18 November 2011

In the End, the Jets Can’t Stop Tebow

Doug Pensinger/Getty Images
The Broncos' Tim Tebow eluding the Jets' Eric Smith in scoring the winning touchdown on a 20-yard run. He passed for 104 yards and ran for 68
 

DENVER — This is what frustration looks like: Rex Ryan, standing behind a lectern, appearing to fight back tears, his eyes red, his voice quavering. This is what frustration sounds like: Darrelle Revis saying that he was shocked, over and over and over again. This is what frustration feels like: abject helplessness, as Eric Smith watched Tim Tebow sprint around the corner, watched him race to the end zone, watched him celebrate the touchdown that sank the Jets on Thursday night and, maybe, for the year.

For 55 minutes, the Jets had been moving toward a classic no-apologies victory, shoving aside all the potential excuses that threatened to disrupt them — a short week, a long flight, altitude. The Denver Broncos were starting their drive at their 5-yard line. All the Jets had to do was stop Tebow, just as they had all game, but they did not. They could not.

A mile above sea level, they reached their lowest point of the season, perhaps of the Ryan era. In adding another layer to a mythology that grows by the hour, Tebow deflated the Jets by driving the Broncos 95 yards and scoring the winning touchdown in their 17-13 victory with 58 seconds remaining.

“I actually am shocked,” Revis said. “Don’t get me wrong. I’m not doubting Tim Tebow’s skills or anything like that. He’s a great football player, but we felt like we had him where we wanted him.”

Tebow said: “I put that pressure on myself to try to make something happen. Ultimately, that’s the best part about being a quarterback. That’s why I’ve wanted to be a quarterback since I was 6 years old, watching guys like John Elway and Steve Young have game-winning drives. That’s what you dream as a little kid.”


The Jets went ahead, 13-10, on a 45-yard field goal by Nick Folk with 9 minutes 14 seconds left in the fourth quarter. Tebow’s 20-yard scamper came on third-and-4, after the Jets sent an all-out blitz up the middle, a curious decision with Denver already in position for the tying field goal. The Jets pressured eight, leaving only three cornerbacks deep. Tebow rolled left and went untouched for 15 yards, evading Smith at the 5 as the worshipping crowd at Sports Authority Field at Mile High went delirious.

“It’s one of those things, you’ve got to catch him because nobody else is around,” Smith said.

Ryan refused to answer questions about the defensive alignment, perhaps a tacit acknowledgment that he — or the defensive coordinator — had called the wrong play. A few other players — Bart Scott, Calvin Pace and Plaxico Burress — declined to answer questions, period.

For the second consecutive year, the Jets responded to a nationally televised thrashing by New England by losing their next game against an allegedly middling team. The Broncos, having won three in a row, are now 5-5. So are the Jets.

“We had high expectations,” Smith said, “and we haven’t lived up to them.”

Afterward, Ryan told his players that he still believed in them, that he believed they could win. But what? Forget about the A.F.C. East, as Ryan did after Sunday’s loss to the Patriots. The Jets have rallied around all of the adversity that they have faced over the last two seasons, believing that experience would propel them into the playoffs. The Jets know they need more than that. They need to win.

All five of their losses have come within the A.F.C., all against teams (Baltimore, Oakland, Denver, New England) that now own the all-important tiebreaker. Five days ago, the Jets were playing for the division lead, dreaming of a home playoff game, perhaps a first-round bye. Now they sit in 10th place.

“Our playoffs start next week,” Ryan said. “We’ve got to find a way to beat Buffalo.”

The defense let the Jets down on that final drive Thursday night, as it did on that final drive in New England on Oct. 9. But it received no help from a special-teams unit that endured a total collapse, shanking a punt, fumbling a kickoff and yielding a 67-yard return. And for much of the game it put the Jets in position to win in spite of Mark Sanchez, who made blunders in clock management and decision-making that mirrored his problems in Sunday’s loss to the Patriots.

He completed 24 of 40 passes, but only 10 of his last 23, and telegraphed the interception that Andre Goodman returned for a game-tying touchdown in the third quarter. He also missed Santonio Holmes streaking near the Broncos’ goal line in the second quarter, his pass deflected by Von Miller. By throwing to Dustin Keller in the waning seconds of the first half instead of taking a timeout, Sanchez cost Folk a chance to attempt a field goal from closer than 61 yards. The Jets were 3 for 14 on third down.

“We’re not perfect by any stretch, but we’re a lot better than this,” Ryan said. “And we all know it. Every man in that locker room knows it, and I know it.”

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