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Tuesday, September 14, 2010

New York Jets Analysis is Heartless However It is Just a Game

 Life and death aspect is especially true of any team that plays in New York and any team called the Jets. 
The Jets’ ballyhooed season opener against the Baltimore Ravens on Monday was like an opening night on Broadway that failed to live up to the hype. The opener was a bust: actors bungled their lines and one of the leading men, defensive tackle Kris Jenkins, was carted off the stage with an injury shortly after the curtain opened. Throughout the evening the Jets were off their rhythm and playing behind the beat. Not unexpectedly, the next day’s reviews have been unkind. Overhyped. Overrated. Jets Fizzle.
“Obviously, a disappointing loss, that goes without saying,” a glum looking Rex Ryan said after the Jets loss.

One of the more significant changes in the new stadium is the location of the postgame news conference. In most cities, the coaches speak from bunkers in the bowels of the stadium.
The coaches’ news conferences are held in a well-appointed, glass-enclosed amphitheater in the middle of a pavilion. Fans can look and listen along with the news media to the coach’s alibis, explanations and excuses.

As Ryan spoke Monday, a Baltimore fan cut through the crowd and roared, “Let’s go, Ravens.”

What could anyone say? When you live in a glass house, you don’t throw stones. 


                     Ines Sainz, a reporter for Mexico's TV Azteca, sat down on the Early Show on CBS to discuss the alleged harassment  that took place in the New York Jets locker room on Saturday. She emphasized that she did not make the harassment charge and it was the rest of the media reported the incident.

Sainz said she started to hear people make jokes about her the minute she walked into the locker room. She decided not to pay attention to what people were saying and move on with her interview with quarterback Mark Sanchez.

She explained that there have been similar reactions when she has entered a lock room before, but "the vocabulary was never so rude." Sainz went onto say she "thinks the media in the locker room was upset about the vocabulary they used to refer to me."

Sainz doesn't intend to pursue any further action and trusts the NFL in what the league decides to do. Scroll down to watch the interview. 

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