New York Jets Team History
                   
                   The 
                  history of the New York franchise in the American Football League 
                  is the story of two distinct organizations, the Titans and the 
                  Jets. Interlocking the two in continuity is the player personnel 
                  which went with the franchise in the ownership change from Harry 
                  Wismer to a five-man group headed by David "Sonny" 
                  Werblin in February 1963. The three-year reign of Wismer, who 
                  was granted a charter AFL franchise in 1959, was fraught with 
                  controversy. The on-the-field happenings of the Titans were 
                  often overlooked, even in victory, as Wismer moved from feud 
                  to feud with the thoughtlessness of one playing Russian roulette 
                  with all chambers loaded. 
                   
                  In spite of it all, the Titans had reasonable success on the 
                  field but they were a box office disaster. Werblin's group purchased 
                  the bankrupt franchise for $1,000,000, changed the team name 
                  to Jets and hired Weeb Ewbank as head coach. In 1964, the Jets 
                  moved from the antiquated Polo Grounds to newly-constructed 
                  Shea Stadium, where the Jets set an AFL attendance mark of 45,665 
                  in the season opener against the Denver Broncos. 
                   
                  Ewbank, who had enjoyed championship success with the Baltimore 
                  Colts in the 1950s, patiently began a building program that 
                  received a major transfusion on January 2, 1965 when Werblin 
                  signed Alabama quarterback Joe Namath to a rumored $400,000 
                  contract. The signing of the highly-regarded Namath proved to 
                  be a major factor in the eventual end of the AFL-NFL pro football 
                  war of the 1960s. 
                   
                  The 1968 season was the culmination of the New York AFL hopes 
                  as the Jets, under the guidance of Ewbank and the play of Namath, 
                  Don Maynard and a host of other major contributors, raced to 
                  the AFL East title with an 11-3 record. They defeated the Oakland 
                  Raiders 27-23 in the AFL championship and then stunned the entire 
                  sports world with a 16-7 victory over the overwhelmingly-favored 
                  Baltimore Colts in Super Bowl III. It is considered to be one 
                  of the two most pivotal games ever toward building fan enthusiasm 
                  for pro football. The Jets won the AFL East again in 1969 but 
                  lost to Kansas City in a first-round playoff game and did not 
                  seriously challenge for a divisional championship for 12 more 
                  seasons. 
                   
                  The next decade saw the Jets return to the playoffs five times 
                  in 1981, 1982, 1985, 1986 and 1991. Their high-water marks during 
                  those years came in 1982 and again in 1986, when they advanced 
                  past the first round of the playoffs. In the strike-shortened 
                  1982 season, the Jets advanced to the AFC championship game, 
                  losing to Miami 14-0. Through it all, the Jets have maintained 
                  an excellent attendance record. They have not fallen below an 
                  average-per-game attendance of 54,051 since 1964, their first 
                  season in Shea Stadium. The Jets moved into the Meadowlands 
                  stadium across the Hudson River in New Jersey in 1984 and have 
                  sold out every one of their seats since. 
                   
                  Coach Ewbank in 1978 and two players in the 1980s, all of whom 
                  stand out in Jets history, have been elected to the Pro Football 
                  Hall of Fame. Namath was elected in 1985 and Maynard in 1987. |