Life at the top is too heady for the New York Jets right
now.
Plagued by errors on offense, defense and special teams, the
Jets were routed by New England 37-16 Sunday night. While the
Patriots took command of the AFC East, the Jets not only fell one
game behind in the standings, they fell so flat on the field that
they were thoroughly outclassed.
“It hurts bad,” star cornerback Darrelle Revis said. “We knew
what position we could have been in if we won. We wanted this very
bad.”
But they played so badly, especially in the second half, that
they had little chance of slowing Tom Brady and the team that has
dominated the division for a decade.
“We made too many mistakes and it cost us,” Revis added. “You
can’t do that against an offense and against No. 12 (Brady).
Brady threw three touchdown passes, including two to Rob
Gronkowski, and the Patriots moved to 6-3. They also have swept the
Jets (5-4), who are tied for second place with Buffalo.
While New England pulled away in the second half, the game
turned late in the second quarter. Mark Sanchez took a timeout at
the wrong time _ coach Rex Ryan took responsibility for it, but
Sanchez admitted it was his goof. The Jets didn’t take advantage of
kicking off from the 50-yard line after going ahead 9-6. And they
couldn’t get any pressure on Brady, who picked them apart on a
quick 80-yard drive.
All part of a bad night for New York, which had won three in a
row.
Ryan was so angry, he told NBC at halftime that the timeout was
the “stupidest play in NFL history.”
“They (the coaches) were talking about taking a timeout and as
soon as I heard it, I walked over to the ref. As soon as I did it,
I saw Rex when I was walking off … It was a horrible mistake and
one you can’t make,” Sanchez said.
There also was a muffed punt by Joe McKnight that two other Jets
also mishandled before the Patriots recovered, leading to a field
goal. And two interceptions by linebacker Rob Ninkovich. And a
team-record 4 1-2 sacks by Andre Carter.
“We had some big mistakes that you just can’t overcome,” said
Plaxico Burress, who caught a TD pass from Sanchez. “We kept
putting our defense in tough situations against a quarterback like
that.”
That quarterback and his coach set an NFL mark with their 117th
victory, breaking a tie with Miami’s Dan Marino and Don Shula as
the winningest duo since 1966.
After the Jets got within a score at 23-16 early in the fourth
quarter, Brady coolly led the Patriots down the field on an 84-yard
drive that was capped by an 8-yard touchdown catch by Deion
Branch.
Ninkovich then sealed the victory _ which snapped a two-game
skid _ on the Jets’ next possession with a 12-yard interception
return for a touchdown midway through the final quarter.
It was also the first home loss for the Jets (5-4) after opening
4-0, but they can’t dwell on it because they play again at Denver
on Thursday night.
Ryan insisted his team was greatly improved since a 30-21 loss
at New England on Oct. 9 and declared it a must-win if New York
wanted to get some home playoff games. Turns out, the Jets still
have plenty of work to do if they expect to dethrone the
Patriots.
New England was coming off losses to Pittsburgh and the Giants,
but said there was no concern in its locker room. It certainly
showed as the Patriots avoided their first three-game losing streak
since 2002.
Brady finished 26 of 39 for 329 yards, the 40th time he reached
the 300-yard mark in a regular-season game, breaking a tie with
Hall of Famer Joe Montana for eighth on the NFL’s list. He also
joined New Orleans’ Drew Brees as the only players to throw for
3,000 yards in their team’s first nine games. Brees also
accomplished the feat this season.
Gronkowski finished with eight catches for 113 yards and the two
scores, and Stephen Gostkowski kicked three field goals. Carter had
all those sacks as the Patriots’ defense, ranked last in the league
coming in, harassed Sanchez all night.
Sanchez was 20 of 39 for 306 yards and a touchdown, but was
intercepted twice and sacked five times.
The Jets appeared to get back in it when Burress caught a 7-yard
fade pass over Antwaun Molden in the right corner of the end zone
on the first play of the fourth quarter, making it 23-16.
But Brady led the Patriots on a typically efficient drive, going
84 yards on 13 plays using a no-huddle offense that kept the Jets’
defense off balance. Brady coolly spread the ball around to his
receivers before connecting with Branch with 8:04 remaining.
“We got caught,” Jets safety Jim Leonhard said. “We do a lot of
things where we’re trying to match personnel, and every once in a
while they get in that hurry-up and it catches us.”
The score sent many in the crowd at MetLife Stadium heading for
the exits.
Earlier, Gronkowski appeared to catch his second TD pass of the
night, but video replay showed he stepped out of bounds. Gostkowski
then booted his third field goal, from 27 yards.
But Gronkowski got into the end zone again a few minutes later
after Ninkovich returned a twice-tipped interception as Sanchez’s
throw went off the hands of running back Shonn Greene, then was
deflected by linebacker Jerod Mayo.
The Jets got on the scoreboard when they got some rare pressure
on Brady. Jamaal Westerman got to him in the end zone, and Brady
threw the ball away left-handed. He was called for intentional
grounding and a safety.
New York took the free kick and moved 65 yards on seven plays,
including a 21-yard run by LaDainian Tomlinson and a 22-yard grab
by Patrick Turner, his first catch of the season. Sanchez ran in
from the 2 on a quarterback draw for a 9-6 lead.
Adding to the frustration was New York not opting to try a pooch
kickoff following a 15-yard penalty on New England’s Vince Wilfork,
and Nick Folk kicked the ball through the end zone. Brady hit five
passes on an 80-yard drive, with Gronkowski getting open over the
middle for the 18-yard score with 9 seconds left in the half that
made it 13-9.
Folk was wide left on a 24-yard field goal attempt at the end of
New York’s opening drive.
New England took advantage, taking a 3-0 lead on Gostkowski’s
50-yard field goal that squeezed over the crossbar.
Not much else going on in the NFL world today.