Jets safety Jamal Adams apparently was not too impressed with his Jets teammates when he arrived last year.

In an interview with Bleacher Report, the second-year safety described a bad culture around the Jets when he first joined the team after they chose him No. 6 overall in the 2017 draft.

“Everybody was used to losing,” Adams told the website in an interview that took place in the spring but was just published. “You can always tell that vibe. I came in, and it was like everybody wanted to do the bare minimum. They didn’t want to go above and beyond. They didn’t want to take that extra step. They didn’t want to be uncomfortable, [but] to be great, you have to be uncomfortable. You have to be willing to sacrifice and willing to do the little things.

“And the team, the organization, just wasn’t doing those things. It could’ve been two or three people on the team that were doing it and then the rest weren’t or vice versa. But if you’re not clicking on all cylinders with the 53-man roster, everybody upstairs, the staff, the whole organization, it’s not going to go anywhere, man.”

That might not sit well with some of the veterans who were with the Jets last season. He described a locker room that had people not putting in much work.

“It’s not necessarily what it looks like,” Adams said. “It’s more about the vibe. That sense of everybody getting used to it. Like, it hasn’t been going good. People are not studying their plays. People aren’t knowing the plays. People aren’t knowing their assignments. We get paid to play a game. You think that people would be dedicated to their craft and actually study it and know it like the back of their hand. It just didn’t happen on our team. It’s the whole NFL. You have a lot of guys that make it but get comfortable. It’s about having that mind-set that when you make it, you’re just getting started.”

The Jets have gone 5-11 in back-to-back seasons, so Adams may not be too far off. The good news for the Jets is Adams believes the losing culture has left the building.

“It’s changed now,” Adams said. “You can tell it’s a different vibe.”