Forum/Sports Pub/The Jets Trade of Adams

The Jets Trade of Adams

1,221 views·5 replies·by george
george
georgeADMIN2020#1
I realize he became a cancer, but getting draft picks during a time when there will be no college ball is a bad deal. Who do you pick? Someone that had a good season a few years ago? Once again the Jets give up their best player and get little to nothing in return.
CommodoreOriginal Crew5,158 postsSince 2018
BennyV
BennyVFREE2020#2
Agree. Whenever I think could they do anything stupider they deliver.
CommodoreOriginal Crew5,665 postsSince 2018
WhatKnot
WhatKnotFREE2020#3
I realize he became a cancer, but getting draft picks during a time when there will be no college ball is a bad deal. Who do you pick? Someone that had a good season a few years ago? Once again the Jets give up their best player and get little to nothing in return.
An interesting observation. 🤔 We will see.
CommodoreOriginal Crew12,891 postsSince 2019
Roccus7
Roccus7MOD2020#4
Full Disclosure: I have little interest in just about all professional sports with the exception of the NHL. Even with hockey, I found this year's "Compressed Season Stanley Cup Playoffs" a laughable non-event that meant nothing. On the other hand, I do, and did, take an active interest in this past year's "Stripers Abusing Dom Files" and only logged a record low 6 head ducks when a striper tail-slapped a lure back at me...

That being said @george can you sympathize with this???

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Drew Kanevsky, a Jets season-ticket holder since 2002, misses the familiar game day rhythms when the team is at home: putting on his trusty No. 74 Nick Mangold jersey, tailgating at Lot K1 at MetLife Stadium, explaining nuances to his 10-year-old son, Anthony, that the television feed doesn’t show.

But in this fraught N.F.L. season in which fans have mostly been barred from stadiums because of public health concerns, Kanevsky finds himself pining for a cherished bygone ritual: booing his favorite team.

“More than you can understand,” said Kanevsky, 42, of Belleville, N.J. “Because I have no way to release my venom.”

The void Kanevsky feels is yet another consequence of a pandemic that has muted so many joyous occasions —
and game-winning field goals drilled in empty venues; the Stanley Cup awarded in Edmonton, Alberta, to a team from Tampa, Fla., that beat a team from Dallas — but also deprived the sporting world of a critical side of fandom: the collective venting.
AdmiralOriginal Crew21,694 postsSince 2018
pequa1
pequa1MOD2020#5
I think we may have just gotten a color TV
CommodoreOriginal Crew7,027 postsSince 2018
C
chunksterFREE2020#6
Yeah! We sold out. 🙄



Captain1,969 postsSince 2020

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