very far to see the consequences of repeated failure. 

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