Friday, 9 March 2012

With Peyton out of the picture, Jets extend Sanchez three more years ()

The mess that is the New York Jets is either one step closer to being cleaned up or getting a whole lot more tangled. On Friday night, the Jets announced a three-year contract extension with quarterback Mark Sanchez, waving a white flag in their pursuit of Peyton Manning on the free agent market. The long-term deal for Sanchez, who led the Jets to two AFC Championship Games in his first two NFL seasons, comes after a rocky 8-8 campaign where the young quarterback struggled. It got so bad that midway through the season, star wide receiver Santonio Holmes called Sanchez and his offensive teammates out after lackluster offensive performance in Baltimore against the Ravens. The acrimony between the two seemed to continue as Holmes was benched in the regular season finale after getting into an on the field fight with his teammates . Holmes has often been suspected as being one of the anonymous sources within the Jets' locker room who has been speaking of dissension in the ranks. Sanchez said that the air has been cleared between the two. "We've been in contact really this whole offseason. A bigger deal was made out of that then was needed to be, but that's OK. With neither of us commenting on that it got bigger — we've kind of laughed that off at this point now, weeks ago. I've been down to see him," Sanchez said. "We've been in contact. I know he's in Africa doing charity work now but I know he's excited about next season." The reports of player discontent with Sanchez began to leak out several days after the Jets season ended, with the anonymous source calling Sanchez "coddled" and saying that the young quarterback was "lazy." Recently, the source told the media that the Jets offense would welcome a potential Manning arrival. Sanchez, who usually tiptoes around sticky issues, was quite clear about what he thought about those comments. "If you're an unnamed source, you don't speak for yourself, and therefore you don't really speak for your team," Sanchez said.