The pros and cons of trading S Marcus Maye

The Jets could trade Marcus Maye. But that doesn’t mean they should. Here are the pros and cons of dealing the safety:

Marcus Maye is the hottest name on the list of potential players the Jets could trade this week.

The safety is playing on his franchise tag after failing to come to a long-term extension with the team and has been the subject to plenty of trade rumors over the past few weeks. Though Maye said he wants to stay with the Jets long-term, there have been reports he would “welcome” a trade and the Jets are looking for at least a third-round pick for him.

Trades don’t exist in a vacuum, though. While trading Maye could help the team in the long run, there are short-term consequences to consider.

Here are the biggest pros and cons for trading the safety.

Robert Saleh’s pregame steps ritual dates back to college

Jets head coach Robert Saleh has been running stadium steps since the early days of his coaching career.

Robert Saleh is no different than his players in the sense that he likes to get himself amped up before a game.

He just goes about it in a different way than those putting the pads on.

Saleh runs up the steps of each stadium his team plays in before opening kickoff. Jets fans were introduced to the pregame routine before New York’s preseason opener against the Giants, as a video of Saleh running up and down the MetLife Stadium steps made the rounds on social media.

As it turns out, the origin of Saleh’s pregame routine dates back to well before he was coaching in the NFL. Even when he was the low man on the totem pole of Michigan State’s coaching staff, Saleh could be seen getting his workout in before every game.

“I’ve been doing it since I was a [graduate assistant], my first job,” Saleh said Friday. “I was looking for something to do pregame while I was still young and in a lot better shape. I was trying to get a workout in and there’s no workout equipment, so I wanted something difficult and I started running stadiums in college. I just took it with me and started doing it in the NFL when I got here, so it’s been about over 20 years now.”

 

New York is hoping Saleh’s pregame routine leads to more wins than his predecessors produced. The 42-year-old pinpointed Arizona, Green Bay and San Francisco as tough stadiums to run the steps in, but making it to the top of those stadiums pales in comparison to being front and center as a head coach during the regular season.

Saleh will do that for real for the first time on Sunday when the Jets take on the Panthers.

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