New York Jets starting quarterback
Geno Smith will miss as many as 10 games because another Jets player punched
him in the face. Think about that for a minute and how stupid that is to happen
on a professional football team.
They wouldn’t be the New York Jets
if something completely stupid didn’t happen every year. They wouldn’t be the
Jets if they didn’t let a promising young quarterback get injured in some freak
sideshow-type incident.
Idemefuna Enemkpali is the linebacker who punched Smith
and was immediately cut from the team. Not to fear though, ex-Jets head coach
Rex Ryan picked him up for his Buffalo Bills.
The New York Times ran a story
saying that Enemkpali had transformed himself into a “figure of infamy” for the
New York Jets. Taking out the starting quarterback with a sucker punch
certainly runs you afoul of the team and its fans, but you have to do better in
the N.F.L. if you want to achieve infamy.
The idea that Idemefuna Enemkpali
could achieve some kind of “infamy” is ludicrous in a league rife with serial
sex offenders, wife beaters and celebrated cheaters. Enemkpali may have “sucker
punched” Geno Smith, but he punched an adult male and apologized for it. If serial
sex offenders like Ben Roethlisberger
can have a career in the N.F.L., sucker punchers shouldn’t have any barriers to
a life in professional football.
The New York Jets have employed
worse people. The Jets starting quarterback for many years was Mark Sanchez, who raped a woman in
college.
So unless Enemkpali ripped off Geno
Smith’s arm and then knocked him out with his own fist, a simple punch isn’t
going to make you infamous. I guess there is a dry spell of crimes from N.F.L.
players lately and the media needs to make the most of ones that it gets.
And, this happened to The Jets,
which makes the story of misfortune that much better. Ridiculous misfortune
business-as-usual for Gang Green. And being a Jets fan hasn’t been easy for
four decades.
I’m a Jets fan, and I must admit
that the Jets misfortunes are somewhat of a badge of honor at this point. I
have stayed loyal to sports teams through thick and thin even when others
became fair weather fans and attached themselves to more popular, winning teams
at the time. I remember when the New York Yankees had the worst record in
baseball in the early 1990s. Living in Connecticut, many of my friends
supported the Boston Red Sox and made fun of me for my team loyalty. I vowed to
them that I would see the Yankees as world champions again (vowing to be kept
on life support until this happened if need be). I only had to wait six years.
And so it is with the Jets. Most
New Yorkers are New York Giants fans because the Giants have won more Super
Bowls within recent memory. The Jets last won the Super Bowl in 1969, three
years before I was born. That’s OK. I’ll wait a little longer.
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