Ex-NFL GM: Davante Adams’ speech to Jets is ‘a sad commentary on the team’ | News, results, highlights, stats and rumours

FOXBOROUGH, MASSACHUSETTS - OCTOBER 27: Davante Adams #17 of the New York Jets takes the field before the game at Gillette Stadium on October 27, 2024 in Foxborough, Massachusetts. (Photo by Adam Glanzman/Getty Images)

Adam Glanzman/Getty Images

Davante Adams is a veteran wide receiver who saw an opportunity to provide some leadership to his new team after a Week 7 loss to the Pittsburgh Steelers, but some around the league believe that said more about the New York Jets than anything other.

“It’s a sad commentary on the team that someone from the outside has to tell them what they’re doing wrong,” a former NFC general manager said in a Thursday story by ESPN’s. Rich Cimini.

A player on the Jets also smiled and offered “no comment” when asked how it felt to have a new teammate booing the team after a loss in his first game.

New York traded for Adams prior to that contest, which ended in a convincing 37-15 victory for the Steelers.

Cimini explained the wide receiver’s postgame speech “drew raves” from quarterback Aaron Rodgers and interim coach Jeff Ulbrich, who even “used it as a rallying cry during the lead-up to the game against New England.”

According to Cimini, “Adams sensed an alarming ‘lack of energy and urgency’ on the field in Pittsburgh and felt compelled to address it immediately after the game, even though he had only been with the team for a few days.”

The apparent lack of urgency from the Jets echoes the comments from the GM, and the results didn’t change in the following game. The New England Patriots surprised Rodgers and Co. with a 25–22 win, dropping New York’s record to 2–6.

This is a team that is supposed to be in a win-now window with the 40-year-old Rodgers under center, surrounded by no shortage of weapons in Adams, Garrett Wilson, Breece Hall and others.

Instead, the Jets sit in last place in the AFC East at 2-6 and need a quick turnaround if they are to be factors in the playoffs.

Perhaps that turnaround starts Thursday against a Houston Texans team that will be without wide receivers Nico Collins and Stefon Diggs.

If it doesn’t, it will take a lot more than an Adams speech to save the Jets season.