“I think you have to take into account it's windy as hell out there, too, guys,” Wilson said.
Mac Jones, with far less talent around him, completed 23 of 27 passes (85.2 percent) for 246 yards in the same conditions.
This was the fourth time this year Wilson has both completed under 60 percent of his passes and thrown for fewer than 160 yards. Among 33 qualifying quarterbacks, Wilson ranks 32nd in passer rating (72.6), 33rd in completion percentage (55.6), 31st in passing touchdowns to interceptions (4-5), and 31st in passing touchdowns per attempt (2.1 percent).
Here’s the thing, though: You can live with that. All of it. Really. You can.
Wilson is a small-school quarterback in the second year of his career playing a quality opponent led by a coach (Bill Belichick) who routinely gives young quarterbacks fits. It’s not what you want to see — heck no. It certainly doesn’t instill much faith Wilson will finally answer the Jets unanswered prayers for a franchise quarterback. But, at the minimum, you could try to focus on the future if he at least showed some sign he was self aware enough to acknowledge his struggles were holding the Jets back.
Instead?
Wilson cited executing, an inability to move the chains, the Patriots defense, and a failure to establish the run game when asked why the offense wasn’t working. After that he finally admitted, “Obviously, I had some I want back.” He mentioned some variation of that a few more times over the next five-plus minutes, but then, before walking off the podium, he dropped the bombshell that he didn’t believe he and the offense let the defense down.
How is that possible? How can those words come out of his mouth?
Two weeks ago Buffalo Bills’ quarterback Josh Allen lost to the Jets. His postgame news conference went exactly how every quarterback’s should. Allen put the entire loss on himself, even though he threw for 205 yards, ran for 86, and scored two touchdowns.
“I let the team down,” he said because of his two interceptions. “As a quarterback you can’t play like s--t.”