Not exactly. Luck, Rodgers, Brady, Manning, Brees, Rivers and even Romo could all do wonders for this team
A worse idea than the Fed and The Rockefeller Laws put together. He'd put the team back three years. It's Mariota or bust.
This will never happen,I can't see the Bears getting rid of Cutler anyway unless they tank the season and have a top 5 pick.
Sorry he will be gone by the time the Jets draft. The Jets will win enough games to make sure that happens. This is the Jets your talking about and that there luck.
Nothing wrong with Decker, Harvin, Kerley and Amaro. You should be fine operating with that core. Not great but certainly NFL caliber receivers. If a QB can't move the ball down the field with those guys, he can't play.
Harvin will be gone at the end of this year. No way Jets pay him 10mil next season. Plus he will not redo his deal to stay with Jets.
If Harvin stays healthy he's definitely going to be here next year unless the Jets get a very strong trade offer from somebody. The one thing the Jets have plenty of right now is cap space.
This team can do and has done so much worse then Cutler. I'd welcome him to the Jets in the right deal. I wouldnt them a first round pick for him but if this was a salary dump move by the Bears i'd be interested.
Different situations. The Jets didn't have anybody on the team after 2013 that was both talented and also required immediate cap expenditure to retain. If Mo Wilk was coming due last year instead of next year the Jets would have spent the extra cap space to retain him. Harvin is under contract and very productive. The contract is fully binding on him at a premium and the Jets can cut and run whenever it becomes the right move. After the 2014 season would not be the time to cut and run given that cap space is not an issue. The only things that would make Harvin expendable would be an injury that looked to cut his future production or a good trade offer from another team. Other than those scenarios the most value in the Harvin scenario is as a Jet using some of the Jets cap space.
This is wrong, of course. If the Jets want to keep Harvin after this year, he'd jump at the chance to restructure, because restructuring a deal like he has means giving him more guaranteed money up front, it's the easiest thing in the world to convince a player to do.