Quantcast

Jets’ Mosley sidelined 5-6 weeks with groin injury

Jets Mosley Returns Football
In this Sept. 8, 2019, file photo, New York Jets inside linebacker C.J. Mosley (57) celebrates with teammates after running back an interception for a touchdown during the first half of an NFL football game against the Buffalo Bills, in East Rutherford, N.J. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig, File)

New York Jets linebacker C.J. Mosley will miss five to six more weeks as he continues to deal with a groin injury that has sidelined him for most of the season.

Coach Adam Gase says Monday that Mosley will try to avoid surgery. Mosley went to see a specialist and was given that timeline. The team will then determine whether he can return at the end of the season.

Mosley injured his groin in the season opener against Buffalo and missed four games before returning last Monday night against New England. But he said he didn’t feel 100% during that game and sat out against Jacksonville on Sunday.

The Jets signed Mosley to a five-year, $85 million deal in March after he played his first five NFL seasons in Baltimore.

Gase also says center Ryan Kalil will also be week to week with a knee injury.

Meanwhile, The Big Cat is joining Big Blue.

The New York Jets traded defensive lineman Leonard Williams to the Giants on Monday for a third-round draft pick next year and a fifth-rounder in 2021, according to a person with direct knowledge of the deal.

Williams was the No. 6 overall pick of the Jets in 2015 and made the Pro Bowl in his second season, but never truly lived up to his lofty draft status. He has 17 career sacks, but none in seven games this season for the struggling Jets. He actually had one in New York’s 29-15 loss at Jacksonville on Sunday that was negated by a penalty on a teammate.

The person spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because neither team had announced the deal, which is the first completed trade between the teams that share MetLife Stadium as their home.

ESPN first reported the deal Monday, a day before the NFL’s trade deadline at 4 p.m. EDT.

In this Oct. 13, 2019, file photo New York Jets’ Leonard Williams warms-up before an NFL football game against the Dallas Cowboys in East Rutherford, N.J. (AP Photo/Adam Hunger, File)

The 25-year-old Williams is scheduled to become a free agent after this season. The fifth-rounder the Jets are receiving could become a fourth-rounder if the Giants sign Williams to a contract extension — which would appear to be a possibility given what the Giants gave up despite being 2-6. The Jets are also paying $4 million of the remaining $6 million on Williams’ contract this year.

He will provide experience on the Giants’ defensive line, where he’ll work alongside Dexter Lawrence, Dalvin Tomlinson and B.J. Hill. The Giants’ interior line has just six sacks, so Williams’ presence should help boost those numbers.

Williams also won’t have to wait long before facing his former team: The Jets host the Giants on Nov. 10.

Giants coach Pat Shurmur was on a conference call as the news of the deal was breaking, but he declined comment. Jets coach Adam Gase also declined comment because the deal was not yet official.

With his lion-like mane, Williams — nicknamed “Big Cat” — was one of the most recognizable players on the Jets in his five seasons since being drafted out of USC. He was also was productive with 240 total tackles, two forced fumbles, an interception and four passes defensed in 71 games.

But his lack of sacks was noticeable, despite former coach Todd Bowles and Gase and defensive coordinator Gregg Williams repeatedly saying he often did things that didn’t show up on stats sheets. He entered the game against the Jaguars with a team-leading 10 quarterback hits.

Williams’ name had been floated in trade rumors in recent weeks with the Jets off to a 1-6 start and it seeming unlikely they would re-sign him in the offseason.

“I thought about it, obviously,” Williams said after the Jets’ 29-15 loss at Jacksonville on Sunday. “It’s something that’s being talked about, but at the same time I can’t let it hinder my play on the field. I can’t let it affect anything that I can control myself. It’s something that’s out of my control and it happens a lot more now in this league and you see trades occur way more often.

“I try to take my emotions out of it and let what happens happen.”

It’s the first major trade by Jets general manager Joe Douglas, who took over for the fired Mike Maccagnan in June. It could also be just the beginning of another rebuilding process for a franchise that has gone eight years without a postseason appearance, with the drought likely to continue this season.

A major reason for the team’s inability to reach the playoffs has been its suspect drafting the past several years, leading to a lack of roster depth.

Williams was part of Maccagnan’s first draft class, and the Jets were thrilled he fell to them at No. 6 after many considered him the best all-around player available going in. But, with him gone, none of the team’s six picks from that year remain on the team. The Jets had 12 draft picks in 2014 under then-GM John Idzik, but only wide receiver Quincy Enunwa remains from that class — and he is out for the season, and perhaps longer, with a second major neck injury in just over two years.

— Dennis Waszak Jr., with reporting from Tom Canavan