Jets Coach Aaron Glenn Snaps at Reporter Over Justin Fields Question After Week 6 Loss In London
Look, we’ve all been there. You’re having a rough day at the office, your team just laid an absolute egg on international television, and some reporter has the audacity to ask you a perfectly reasonable question. That’s exactly what happened to New York Jets head coach Aaron Glenn after his team’s pathetic 13-11 loss to the Denver Broncos in London on Sunday.
The question that set Glenn off? Whether Justin Fields would remain the starting quarterback. Apparently, asking about the future of a quarterback who managed negative 10 passing yards as a team is crossing some invisible line in Glenn’s world.
The Meltdown Moment
When a reporter dared to inquire about Fields’ status as QB1 heading into Week 7 against Carolina, Glenn’s response was about as defensive as his team’s secondary has been all season – which is to say, not very good.
“Come on, man. What kind of question is that?” Glenn fired back, clearly frustrated. “There are a number of guys that — I mean, sometimes this league is like this, and there are guys that have bad games. That doesn’t mean you just bench them. Come on, you know better than that.”
Here’s the thing though The numbers of that game don’t lie.
The Numbers Don’t Lie
Let’s break down Fields’ performance against Denver, because the stats tell a story that Glenn apparently doesn’t want to hear. Nine completions on 17 attempts for 45 yards. That’s an average of five yards per completion and its embarrassing,
Getting sacked nine times is particularly impressive when you consider that some of those weren’t even the offensive line’s fault. Fields has developed a remarkable ability to hold onto the ball.
So, yeah Mr Glenn, when your quarterback completes 9 of 17 passes for a whopping 45 yards and gets sacked nine times, maybe it’s not just a “bad game.” Also, Fields has had 5 bad games too, enough of the excuses. But hey, at least the practices are “damn good”.
Glenn’s Defensive Strategy Off the Field
The most telling part of Glenn’s outburst wasn’t the frustration – any coach would be frustrated after that performance. It was the complete unwillingness to acknowledge that the quarterback position needs to be evaluated. This is the same coaching staff that watched their team net negative passing yards and thought, “Yep, we’re good here.”
Veterans like Tyrod Taylor and rookie Brady Cook are waiting in the wings, but Glenn seems determined to ride this sinking ship all the way to the bottom of the AFC East. Which, considering they’re 0-6, isn’t exactly a long journey at this point.
The Bigger Picture Problem
Here’s what makes Glenn’s reaction so puzzling: the Jets aren’t some playoff contender trying to work through growing pains with a young quarterback. They’re winless.
The reporter’s question wasn’t out of line; it was necessary journalism. When a team performs as poorly as the Jets did against Denver, every aspect of that performance should be under scrutiny. That includes the quarterback position, the coaching decisions, and yes, even the coach’s ability to handle legitimate criticism.
What’s Next for the Jets
Looking ahead to their Week 7 matchup against Carolina, the Jets face a Panthers team that just upset Dallas with Bryce Young looking rejuvenated. Meanwhile, Glenn is doubling down on Fields, apparently convinced that loyalty is more important than winning football games.
The irony here is rich. Glenn got testy about a question regarding his quarterback’s performance, but his own performance as a head coach has been equally questionable. When you’re 0-6, nobody should be above criticism – not the players, not the coaching staff, and certainly not the process that got them to this point. If Glenn doesn’t adjust, he might be one and done as the Jets head coach.
