Upon further review, Aaron Glenn changed his perspective on things.
The New York Jets coach was critical Sunday of the team's effort in a 42-10 blowout loss to New England, saying it was the first time this season that was truly a problem.
''Getting a chance to look at it last night and look at it again this morning, I will say this: Effort was not the issue with that game,'' Glenn said Monday. "I thought our guys played all the way to the very end. What really showed up is they did some things schematically, I thought, that was challenging offensively and defensively that we really have to take a look at and try to hone in on and fix those things.
''And I would say that some of their players just made plays.''
The Jets, meanwhile, made very few. At least not enough to prevent the Patriots from turning the Jets' home finale into an absolute embarrassment, scoring touchdowns on their first six drives.
Glenn might have backtracked on his comments a bit because criticizing players' efforts could fracture the locker room. By bringing schemes and play calls into it, some of the blame falls onto Glenn and his staff.
''Even when it got to a point where all they were trying to do was run the ball, our guys didn't back down from that at all,'' Glenn said. "And I would say that most of the time when that happens, I mean, that's when you have an effort issue. You saw our guys, they were running on and off the field the whole time. Man, it was nothing about them that they were throwing up the white flag and they were quitting. So, to me, that's the one thing that I really wanted to look at and see how that was. Again, schematically were there some things that were challenging? Absolutely.
''But again, our guys did not quit.''