The Jets’ offseason is over … finally.

The team takes the field Sunday to open the season against the Bills after one of the most turbulent offseasons in recent memory. The Jets fired coach Todd Bowles, replaced him with Adam Gase, spent more than $120 million in free agency to lure stars like Le’Veon Bell and C.J. Mosley to New York, drafted Quinnen Williams No. 3 overall, then fired general manager Mike Maccagnan and replaced him with Joe Douglas.

Catch your breath after that sentence. It has not been a dull eight months since the Jets last played a game.

Now, the Jets get to find out if all those changes from the front office to the locker room to the coaching staff make a difference. They have gone 14-34 in the past three years. The playoff drought is at a whopping eight seasons. This team and its fans are starved for some success.

“I like the way that this group has worked since we started,” Gase said. “I think our coaching staff is excited for these guys, because I think they have a lot to prove. They have a lot of things that things haven’t gone their way all the time — the guys that have been here and I think they’re excited to kind of wipe the slate clean, start over and work to get to 1-0.”

To get to 1-0 they will have to beat their division rivals from Buffalo. The Bills are in a similar situation to the Jets with a second-year quarterback and some major changes in personnel. Everyone figures the Patriots will win the AFC East and the Dolphins will finish last. It will be a battle between the Jets and Bills to see who can come in second and possibly contend for a wild-card spot.

They are counting on a big step forward in his second year from quarterback Sam Darnold, who said he is in a different place than he was a year ago.

“I wasn’t nearly as comfortable as I am now, I don’t think it’s because of the offense necessarily, I mean I love this offense that we’re in right now, but I just think it’s the comfort level with everything else,” Darnold said. “Given that it is year two and I know all the guys in the locker room and all that stuff I have been talking about. I think those are the reasons I feel a little bit more comfortable going into this Week 1.”

It is time to see if that comfort translates to wins.