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Jets post game reax loss to Denver

What can you say about this guy Tebow that hasn’t been said?  I’ll let the national script play itself out.  95 yards with over 5 minutes left against a Jets defense that had pretty much shut them down.  But the fact remains, that he wins and say what you will about his mechanics and how the option offense won’t work at the NFL level, but he’s a winner.  I dont want to hear anything but his 4-1 record.  Tim Tebow is singlehandedly changing the conversation from his being unable to make an NFL throw (which hasn’t changed: he can’t do it on a regular basis) and being unable to be a viable starting QB option in the NFL to making plays and being a football player.

So this morning before you ask who’s to blame and what’s wrong with the Jets, maybe the question you should be asking is: IS THIS the real Jets team?

– Those who’ve watched the Jets this season can admit this now after watching the Denver game: Mark Sanchez has regressed.  We’re not saying he’s a Tebow now, Sanchez was given the chance to  sling the rock 40 times which was twice the amount of times that Tebow threw it, but Sanchez isn’t making simple reads and throwing it four and five yards short.  I wrote this in the last postgame reax column about the Pats loss: Sanchez was NOT making the simple throws you expect QBs in this league to make.  This is his third year in this system under Brian Schottenheimer.  This is not something new and he’s not green anymore (he is literally, not figuratively), the playbook can and SHOULD at this point be opened up to him and yet Sanchez is proving week after week that he’s not ready for that responsibility.

The Jets this year forced the issue with Sanchez’ progression.  The theory was, give him another deep threat.  Put more passing attempts in the game plan and let’s watch and see.  He’s going to have career highs in passing attempts, completions, touchdowns and INT’s this year.  Well, it would go without saying that he would do these things when he’s attempting more passes but there is evidence of small incremental progress there.  But with the Jets in win now mode its difficult to really see that.  Again, here were the throws that I saw where an average NFL QB can make and Sanchez just couldn’t.

10:56 3rd quarter Bad throw on 2nd and goal, play set up beautifully but he just throws it way too high for Keller to make a catch on it.
2nd and 6 on 4:33 3rd quarter- Underthrows Plaxico Burress by five yards.
3rd and 6- Behind the receiver- TD Denver
3rd and 6 4th quarter 9:19- Doesn’t step into throw.  Rushes throw, and throws in front of Santonio Holmes by 3-4 yards preventing the Jets from getting a first down.  If Sanchez had thrown it into the middle of the field instead, where there was NOBODY, Holmes walks in for a touchdown.

– These plays are costing his team a game but again, the major difference is that Tim Tebow’s limitations are not preventing Denver from being creative.  They are finding ways to win despite Tim Tebow’s lack of making a throw.  Look, as many examples as there are for Sanchez’ ineptitude as a QB, there are plenty more of Tebow and up until that final drive EVERY TIME he went three and out in that game he was being showered with boos.  Tebow is the most polarizing figure in sports.  He does not apologize for who he is spiritually and as a person, which I find ridiculous that he has to make excuses for his overt Christianity, but he makes no excuses when he plays poorly but the guy makes plays.  At the end of the game, he knew he had to take over.  The Jets had forced Denver into 8 three and outs out of their twelve drives.  EIGHT THREE AND OUTS.  Thats not a winning formula.  So how does a team with an inept QB win a game like this?

Special teams: Out of their 12 drives, the Broncos started on the Jets side of the field 5 times.
Defense:  That pick six, on a horrendous throw by Sanchez helped alot.  But look at the Jets offense, minus Shonn Greene for pretty much the entire game and playing without LDT to begin with, only rushed for 83 while the Broncos ran for 125.  A stout defense and good special teams can ALWAYS help.

– Instead of the usual breakdown of one series of either the Jets or Giants, I wanted to get into the final drive by Tebow and look at all the tackles and missed opportunities the Jets had to clinch this game

“the only way you get beat right now is if something crazy happens.  Your defense is playing so well”- Famous last words from Mike Mayock as the Jets were punting to the Broncos

1st-10, DEN4 5:54 T. Tebow passed to E. Royal to the right for 8 yard gain- Jim Leonhard ends this game right here.  This is a safety.  Tebow makes a boneheaded play to throw a pass across the  line of scrimmage and Eddie Royal misses a tackle by Jim Leonhard and Mike Mayock says it right: “That was scary.”  –1
2nd-2, DEN13 5:25 T. Tebow rushed to the right for 15 yard gain- Tebow running the option and breaks 3 tackles and nearly escapes another, so the Jets have now missed three more.  -3
1st-10, DEN28 4:43 T. Tebow passed to D. Thomas to the left for 9 yard gain Shotgun, rolls to his left and hits his guy on an out.
2nd-1, DEN37 4:36 T. Tebow incomplete pass to the left- Empty backfield, shotgun and Tebow throws a wobbly backshoulder throw that goes 5 yards short.
3rd-1, DEN37 4:32 T. Tebow rushed to the right for 7 yard gain Tebow in shotgun takes it himself and escapes two would be tacklers but gets taken down but not before he gets the first down. 
1st-10, DEN44 3:53 T. Tebow rushed to the right for 9 yard gain Runs right by Darrelle Revis, who as Deion Sanders said so perfectly made a business decision and basically oley’d the tackle and let him go by him and then Tebow runs over another Jet defender. -1
2nd-1, NYJ47 3:45 T. Tebow rushed up the middle for 3 yard gain Empty backfield goes right up the gut himself and breaks two more tackles. -2
1st-10, NYJ44 3:02 T. Tebow incomplete pass to the left Throws it on the ground.  Tebow in the pocket and can’t seem to get a good rhythm going when he’s there.  
2nd-10, NYJ44 2:57 T. Tebow passed to D. Rosario to the left for 18 yard gain While being hit the ball comes out wobbly but hits his receiver for another huge gain.  
1st-10, NYJ26 2:31 L. Ball rushed up the middle for 3 yard gain – keeping the defense honest.  That’s all.  They are in field goal range. THEY SHOULD BE GOING VANILLA trying to get a few more yards and make it a makeable field goal.  Remember the Broncos are ONLY down 3 they don’t have to go for the TD.  
2nd-7, NYJ23 2:00 T. Tebow rushed up the middle for 3 yard gain Fakes the throw to his right and keeps it and runs into the heart of the D.
3rd-4, NYJ20 0:58 T. Tebow rushed to the left for 20 yard touchdown. Here’s where things really come unglued in Denver.  Don’t believe me?  There’s a knucklehead who comes on to the field to try and get cured of leprosy by touching Tebow’s jersey.  EVEN if the Broncos don’t get the TD, they have a very makeable FG here and the game is at the very least going into OT.  But what happens?  Jets do an all out blitz for the first time ALL GAME.  They had not called a single blitz all game, had stayed disciplined in their gaps and Tebow makes one guy miss who’s nibbling at his knees.  Eric Smith comes up WAYYY too hard and leaves the outside wide open for Tebow to go around to get the first down at the first least and then some as Tebow navigates himself through the melee going on and finds the end zone.  -1 
M. Prater made PAT

A defense can not constantly be asked to pitch shutouts against really good football players because at some point that really good football player WILL make a play.  The Broncos game plan was this: keep the score close.  Wait for Tebow to make a play.  They did their part, and Tebow did his.  That final defensive call was totally moronic.  Don’t over commit.  Why break discipline?  That falls on Rex.  The offensive game calling falls on Schottenheimer.  The playmaking falls on the players.  The Special teams miscues which continued falls on Westhoff.  This was a complete utter breakdown of the highest order and this final drive, the Jets defense finally broke and Tebow broke them.  TEBOW broke them.  They had nothing left and were incapable of making a play at that point in the game.  It was so plain to see.  As a matter of fact, it was painful to see if you were a Jet fan.

– So what do we make of this loss?  Well, let’s break this down.  The skinny?  The Jets have no choice BUT to win out.  They have to win all six of their remaining games to even begin thinking about the playoffs.  The Jets now don’t have the tie breaker within the AFC against the Raiders, Ravens, and Broncos, three teams that will most likely be with a similar record as the Jets.  The Jets have to win out and now hope some of those guys lose all their games.  Basically the Jets have put themselves in a position that is untenable.  IF the Jets want to win they MUST go back to ground and pound.  The Broncos put the ball in Tebow’s hands and don’t ask him to do anything outside of his comfort zone.  Why would the Jets expect Sanchez to?  Or maybe it would be better if the Jets lost the next two games and let Sanchez just sling the ball and get more and more comfortable being a pocket passer and get more comfortable with the recievers in real game situations.  He’s not yet in that place where the Jets can trust him in those spots.

The quick foolhardy explanation will be that the Jets defense choked.  That the offense sucks.  I’m not saying either of those explanations aren’t good, I’m just saying that the Jets need to re-evaluate what they are doing on offense.  Brian Schottenheimer has NEVER been one of my favorite Jets.  In fact, I’ve thought that his up and down play calling ability has limited Sanchez in a great way but Schotty needs to put him in those quick step slant screen options where he makes a very quick read.  When Sanchez is out there shuffling his feet, pointing at some receiver and throwing on the run, he’s in trouble.  Sanchez doesn’t know when to loft the ball or throw it soft or when to drill it in.  Its one speed with his throws and it goes back to basic quarterbacking.  Remember last week’s dumbest play in the history of football?  Those are the kind of plays that get you benched but he gets more burn virtue of being a number 5 selection in the draft.

But that slack will only go a long way.  The rest of the season in my opinion, will be Sanchez fighting for his job.  The Jets are in a win now mode and for a majority of that game, the Jets defense was more than stifling, it was Super Bowl calibre and when it came time for the final drive Tebow was in a familiar position: his team needed him to make a play and more times than not, Tebow will make that play.  I won’t say the defense choked in that spot, I’d rather more of the onus on the offense and its inability to keep the Jets defense from being in that position on the road.  Tebow was a one man wrecking crew but it was because the defense had done such a stellar job all game that it was difficult for them to continue to do so when it was clearly Tebow time.

For the Jets to make the playoffs I think they have to go 60/40 run/pass.  They have to put Sanchez into easier reads as an offense.  They need to dumb down the offense.  If you see them continue to sling it, Sanchez had better make the throws and the plays to win the Jets some games.  If not, you can bet Mike Tannenbaum will be on the phone with the Colts come draft time giving up his draft picks for the right to either select Luck or trade for Peyton Manning

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Week 5 Postgame Reax

Before we get into the interceptions and everyone’s need to blame Eli for all of the Giants problems, I’ll try to explain why Eli wasn’t at fault for today’s loss and why a surprise group is at fault for today’s loss.

– Seattle came out on the field with the hurry- up offense which was successful in beating the Giants and I’ll tell you why for two reasons:

1. The NFL is a copycat league.  So if other teams see an offensive philosophy that works against a defense, then yes, other teams will try to copy them and go for it.

2. The Hurry-up offense negates the pass rush because Seattle did quick hitches and slants.  Look at the Giants DB’s, they are 5-8 yards off the receiver.  Why?  Because the point is not to let the receiver beat you with their speed.  If the route takes longer to develop, the QB will have to hold on to the ball much longer and thus gives time for the DE’s and tackles to get to the QB which drives the defense.  the lack of speed by the corners is a problem

– I don’t watch the Seattle offense well enough to know this, but is it really a good thing for them to be running an option offense in the NFL?  I get that the college spread offense has been the latest revolutionary offense that has taken hold in the pro league, but the option offense?  I mean, if a pro offense is too much for Tarvaris, I get it, but how many teams will be able to run it effectively?

– The Giants giveth and the Giants taketh away.  Amazingly this loss can be pinned on the lack of taking advantage of opportunities that the Seahawks continuously gave them.  I counted 5 passes that were sure fire interceptions that the Giants dropped.  You can take one of them away because the Giants then got a strip fumble on the very next play.  That’s four extra turnovers the Giants could’ve had which means the Giants left points on the board.  Again, this game was done in by mistakes that the Giants didn’t take advantage of, as opposed to the ones they did.

– For the second straight week, the Giants offensive line was manhandled at the point of attack.  All day, the Seahawks were running inside stunts and coming RIGHT UP THE MIDDLE which is how they got the safety to begin with.  Anthony Hargrove punched right through the middle and before Eli even turned around after the handoff, Hargrove’s helmet was in Bradshaw’s chest and pushing him behind the goal line.  Then there were the constant line mishaps.  Clearly David Baas’ absence was huge.  Low snaps, terrible handling and the Seahawks constantly coming right up the middle of the line meant that there were several leaks at the center position.  The Kevin Boothe experiment hopefully will end in time for the Bills coming into town.

It was the kind of week that the offensive line once again had a problem.  Then there’s the defensive line.  Now, the QB pressures, hurries, and sacks will cloud the fact that the Seahawk line was powering some strong runs by Marshawn Lynch.  We’ve glorified the Giants when they can hold firm against smaller lines but boy, runners like Marshawn Lynch and Beanie Wells last week will give the Giants problems.  Bigger running backs can muscle a few extra yards out of the Giants defensive line who’ve shown poor tackling technique.  The one handed reaches for tackles will NOT cut it against bigger backs OR shiftier backs.  The Giants have been susceptible to those kind of runners for some time now.  It will be difficult for the Giants to stop anyone if their run defense isn’t closing running lanes.

– As fantastic as that catch was for Victor Cruz, I still think that the better emergence has been Hakeem Nicks.  Every week Nicks makes a grab that makes you go wow.  He’s not going to get the press that a Calvin Johnson gets because Eli doesn’t throw to Nicks in triple coverage, he only saves that Sportscenter highlight for Victor Cruz.  Last week, Nicks grab to set up a 1st and goal to score the touchdown to make it a one possession game against the Cardinals was flat out impressive where he muscled the ball away from the corner, threw him down, and then ran with the football for about ten yards.  That’s called force of will.  That’s his drive.  The fact that he wants nothing to do with Facebook or Twitter or hates to do the commercial stuff (I don’t mean commercials, but just the networking and posing) tells you all about how humble, and driven this kid is.  Hakeem Nicks is the real deal and for too long we’ve been hungry for a receiver to step up since Plaxico Burress left and he’s stepped up in a huge way.  At some point Eli and him will get that back shoulder play routine and become so in synch with one another that all it will take is a look to run a back shoulder route which I have to say, is probably next to the fadeaway by Jordan, the most impossible play to stop in sports.

– Victor Cruz has absolutely been impressive these last few weeks starting from his Eagles game where he had some terrific touchdown grabs.  More so than his highlight reel which has been unreal, his emergence has been that Eli has become much more comfortable in trusting him with the ball which was evidenced by Eli going to him deep in Seattle territory and the game on the line.  Now, him slipping and Eli trying to get it to him anyway shows that there are still little parts of his game that need to be fixed but there is someone that Eli has become confident in.

– On the other side of the good tidings for receivers, is the bad.  Mario Manningham has simply disappeared from Eli Manning’s radar in key critical moments.  I’ve been a fan of Manningham since he was drafted in the fifth round.  I thought he was a steal at that point in the draft.  He has the flair for making great catches.  But he has dropped plenty of critical throws and that’s the way to get OUT of the graces of your QB which is what Victor Cruz can tell you after his key third down drop in the first quarter of the first game got him a first class seat on the bench.  It was only necessity, after Manningham’s injury that got Cruz back into the rotation and he’s taken full advantage of his second chance.  It looks like Manningham has to get in some extra practice time and make some bigger catches in order to get the fair Eli’s attention.

– One more reciever I want to give props to is Jake Ballard.  When Kevin Boss was not retained and the Giants let him walk I was wondering what the G-men were thinking but they are legitemately excited about Ballard’s progression and growth as not only a pass catching tight end but as a blocker as well.  Ballard first of all, looks like Boss so the similiarity begins there, but his blocking has been pretty good and has filled in nicely.  Manning loves to throw to his tight ends to begin with and the absolute flop that Travis Beckum has been has only exacerbated how effective Ballard has been.  Converting Bear Pascoe to TE has been a rough go of it, but Ballard’s emergence gives Eli yet another safety net to throw to.  Remember when the Giants were afraid of losing two key Eli safety nets in Steve Smith and Kevin Boss the Giants have found two new ones in Cruz and Ballard.

– Now, I promised you I would defend Eli Manning and I will.  This loss is not on him and that interception.  The QB gets all the credit and fairly gets all the blame when things don’t go right.  But he was not the reason they lost this game.  Watch the Packers.  Watch the Saints.  They have a certain rhythm and definition to their offense.  There is an air of unpredictability when they line up.  There is an air of confidence that when its a passing down, they can pass it knowing that they will convert.  I dont get the sense the Giants have that.  I think the Giants running game is better than both of those teams to be fair and some of yesterday’s struggles and only converting their first third down on that Victor Cruz hail mary of a play is NOT a recipe for success but its clear that the vision of this offense is not a good one and it starts with the coordinator.  I have NEVER been a fan of Kevin Gilbride.  He relies on the screen pass far too often which leads to the once or twice in a game play where Eli just kind of chucks it at Bradshaw’s feet and the crowd starts booing.  The screen is a good play if you run it twice in a game but the G-Men are a screen heavy team and I can’t for the life of me figure out why.  I get its a successful play but not when teams read it.  Not when teams are sitting on that play and when you have become so reliant on it that teams can sniff it out early.  Gilbride’s play calling got a lot of love in that Philly game and with just due.  He called a brilliant game but in a game against Seattle where their run defense is stout and you know that and you can’t draw up pass plays that are effective enough to take advantage of it?  That’s just lazy play calling.  I get that the Giants want to impose their will on the defense and want to make sure that they play Giant football but you have to be ready and willing to adapt.  The Giants have three quality receivers now.  I still am high on Manningham even if Eli has begun to phase him slowly out of the offense.  I think Jake Ballard has quietly been an absolute beast and its up to Gilbride to utilize these weapons on offense to give the Giants a different shade to this offense.  Its time to pull out the bigger designs on this offense.  Don’t get me wrong, I don’t think this was the game to tip your hand in showing all the secret plays but this was a game that I felt the Giants went to the pass too late, and hung around with the run too long.  Shorter pass routes and quick slants and hitches would’ve helped.  On the play that Eli threw the ball up to Cruz, Manningham was wide open as he ran an out and in but Eli never even looked underneath.  It has to be frustrating for Manningham now but he has to play himself back in and must continue to work in order to be back in the QB’s good graces.  More so, the Giants need better play calling to ensure that Eli isn’t in a state of constant flux where he’s getting poor back up . – The Giants were fortunate with their first half follies to be tied.  242-163 in total yards, 97-35 in rushing yards and 145-128 in passing yards all in favor of the Seahawks but the biggest stat was 3 takeaways and 7 points off those turnovers to 2 turnovers and 0 points off the turnovers including two which had the Giants pinned at the red zone.  The defense clamped down when necessary.  The Giants need a certain rhythm and Gilbride must effectively get that rhythm to play itself out.  You have the weapons Gilbride, now use them properly.

– Finally, I think this loss goes to the defense more so than the offense.  The offense did its part somewhat but with Snee going down in that final fourth quarter drive due to a concussion and David Baas’ injury and Brandon Jacob’s absence, it was tough for the G-Men offense to gain any rhythm.  Danny Ware was a flop and it has to be concerning for them that without Jacobs the running game can stall.  I think the outcome would’ve been different had Jacobs been in the game.  The offense would’ve converted more third downs but more importantly, the third downs would’ve been more manageable distances than the ones that the Giants were attempting to convert.  The defense was slow, and on the deciding touchdown failed to continue playing.  Now teams have a blueprint to slow down the Nascar defense the Giants have.  Quick slants to receivers.  Hurry up offense.  More teams will run it.  And now we have Brad Smith, Fred Jackson, and those damn Bills coming in on Sunday.  Certainly will be a tough task for the Giants.  Getting some of those guys back will certainly help.or

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