Jets have longest playoff drought among major sports after Sacramento Kings clinch

The hope is this distinction only lasts one year for the Jets.

The Jets are now No. 1 … in a dubious fashion. The Sacramento Kings clinched a playoff spot Wednesday night with a 120-80 win over the Portland Trail Blazers, so the Jets (12 years) now own the longest active playoff drought among all four North American major sports.

Before this season, the last time the Kings had made the playoffs was in 2006, back in the Mike Bibby days. Now, with the likes of De’Aaron Fox and Domantis Sabonis, the Kings will return to the postseason after 16 years away.

The silver lining is that the Jets may soon share that drought with the NHL’s Buffalo Sabres. If they miss the playoffs — Buffalo is five points out of a playoff spot as of March 30 — they will extend their postseason drought to 12 seasons as well, having not made the playoffs since the 2010-2011 season.

The hope is that, with all the talent New York will have on the field in 2023, this new playoff drought distinction for the Jets will last only one year.

Jets continue NFL’s longest playoff drought, but they’re only a quarterback away

Bad news: The New York Jets will miss the playoffs for the 12th straight season. Good news: They’re only a quarterback away.

The last time the New York Jets made the playoffs, it was the 2010 season. Rex Ryan was the head coach, Mark Sanchez was the quarterback, LaDainian Tomlinson was the primary running back, Darrelle Revis was in his fourth season, and Jim Leonhard was patrolling the secondary along with Revis. Now, Ryan and Sanchez are television analysts, Revis is coming up on his first year of Hall of Fame eligibility, Tomlinson is in the Hall of Fame, and Leonhard is the Wisconsin Badgers’ interim head coach after a highly successful stint as the team’s defensive coordinator.

What we’re saying is that it’s been a long time since the New York Jets rocked and roiled in the postseason.

Sadly for Jets fans, that unfortunate trend will continue in the 2022 season. When the Jets lost 23-6 to the Seattle Seahawks on Sunday, that officially ended their chances for the postseason.

The good news for the now 7-9 Jets is that they have just about everything figured out. General manager Joe Douglas did a great job in free agency and the draft, head coach Robert Saleh is the right guy for that job, and there’s serious talent just about everywhere.

The bad news for the now 7-9 Jets is their deficit of talent at the game’s most important position. Quarterback has been a major problem for the team through most of the season. Zach Wilson has firmly proven that he’s not the guy, and his selection with the second pick of the 2021 draft will go down as Douglas’ biggest mistake. Mike White has been a serviceable bridge starter, though he is in no way the future at the position. Whether it’s in the draft or in free agency, the Jets will have to figure that out.

So, back to the good news. The Jets are estimated to have just over $15 million in salary cap space when the new league year kicks over in March, and there are moves Douglas and his staff can make to expand that. Perhaps it’s a free agent signing. Perhaps it’s a mega-trade for a star like Aaron Rodgers. Or, maybe the Jets find their future quarterback in the draft. Right now, they have the 13th overall pick, which is a decent place to be.

Perhaps the Jets should take a look at one of their AFC East foes, and how they figured out an interminable postseason drought. The Buffalo Bills failed to make the postseason every year from 2000 through 2016. They made it in 2017 with Tyrod Taylor as their bridge guy, selected Josh Allen with the seventh overall pick in the 2018 draft, and haven’t missed the postseason since 2019.

All the Jets need is the right quarterback. Or, a functional quarterback. Any quarterback who won’t turn into a pumpkin at the worst possible time. If they can get that rolling, the future looks very bright.

Decade of disaster: Jets own NFL’s longest active playoff drought

The Jets have the NFL’s longest active playoff drought at 10 years.

After another season without making the postseason, the Jets own the NFL’s longest active playoff drought.

The Browns previously owned the longest playoff drought at 18 years, but they officially clinched their spot in this year’s playoffs with a win over the Steelers on Sunday. Now the Jets have taken the lead with 10 years of not making the postseason.

The last time the Jets made it past Week 17 was in 2010, when Rex Ryan was the head coach. They made the AFC Championship game and lost for the second consecutive year.

This is the second-longest playoff drought in Jets franchise history. New York had an 11-year playoff drought from 1970 to 1980 before finally making the postseason in 1981.

In the last 10 years, the Jets have had one winning season. That came in Todd Bowles’ first season as head coach in 2015, when the Jets finished 10-6. However, they failed to make the playoffs that season after losing to Ryan’s Bills in the season finale.

New York will enter the 2021 season coming off its second-worst record in franchise history at 2-14. Only Rich Kotite’s 1996 Jets had a worse record than the 2020 Jets under Adam Gase.

Unless the Jets have a major turnaround next season, their playoff drought could tie for the longest in team history.