Preview: Jets (3-1) at Dolphins (1-3)

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Preview: Jets (3-1) at Dolphins (1-3)




First-year New York Jets coach Rex Ryan and rookie quarterback Mark Sanchez won't be the only ones getting their first taste of the team's intensifying AFC East rivalry with the Miami Dolphins on Monday night.

Controversial wide receiver Braylon Edwards will also attract plenty of attention in prime time in his Jets debut, but the matchup between New York's physical defense and the Dolphins' prolific rushing attack could determine the outcome in Miami.

New York's defense, ranked fourth in the NFL in yards allowed, held the Saints' potent offense to 10 points, but it was a pair of Sanchez mistakes that led to the decisive margin.

One of Sanchez's three interceptions was returned 99 yards for a touchdown in the second quarter, and his fumble was recovered by New Orleans in the end zone less than six minutes later to give the Saints a 17-0 lead.

"He's like a tiger. He's going to come roaring back," Ryan said. "There's no doubt. I have 100 percent confidence in him, and I have confidence in our football team.

"I can't wait to play again," the coach added. "It's almost like you've got a volcano inside of you like, 'Man, let's go.' I think that's the way our team feels."

The Jets (3-1) are certainly eager to take the field for the first time with Edwards in green. The team traded wide receiver Chansi Stuckey, linebacker Jason Trusnik and two undisclosed draft choices to Cleveland on Wednesday in exchange for Edwards, who had 1,289 receiving yards and 16 touchdowns in 2007 but has found the end zone just three times since.

Edwards has also had problems with dropped passes, and he has made headlines this week for allegedly punching a friend of NBA MVP LeBron James, but the Jets believe he can provide an important boost to their offense despite his apparent baggage.

"I know he's going to add something great to this offense," wide receiver Jerricho Cotchery said. "We've got to smile about that because he's a great player and he's going to demand a lot of attention."

New York's defense could also get a boost this week, as standout linebacker Calvin Pace is eligible to return following a four-game suspension for violating the NFL's policy on performance-enhancing substances.

That could make things even tougher for the Dolphins, but Miami (1-3) will be bringing the league's best running game. Thanks in part to their dedication to the wildcat - a formation from which they still haven't attempted a pass this year - the Dolphins average 183.5 yards per game on the ground.

"Coming into this season, a lot of people were saying the wildcat is a fad and this and that," running back Ronnie Brown said. "It works for us. So we'll see."

The Dolphins racked up 250 rushing yards in a 38-10 blowout of Buffalo on Sunday for their first win of the season, giving quarterback Chad Henne a victory in his first NFL start. Henne, a college teammate of Edwards at Michigan, is filling in for Chad Pennington after the veteran suffered a season-ending shoulder injury.

Henne was unspectacular but efficient, going 14 for 22 for 115 yards and his first professional touchdown without an interception while Brown rushed for 115 yards and two touchdowns.

That duo may have to step up even more with a challenging road ahead. The Dolphins' next four games are against the Jets, Saints, Jets again and New England Patriots as they try to rebound from their slow start and defend their AFC East title.

"Things aren't getting any easier," guard Justin Smiley said. "We got that first win, and we realize we can play with anybody. We know that, we just needed that win to prove it. We're going to have to keep doing it, or we'll be right back in the same place."

The Dolphins clinched the division in the final week last season with a 24-17 road win over New York, ending the Jets' late-season stumble that cost the team a playoff spot.

The Jets, however, won 20-14 in Miami in the 2008 season opener, holding the Dolphins to a season-low 49 rushing yards to take their third straight victory at Land Shark Stadium. Miami managed just 52 yards on the ground in a 27-9 postseason loss to Baltimore, which had Ryan as its defensive coordinator.

That should help ease the new coach's transition into the rivalry, which has featured no shortage of chatter ahead of Monday's game even though both starting quarterbacks have changed.

Dolphins linebacker Channing Crowder led the way with some verbal shots at Jets back Leon Washington, a college rival of Crowder's when the two played at Florida (Washington) and Florida State.

"We do not like each other,' Crowder said Wednesday. "With Florida State, I hated him. I hate him now. If I see him out, I'm not going to talk to him. I'm not going to slap him, but I'm not going to be pleasant."

Crowder has also traded barbs with Ryan, and he promised to give Sanchez an earful, but his own coach has refused to get involved.

"The game's not won or lost based on that kind of garbage," Miami coach Tony Sparano said.

Injuries to key defensive players, however, could be crucial. Linebacker Joey Porter was one of three Miami defenders to miss practice Wednesday. Porter, who sat out last weekend with a sore right hamstring, did light exercises on the side. His status for this week is uncertain.





The combination of Ryan and Sanchez led the surprising Jets to an impressive 3-0 start, but the team will be trying to rebound from its first loss of 2009 following a 24-10 defeat at New Orleans on Sunday.
 

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NY JETS (3-1) vs MIAMI (1-3)

NY JETS (3-1) vs MIAMI (1-3)

NY JETS (3-1) vs MIAMI (1-3)

Game Time: 8:35 p.m. EDT Monday, October 12

Stadium: Pro Player Stadium Surface: grass






RECORD ANALYSIS
STRAIGHT-UP VS. SPREAD OVER/UNDER
NY JETS HOME AWAY TOTAL HOME AWAY TOTAL HOME AWAY TOTAL

Year-to-Date 2 - 0 1 - 1 3 - 1 2 - 0 1 - 1 3 - 1 1 - 1 0 - 2 1 - 3
Last 5 games 2 - 0 1 - 1 3 - 1 2 - 0 1 - 1 3 - 1 1 - 1 0 - 2 1 - 3
YTD vs. Div. 1 - 0 0 - 0 1 - 0 1 - 0 0 - 0 1 - 0 0 - 1 0 - 0 0 - 1
STRAIGHT-UP VS. SPREAD OVER/UNDER
MIAMI HOME AWAY TOTAL HOME AWAY TOTAL HOME AWAY TOTAL
Year-to-Date 1 - 1 0 - 2 1 - 3 1 - 1 0 - 2 1 - 3 2 - 0 0 - 2 2 - 2
Last 5 games 1 - 1 0 - 2 1 - 3 1 - 1 0 - 2 1 - 3 2 - 0 0 - 2 2 - 2
YTD vs. Div. 1 - 0 0 - 0 1 - 0 1 - 0 0 - 0 1 - 0 1 - 0 0 - 0 1 - 0
AWAY VS. SPREAD HOME VS. SPREAD
Year-to-Date FAV DOG GRASS TURF FAV DOG GRASS TURF
NY JETS 0 - 0 1 - 1 1 - 0 0 - 1 1 - 0 1 - 0 2 - 0 0 - 0
MIAMI 0 - 0 0 - 2 0 - 1 0 - 1 1 - 0 0 - 1 1 - 1 0 - 0



TEAM LOGS/SCHEDULE:
( * = overtime)

NY JETS
LINE OVER/UNDER
DATE DAY OPP SCORE SU OPEN CLOSE ATS &
MARGIN OPEN CLOSE O/U &
MARGIN G/T
09/13/09 Sun @HOU 24 - 7 W +4.5 +4.5 W 21.5 45.0 44.0 U -13.0 G
09/20/09 Sun NE 16 - 9 W -6 -3 W 4 46.5 45.0 U -20.0 G
09/27/09 Sun TEN 24 - 17 W -3.0 -1.0 W 6 36.5 36.0 O +- 5.0 G
10/04/09 Sun @NO 10 - 24 L +4.5 +7.5 L -6.5 47.5 46.5 U -12.5 T


MIAMI
LINE OVER/UNDER
DATE DAY OPP SCORE SU OPEN CLOSE ATS &
MARGIN OPEN CLOSE O/U &
MARGIN G/T
09/13/09 Sun @ATL 7 - 19 L +4 +4 L -8 43.0 44.0 U -18.0 T
09/21/09 Mon IND 23 - 27 L +3 +3 L -1 40.5 41.0 O +- 9.0 G
09/27/09 Sun @SD 13 - 23 L +7 +5.5 L -4.5 43.0 44.0 U -8.0 G
10/04/09 Sun BUF 38 - 10 W -3.0 -1.0 W 27 38.5 37.0 O +-11.0 G



PREVIOUS MEETINGS:

LINE OVER/UNDER
DATE DAY VIS SC HOM SC OPEN CLOSE ATS &
MARGIN OPEN CLOSE O/U &
MARGIN G/T
09/18/05 Sun MIA 7 NYJ 17 -5.5 -5.5 NYJ +4.5 37.5 37.0 U -13 G
12/18/05 Sun NYJ 20 MIA 24 -7.0 -8.5 MIA --4.5 35.5 35.5 O +-8.5 G
10/15/06 Sun MIA 17 NYJ 20 -3.0 -2.5 NYJ +0.5 36.0 36.0 O +-1 G
12/25/06 Mon NYJ 13 MIA 10 -1.0 -2.5 MIA --5.5 36.5 36.0 U -13 G
09/23/07 Sun MIA 28 NYJ 31 -3.0 -3.0 PUSH 37.0 36.5 O +-22.5 G
12/02/07 Sun NYJ 40 MIA 13 -1.5 -2.0 MIA --29 38.0 37.0 O +-16 G
09/07/08 Sun NYJ 20 MIA 14 +2.5 +3 MIA --3 36.5 37.0 U -3 G
12/28/08 Sun MIA 24 NYJ 17 -3.0 -3.0 NYJ --10 42.5 42.5 U -1.5 G





STATISTICAL AVERAGES:


AWAY/HOME RUSHING PASSING TOT TURNOVERS
PTS FD AT YDS AVG AT CO PCT YDS AVG YDS INT FUM FGP
NYJ (off) 17.0 18 35 161 4.6 29 16 0.6 192 6.6 353 2.0 0.5 .00
MIA (def) 18.5 12 14 54 3.9 25 14 0.6 228 9.1 282 1.5 0.0 .00
RUSHING PASSING TOT TURNOVERS
PTS FD AT YDS AVG AT CO PCT YDS AVG YDS INT FUM FGP
NYJ (def) 15.5 15 23 96 4.2 33 19 0.6 168 5.1 264 0.5 1.0 .00
MIA (off) 30.5 26 47 245 5.2 28 18 0.6 125 4.5 370 0.5 0.0 .00
ALL GAMES RUSHING PASSING TOT TURNOVERS
PTS FD AT YDS AVG AT CO PCT YDS AVG YDS INT FUM FGP
NYJ (off) 18.5 16 33 131 4.0 28 16 0.6 167 6.0 298 1.3 0.8 .00
MIA (def) 19.8 16 21 61 2.9 30 17 0.6 239 8.0 300 0.8 0.3 .00
RUSHING PASSING TOT TURNOVERS
PTS FD AT YDS AVG AT CO PCT YDS AVG YDS INT FUM FGP
NYJ (def) 14.3 16 24 100 4.2 37 19 0.5 178 4.8 278 1.0 1.0 .00
MIA (off) 20.3 22 37 184 5.0 29 19 0.7 138 4.8 322 0.8 1.0 .00



SCORING AVERAGES:

NY JETS (away) Q1 Q2 H1 Q3 Q4 OT H2+OT
POINTS FOR 1.5 5.0 6.5 7.0 3.5 0.0 10.5
POINTS ALLOWED 1.5 7.0 8.5 0.0 7.0 0.0 7



MIAMI (home) Q1 Q2 H1 Q3 Q4 OT H2+OT
POINTS FOR 3.5 11.5 15 7.0 8.5 0.0 15.5
POINTS ALLOWED 3.5 4.5 8 0.0 10.5 0.0 10.5



NY JETS (all) Q1 Q2 H1 Q3 Q4 OT H2+OT
POINTS FOR 4.3 3.3 7.6 7.8 3.3 0.0 11.1
POINTS ALLOWED 1.5 7.5 9 1.8 3.5 0.0 5.3



MIAMI (all) Q1 Q2 H1 Q3 Q4 OT H2+OT
POINTS FOR 1.8 6.5 8.3 4.3 7.8 0.0 12.1
POINTS ALLOWED 1.8 5.5 7.3 3.3 9.3 0.0 12.6



VALUE INDEX COMPARISON TO LAS VEGAS LINE:

LV POINTSPREAD VALUE INDEX VALUE INDEX
OPEN CURRENT RATING LINE EDGE
NY JETS 50
MIAMI 51.5 -5.0 6.5
LV OVER/UNDER VALUE INDEX VALUE INDEX
OPEN CURRENT RATING EDGE
OVER/UNDER 38.5 2 over
 

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Young Quarterbacks will affect AFC East Affair

Young Quarterbacks will affect AFC East Affair

Young Quarterbacks will affect AFC East Affair

For the New York Jets and Miami Dolphins, four games into the season look a little different than most anticipated. As they prepare for a division game on Monday, how these are where they are and the outcome of the game is not lost on the teams and fans alike.

New York (3-1 SU&ATS) drafted Mark Sanchez and believed he could help them right away, however very few outside the Jets locked room thought their first round pick would play this well this soon.

Yes, Sanchez did have a few rookie moments in loss to New Orleans last week, but that is to be expected and he has embraced his position in the Big Apple and has been an important cog in the wheel to New York?s fast start. The next step in Sanchez?s career development is how he bounces back from adversity, especially on the road, where the Jets are 6-0 ATS at Miami.

Coach Rex Ryan?s pressure tactics are paying dividends, with is club fourth in total defense at 277.7 yards per game and third in points allowed at 14.2. It?s of significance, Miami is 4-13 ATS at home vs. teams yielding 285 or less yards per game.

The Dolphins (1-3 SU & ATS) off last year?s complete turnaround that produced an AFC East title, expected to keep moving in the same direction. However, three straight losses to start the season were more shocking than recent pictures of Kevin Federline. Though the Dolphins run for 183.5 yards per game (1st in the NFL) they still lack explosion on offense. Part of it is how they?ve been built with Chad Pennington as the quarterback, using the running game and controlled passing. That is out the window with the former Jets QB on the shelf again, and a stronger armed Chad Henne takes over, with less actual playing experience than his counterpart Sanchez.

All division games take on added importance and this one just became more so for both teams with New England being upset at Denver Sunday. A win gives the Jets back the lead in the AFC East and a Miami victory makes it two in a row and places them just one game behind the Pats and Flyboys.

Sportsbook.com has New York favored by 2.5 with total of 36. The Jets are 7-1 ATS in October off a SU and ATS loss and in revenge spot against opponent (Lost to Miami 24-17 in last meeting). The Jets are 17-5 UNDER versus good rushing teams averaging 4.5 or more rushing yards. The Dolphins are 19-6 UNDER after gaining 175 or more rushing yards in last game and could be in favorable situation with underdogs 8-1 ATS in Miami?s last nine pre-bye week games.

New York covers if they contain Ronnie Brown and the Wildcat offense. Coach Ryan has faced the Wildcat in the playoffs with Baltimore last year and attacked Brown up the middle and outside defenders stayed home to contain Brown. With cornerbacks Darrelle Revis and Lito Sheppard, the Jets secondary should be able to handle ordinary Fins pass-catchers and stuff the box with run stoppers and blitz Henne like he?s seeing a green and white squadron. On offense, building an early lead is important, since that means Sanchez doesn?t have to do as much and run play action to attack Miami safeties that are much better against the run than the pass.

Miami covers if they control the line of scrimmage and maintain possession of the pigskin. Sanchez is a good rookie quarterback, but he?s not Peyton Manning. They Jets have given up 280 yards total on the ground the last two weeks, primarily outside the A and B gaps. Brown and Ricky Williams should test them. Henne has the arm to at least stretch the field beyond 10 yards, which could mean crossing patterns for solid route runners like Greg Camarillo and Davone Bess to move the chains and get the secondary away from the line of scrimmage. The Dolphins are second against the rush (61 YPG), which could force the New York to throw more than they prefer. Chances are Braylon Edwards will not be as much a factor this early.

Monday Night System ? Play Against any team that lost against the spread on the road last week against a team that covered at home at the same time. (18-6 ATS)
 

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NFL Preview - N.Y. Jets (3-1) at Miami (1-3)

NFL Preview - N.Y. Jets (3-1) at Miami (1-3)

NFL Preview - N.Y. Jets (3-1) at Miami (1-3)




A pair of inexperienced quarterbacks will be in the spotlight at Land Shark Stadium on Monday night, when Mark Sanchez and the New York Jets visit Chad Henne and the Miami Dolphins in the latest renewal of a bitter AFC East rivalry.

In his first career primetime affair, Sanchez will be attempting to bounce back from the worst outing of his young NFL career.

The rookie (14-of-27, 138 yards) committed four turnovers in last week's 24-10 loss at the Saints, throwing three interceptions and losing a fumble on an afternoon (three INT, one fumble) in which he was also sacked four times.

On a day in which the Jets defense did a nice job handling Drew Brees (20- of-32, 190 yards, 0 TD, 0 INT), it was two major Sanchez mistakes that put the team in an ultimately insurmountable hole.

To start the second quarter, Sanchez lofted a ball that was intercepted by veteran safety Darren Sharper, who promptly returned the pick 99 yards for a New Orleans touchdown to make the score 10-0. Less than five minutes later, Sanchez was stripped of the football on a sack by Will Smith in the end zone, and the ball was recovered by Remi Ayodele in the end zone for another New Orleans score.

The loss was the Jets' first after a surprising 3-0 start, and dropped Gang Green into a tie with the Patriots for first place in the AFC East.

On Monday, Sanchez will see his receiving corps enhanced via the addition of former Pro Bowl wide receiver Braylon Edwards, obtained from the Browns on Wednesday in exchange for a package including draft picks, wide receiver Chansi Stuckey, and linebacker Jason Trusnik.

While New York experienced its first difficult setback of the year in Week 4, Miami began to get well after a disappointing 0-3 start.

In his first NFL start after Chad Pennington (shoulder) was placed on season- ending injured reserve, Henne was efficient and showed quality leadership in a 38-10 rout of the Buffalo Bills. The second-year signal-caller's numbers (14- of-22, 115 yards, 1 TD) may have been pedestrian, but were complementary to the work of a strong running game and playmaking defense.

The Dolphins (1-3) carried the ball 45 times for a whopping 250 yards, including a combined 200 yards and three scores from Ronnie Brown (20 carries, 115 yards, 2 TD) and Ricky Williams (16 carries, 85 yards, 1 TD).

On the other side, Bills quarterback Trent Edwards was sacked six times and threw three interceptions, and the Buffalo running game was a non-factor during a contest in which the Bills played from behind nearly throughout. Marshawn Lynch had just four yards on eight carries in his return from an NFL suspension.

For Tony Sparano's squad, Monday will begin an arduous stretch of games that continues with the Saints (10/25), Jets again (11/1) and Patriots (11/8).

SERIES HISTORY

The Jets hold a 46-39-1 lead in their all-time regular season series with Miami, including an unconventional split of last year's home-and-home. Gang Green was a 20-14 winner when it traveled to Dolphin Stadium in Week 1 of last season, and was officially knocked out of the AFC East race with a 24-17 loss to the Fins in Week 17. The latter result snapped the Jets' five-game win streak in the series, which includes three straight wins in Miami. The Dolphins last protected their home field against the Jets in 2005.

In addition to their regular season history, the Jets and Dolphins met in the 1982 AFC Championship, which went to Miami by a 14-0 score.

Sparano is 1-1 against the Jets as a head coach, while New York's Rex Ryan will be meeting both Sparano and Miami for the first time as a head coach.

WHEN THE JETS HAVE THE BALL

Despite the generally high marks Sanchez (744 passing yards, 4 TD, 5 INT) has received for his performance during his first four weeks as an NFL quarterback, the stark facts will show that the Jets are currently 27th in the league in passing offense (166.8 yards per game), and 24th overall (297.2 yards per game). While the attack is likely to revolve around the rushing exploits of Thomas Jones (229 rushing yards, 3 TD) and Leon Washington (181 rushing yards, 11 receptions) primarily, the acquisition of the deep threat Edwards (10 receptions with Cleveland) is undoubtedly an effort to assist both modes of travel. Edwards, a Pro Bowler during a 2007 season in which he caught 16 touchdown passes, had just 65 catches and three touchdowns over his final 20 games with the Browns, but should help free things up for other targets such as wideout Jerricho Cotchery (23 receptions, 1 TD) and tight end Dustin Keller (12 receptions, 1 TD). Cotchery posted game-highs with five catches for 71 yards against the Saints. A running game that has operated in fits and starts needs more production from Jones and Washington, who combined for just 65 ground yards on 17 carries against the Saints. The Jets line has allowed nine sacks of Sanchez through the first four weeks.

The Dolphins and defensive coordinator Paul Pasqualoni have to hope that the playmaking ability the team showed in the win over the Bills will stick around awhile. Even with top pass rusher Joey Porter (6 tackles, 2 sacks) absent from the lineup with a hamstring problem, the club managed six sacks, with half of those going to first-year outside linebacker Cameron Wake (7 tackles) and another two to Dolphins legend Jason Taylor (8 tackles, 3 sacks). The efforts of the pass-rushing group helped aide a secondary that finished with its first three interceptions of the year, including two from cornerback Will Allen (16 tackles, 2 INT) and a 23-yard pick-six for first-round rookie CB Vontae Davis (4 tackles, 1 INT) in the first quarter. Porter is considered questionable for Sunday. The Dolphins have been generally stout against the run all year, ranking second in NFL rushing defense (61 yards per game) heading into Week 5 and third in yards allowed per carry (2.9). Inside linebackers Akin Ayodele (16 tackles) and Channing Crowder (14 tackles) have been a major part of the run- stopping effort, while nose tackle Jason Ferguson (6 tackles) and end Kendall Langford (10 tackles, 1 sack) are among those who have made their presence felt up front.

WHEN THE DOLPHINS HAVE THE BALL

Though they're certainly not the most explosive offense to come down the pike, the Dolphins have shown the ability to run the football better than any team in the league. Brown (369 rushing yards, 4 TD) and Williams (248 rushing yards, 8 receptions, 3 TD) have been at the forefront of an attack that ranks first in NFL rushing offense (183.5 yards per game) by a wide margin, and the team's abilities in short yardage have also yielded the team's most efficient team on both third-down (54.1 percent) and fourth-down (5-of-5). That said, with defenses likely gearing up to stop the run until further notice, it will be up to Henne (207 passing yards, 1 TD, 1 INT) to make throws down the field to keep teams honest. Wideouts Ted Ginn (14 receptions), Davone Bess (20 receptions), and Greg Camarillo (11 receptions) are his best bets there, and tight end Anthony Fasano (4 receptions) is another possible presence for the team over the middle of the field. Camarillo was the team's most active pass-catcher in the Buffalo win, hauling in four balls for 42 yards, while rookie Brian Hartline (6 receptions, 1 TD) scored his first career touchdown on a five-yard pass from Henne in the third quarter. The Miami o-line has surrendered a somewhat troubling 13 sacks through four contests.

After easing into life as an NFL starter against a depleted Bills team, Henne can count on being attacked a great deal by a Jets defense that ranks fourth in the league in yards allowed (277.8 yards per game), fifth against the pass (177.5 yards per game), and first in opponents' completion percentage (51.0). Gang Green has only four sacks on the year, and didn't get to Brees at all last week, but the return of outside linebacker Calvin Pace from a four-game NFL suspension should assist their efforts to bring pressure from the outside. Inside linebacker David Harris (33 tackles, 1 INT) is currently the team's leader in sacks with two. Henne will also want to be careful in testing a fine secondary led by cornerback Darrelle Revis (16 tackles, 1 INT) along with safeties Kerry Rhodes (21 tackles) and Jim Leonhard (18 tackles). Rhodes had eight tackles against the Saints last week, while Revis broke up a pair of Drew Brees passes. Miami will likely have more success running the football against a Jets team that surrendered 153 yards on the ground to New Orleans last Sunday. Harris, Rhodes, nose tackle Kris Jenkins (7 tackles) and linebacker Bart Scott (23 tackles) have been the most active run-stoppers for a team that ranks 13th in NFL rushing defense (100.2 yards per game) as Week 5 begins.

FANTASY FOCUS

If you're looking to pull out a Week 5 fantasy contest based on the exploits of members of either the Jets or Dolphins, and you don't own either of these defenses, you could be in a bit of trouble. The quarterbacks are too inexperienced at this stage to merit starting assignments, and the fact that both teams stop the run well makes using Jones, Washington, Brown, or Williams somewhat problematic. Each back will probably contribute something, but none can be counted on for a huge night. Edwards will be a trendy play here, but he didn't produce for the Browns over the past two seasons and a wait-and-see approach is prudent in regard to his potential on the Jets.

OVERALL ANALYSIS

The Jets have taken on the "AFC East media darling" mantle that the Dolphins earned last season, but with a rookie quarterback in tow, are still going to have to prove themselves on a weekly basis. Though Miami has had its problems during a 1-3 start, the Dolphins are still strong enough defensively to dial up some things to rattle Sanchez. The Jets will do the same to Henne, and you can count on some mistakes from the former Michigan star, but the Dolphins' prospects for running the football seem a bit better than those of the Jets. In what will likely be a grind-it-out affair, look for Miami to make one more big play than its rival, and to pull out a win it needs more desperately than does New York.

Predicted Outcome: Dolphins 14, Jets 13
 

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NFL Matchup - New York Jets at Miami

NFL Matchup - New York Jets at Miami

NFL Matchup - New York Jets at Miami

New York Jets (3-1) at Miami Dolphins (1-3)
Date: Monday, October 12th
Kickoff: 8:30 p.m. (et)
Site: Land Shark Stadium (75,192) -- Miami Gardens, Florida
Surface: Grass (PAT)
Home Record: New York 2-0; Miami 1-1
Away Record: New York 1-1; Miami 0-2
Versus A-F-C East: New York 1-0; Miami 1-0
Versus A-F-C: New York 3-0; Miami 1-2
Current Win/Loss Streak: New York 1L; Miami 1W
Current Road Win/Loss Streak: New York 1L
Current Home Win/Loss Streak: Miami 1W
Television: ESPN
Announcers: Mike Tirico, Ron Jaworski and Jon Gruden
All-Time Series: New York (46-40-1 -- Miami, 1-0 in playoffs)
Last Meeting: December 28, 2008 (Miami, 24-17 at New York)
Series Streak: New York has won five of the last six meetings.

Season Schedule/Results
New York Jets
Sep 13 - W at Houston, 24-7
Sep 20 - W vs. New England, 16-9
Sep 27 - W vs. Tennessee, 24-17
Oct 4 - L at New Orleans, 10-24
Oct 12 - at Miami, 8:20 PM
Oct 18 - vs. Buffalo, 4:15 PM
Oct 25 - at Oakland, 4:05 PM
Nov 1 - vs. Miami, 1:00 PM
Nov 8 - Open
Nov 15 - vs. Jacksonville, 1:00 PM
Nov 22 - at New England, 4:15 PM
Nov 29 - vs. Carolina, 1:00 PM
Dec 3 - at Buffalo, 8:20 PM
Dec 13 - at Tampa Bay, 1:00 PM
Dec 20 - vs. Atlanta, 1:00 PM
Dec 27 - at Indianapolis, 4:15 PM
Jan 3 - vs. Cincinnati, 1:00 PM
Miami Dolphins
Sep 13 - L at Atlanta, 7-19
Sep 21 - L vs. Indianapolis, 23-27
Sep 27 - L at San Diego, 13-23
Oct 4 - W vs. Buffalo, 38-10
Oct 12 - vs. NY Jets, 8:20 PM
Oct 18 - Open
Oct 25 - vs. New Orleans, 4:15 PM
Nov 1 - at NY Jets, 1:00 PM
Nov 8 - at New England, 1:00 PM
Nov 15 - vs. Tampa Bay, 1:00 PM
Nov 19 - at Carolina, 8:20 PM
Nov 29 - at Buffalo, 1:00 PM
Dec 6 - vs. New England, 8:20 PM
Dec 13 - at Jacksonville, 1:00 PM
Dec 20 - at Tennessee, 1:00 PM
Dec 27 - vs. Houston, 1:00 PM
Jan 3 - vs. Pittsburgh, 1:00 PM
 

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What bettors need to know: New York Jets at Miami Dolphins

What bettors need to know: New York Jets at Miami Dolphins

What bettors need to know: New York Jets at Miami Dolphins
New York Jets at Miami Dolphins (+2.5, 36)

Line movement

Oddsmakers opened this AFC East tilt with the home side getting a point, but the betting public has pushed the line up to +2.5 since. The total opened at 36, then bounced up to 37 at most shops. It has settled back to 36 since.

Weather

It should be a perfect night for Monday Night Football at Land Shark Stadium. The temperature is expected to be around 85 degrees with only a 10 percent chance of precipitation.

Remember me?

Jets head coach Rex Ryan knows a thing or two about stopping the Dolphins offense. He helped the Ravens force six turnovers and limit Miami to just 22 points in two meetings last season as Baltimore?s defensive coordinator.

Miami sees a lot of similarities to Baltimore?s defense last year and Ryan?s group in New York.

?They?re running all the same stuff that we saw twice last year,? Dolphins running back Patrick Cobbs told the New York Daily News. ?That?s probably the best advantage we have is that we saw it twice last year.?

Gang Green has allowed just three offensive touchdowns in four games this season.

Ryan also gets outside linebacker Calvin Pace, who the head coach calls his best pass rusher, back from a four-game suspension.

On the receiving end

There are mixed opinions on whether newly acquired receiver Braylon Edwards will have a big impact on Monday?s game. The Jets traded for the former Cleveland playmaker at the beginning of the week and noise out of New York says Edwards will start against the Fish.

?We expect him to be starting Monday night,? Ryan told reporters. ?We?re fortunate he?s played in similar systems. Hopefully he can get up to speed, and if we have to have a wristband [with the plays on it] with him, we will.?

While the Dolphins respect Edwards? talents, they?re not sure Edwards will pose much of a threat so soon after the trade.

?You have to also take into perspective that he?s new, he?s coming in and he really doesn?t know the offense like that,? Fish DB Sean Smith said. ?So I?m not expecting to see him for four quarters like an every-down receiver.?

The importance of Edwards performing well in his first game with his new team was augmented when Jets No. 1 receiver Jerricho Cothchery missed practice this week.

Cothchery made the trip to Miami but he?s still considered questionable. Don?t forget either that New York sent its No. 2 receiver (Chansi Stuckey) to Cleveland in the Edwards trade.

Trash talk

The week started off with a bang when Dolphins linebacker Channing Crowder told reporters what he thought off Jets running back Leon Washington.

?We do not like each other,? Crowder, who?s played against Washington regularly since college. ?I hated him. I hate him now.?

Washington responded by instructing the press to relay this message: ?I eat clam chowder for breakfast.?

Gross.

Let?s hope Mark Sanchez is bringing his earmuffs because Crowder also promises to cuss out the rookie starting quarterback.

Trends

The Jets are on a remarkable ATS (against the spread) run versus their divisional rival. New York has covered the number in nine of the last 10 matchups against the Dolphins.

Of course the one ATS win for the Fish came in the two sides? most recent meeting, a 24-17 road win for Miami last December.

The trend gets even better if you look deeper into the two teams? series history. The Jets are 20-5-2 ATS in the last 27 meetings.

The under is 3-1 for the Jets this season and 7-3 in Miami?s last 10 games dating back to last year.
 

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Preview:
N.Y. Jets at Miami
When: 8:30 PM ET, Monday, October 12, 2009
Where: LandShark Stadium, Miami, Florida

Quick Hits

Overall Team Offense

The Miami Dolphins are ranked 18 on offense, averaging 0.0 yards per game. The Dolphins are averaging 0.0 yards rushing and 0.0 yards passing so far this season.

The New York Jets are ranked 23 on offense, averaging 0.0 yards per game. The Jets are averaging 0.0 yards rushing and 0.0 yards passing so far this season.

Home and Away

The Miami Dolphins are 1-1 at home this season, and against 1-0AFCE opponents.

At home the Dolphins are averaging 30.5 scoring, and holding teams to 18.5 points scored on defense.

The New York Jets are 1-1 while on the road this season, and 1-0 against AFCE opponents.

On the road, the Jets are averaging 17.0 scoring, and holding teams to 15.5 points scored on defense.



Top 5 Trends

NYJ
MIA Under is 7-0-1 in MIA last 8 games in Week 5.
NYJ
MIA Under is 6-0 in MIA last 6 games following a SU win of more than 14 points.
NYJ
MIA Under is 6-0 in MIA last 6 games following a ATS win.
NYJ
MIA Under is 4-0 in NYJ last 4 road games.
NYJ
MIA NYJ are 10-1 ATS in their last 11 meetings in Miami.
 

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Trends - N.Y. Jets at Miami

Trends - N.Y. Jets at Miami

Trends - N.Y. Jets at Miami

ATS Trends

N.Y. Jets

Jets are 8-2 ATS in their last 10 games after accumulating less than 250 total yards in their previous game.
Jets are 7-2-1 ATS in their last 10 games as a road favorite of 0.5-3.0.
Jets are 4-11-1 ATS vs. a team with a losing record.
Jets are 1-4 ATS in their last 5 games in Week 5.
Jets are 1-5 ATS in their last 6 games as a favorite.
Jets are 1-5 ATS in their last 6 games as a road favorite.
Jets are 1-8 ATS in their last 9 games in October.
Jets are 0-4 ATS in their last 4 games following a S.U. loss.
Jets are 0-4 ATS in their last 4 games after scoring less than 15 points in their previous game.
Jets are 0-4 ATS in their last 4 road games vs. a team with a losing home record.
Jets are 0-4 ATS in their last 4 games following a ATS loss.


Miami

Dolphins are 5-1 ATS in their last 6 vs. AFC East.
Dolphins are 5-1 ATS in their last 6 games in October.
Dolphins are 4-1 ATS in their last 5 games after allowing less than 15 points in their previous game.
Dolphins are 3-7 ATS in their last 10 games on grass.
Dolphins are 14-36-1 ATS in their last 51 home games.
Dolphins are 4-11-3 ATS in their last 18 games as an underdog of 0.5-3.0.
Dolphins are 6-19-1 ATS in their last 26 games after allowing less than 250 total yards in their previous game.
Dolphins are 6-20 ATS in their last 26 games after allowing less than 90 yards rushing in their previous game.
Dolphins are 2-8 ATS in their last 10 games following a SU win of more than 14 points.
Dolphins are 1-4 ATS in their last 5 games overall.
Dolphins are 1-4 ATS in their last 5 games following a ATS win.
Dolphins are 1-5 ATS in their last 6 games as a home underdog.
Dolphins are 0-4-1 ATS in their last 5 games as a home underdog of 0.5-3.0.
Dolphins are 0-4 ATS in their last 4 games as an underdog.


OU Trends

N.Y. Jets

Under is 4-0 in Jets last 4 games as a road favorite of 0.5-3.0.
Under is 5-0 in Jets last 5 games as a road favorite.
Under is 4-0 in Jets last 4 road games.
Under is 5-1 in Jets last 6 games overall.
Over is 4-1 in Jets last 5 Monday games.
Under is 4-1 in Jets last 5 games in October.
Under is 3-1-1 in Jets last 5 games following a ATS loss.
Under is 5-2-1 in Jets last 8 vs. AFC East.
Under is 7-3 in Jets last 10 road games vs. a team with a losing home record.
Under is 21-10-2 in Jets last 33 games after accumulating less than 150 yards passing in their previous game.


Miami

Under is 6-0 in Dolphins last 6 games following a SU win of more than 14 points.
Under is 7-0-1 in Dolphins last 8 games in Week 5.
Under is 6-0 in Dolphins last 6 games following a ATS win.
Under is 5-1 in Dolphins last 6 games as an underdog.
Under is 12-3 in Dolphins last 15 games after scoring more than 30 points in their previous game.
Under is 22-7 in Dolphins last 29 games after accumulating more than 150 yards rushing in their previous game.
Under is 24-8 in Dolphins last 32 home games vs. a team with a winning road record.
Under is 11-4 in Dolphins last 15 games overall.
Under is 21-8 in Dolphins last 29 games following a S.U. win.
Over is 12-5 in Dolphins last 17 Monday games.


Head to Head

Jets are 10-1 ATS in their last 11 meetings in Miami.
Jets are 20-5-2 ATS in their last 27 meetings.
Underdog is 3-1-1 ATS in their last 5 meetings.
Road team is 4-0-1 ATS in their last 5 meetings.
 

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DUNKEL INDEX 12 0CT 09

DUNKEL INDEX 12 0CT 09

Today's NFL Picks
NY Jets at Miami
The Jets look to build on their 10-1 ATS record in their last 11 games in Miami. New York is the pick (-1 1/2) according to Dunkel, which has the Jets favored by 5 1/2. Dunkel Pick: NY Jets (-1 1/2). Here are all of this week's picks.

MONDAY, OCTOBER 12
Time Posted: 11:00 p.m. EST (10/7)
Game 427-428: NY Jets at Miami
Dunkel Ratings: NY Jets 136.544; Miami 131.188
Dunkel Line: NY Jets by 5 1/2; 40
Vegas Line: NY Jets by 1 1/2; 36
Dunkel Pick: NY Jets (-1 1/2); Over
 

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Jets' fate could rest on bounce back

Jets' fate could rest on bounce back

Jets' fate could rest on bounce back
By MARK CANNIZZARO


MIAMI -- How do they get up off the mat?

That is perhaps the most compelling question to tonight's Jets-Dolphins AFC East showdown: How the Jets respond from their first loss of the season -- their first loss under Rex Ryan's leadership.

The Jets' feel-good 3-0 start was derailed by last week's 24-10 loss in New Orleans. The Dolphins halted their 0-3 start with a rout over the Bills last Sunday and saved their season, for the moment.

What gives tonight?

The Jets can truly separate themselves from their AFC East rivals with a win tonight, and that's not something lost on Ryan, who said, "This game counts as one-and-a-half games."

JETS BLOG

At the head of the list for Jets among those needing to bounce back is their rookie quarterback Mark Sanchez, who threw three interceptions and lost a fumble last week.

Because so many eyes are on the Jets to see how they'll respond to their first knockout, it was fitting that they invited boxing champion Floyd Mayweather to practice on Thursday to visit and speak to the team.

It was a page torn right out of the playbook of former Jets head coach Eric Mangini, who brought in a lot of boxers to speak to the players.

"I like when you get champions, great guys in the sports and entertainment field. I like when they come to practice,'' Ryan said. "It was great to see pound-for-pound the best fighter in the world come out and watch practice. His message was that he enjoys the way we play, our style of play.''

Here's how we see tonight's game breaking down:

BEST MATCHUP: Jets LT D'Brickashaw Ferguson vs. Dolphins DE Jason Taylor. Ferguson yielded two sacks last week in New Orleans. Taylor has three sacks this season and has been a terror against the Jets in his career.

WHAT'S THE RUSH?: The Dolphins own the No. 1-ranked rushing offense in the NFL, averaging 183.5 yards per game to their opponents' 61. They've run the ball 147 times to their opponents' 83 carries. They have 47 rushing first downs to their opponents' eight.

WILD TIMES: The Jets must do a better job slowing the Dolphins' "wildcat'' offensive formation. Miami has run it 29 times -- all runs -- and gained 211 yards for a 7.3-yard average. Ronnie Brown, their leading rusher, has gained 162 of his 369 yards on 21 "wildcat'' runs. Pursuit to the ball and sound tackling will be critical.

ONE-HANDED: If the Jets can limit the Dolphins' rushing attack, they can tie one hand behind the Dolphins' back, because inexperienced QB Chad Henne (24-of-41, 207 yards, 1 TDs, 1 INT) is not likely to carry the Dolphins to victory. The Jets' No. 1 goal on defense, other than forcing turnovers, is to put Henne in 3rd-and-long situations by stuffing the run on first and second down.

CATCH THIS: Even if the Jets aren't without their top WR Jerricho Cotchery (questionable with a hamstring injury), he won't be 100-percent. That leaves the Jets thin at receiver, with newcomer Braylon Edwards making his Jets debut after just three days of practice. Role players Brad Smith (3 catches), David Clowney (no catches) and Wallace Wright (no catches) will have to step up.

POSSESSIVE: The Dolphins' formula offensively has been to control the ball. Miami averages 35:58 per game in time of possession compared to their opponents' 24:03.

EFFICIENCY DEPARTMENT: The Dolphins are 54.1 percent on third-down conversions and 5-of-5 on fourth down -- both tops in the NFL.

FOE FACT: No regular receiver has an average per catch of more than 9.9 yards against the Dolphins.

JETS FACT: Kicker Jay Feely has made his last 20 field goal attempts, two shy of the team record 22 by Pat Leahy.

CANNIZZARO'S CALL: The Jets defense will stuff the Dolphins' run on early downs and force Henne into 3rd-and-long situations. The Jets will play a bit more conservatively with Sanchez and run as often as possible. It'll result in a tight game decided late on a Feely FG.

JETS 16, DOLPHINS 13
 

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Cotchery may not go against Dolphins

Cotchery may not go against Dolphins

Cotchery may not go against Dolphins
By MARK CANNIZZARO


MIAMI -- Quietly, injuries have begun mounting up on the Jets and could be a significant factor when they play the Dolphins tonight at Land Shark Stadium.

Top receiver Jerricho Cotchery, who leads the team with 23 catches and 356 yards, is listed as questionable with a hamstring injury. Cotchery hasn't practiced since Wednesday, and that wasn't a full session.

It puts significant pressure on Braylon Edwards, who was acquired during the week and has had only three practices to get ready for his Jets debut, as well as Brad Smith, David Clowney and Wallace Wright.

JETS BLOG

Smith has only three catches this season, while Clowney and Wright have none.

*

It looks like Dwight Lowery will start his third consecutive game for the injured Lito Sheppard (right quadriceps). Sheppard practiced all week and appeared to be ready to return, but has been listed as doubtful on the injury report.

It's uncertain whether the Jets are being cautious about rushing Sheppard's return before he's completely ready or if he suffered a late-week setback, because Ryan said Sheppard was "moving well'' in practice as of Friday.

Nickel back Donald Strickland (right ankle) will miss his third consecutive game. RT Damien Woody (foot) was very limited in practice all week and is listed as questionable for tonight. If he can't play, Wayne Hunter would start in his place. S Kerry Rhodes (knee) was also limited in practice during the week and is also listed as questionable, though he's expected to play.
 

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Adding Edwards more than a small gamble for Jets

Adding Edwards more than a small gamble for Jets

Adding Edwards more than a small gamble for Jets
By JAY GREENBERG


It must be the position.

We mean, historically some running backs have chafed when their numbers aren't called, but the pounding they take must sap any energy they have for politics.

Receivers, however, start every play out on a symbolic island and spend, even on an especially productive day, 85 percent of their time as decoys.

It does tend to make a higher percentage of them insecure.

JETS BLOG

Not to the degree of Terrell Owens, surely, but Randy Moss, Plaxico Burress and Chad Ochocinco have marched to their own drummers, often pounding away at a headache-producing level.

Eric Mangini is especially neurotic. Still, any coach's primary fear, above what an essential player who is essentially nuts can do to a locker room, is a whacked-out wideout climbing into the head of a fragile quarterback.

No team can win with the latter, which is the danger of foisting Braylon Edwards on a young Mark Sanchez.

Sanchez is going to be good, it doesn't take Paul Brown to see that, but the Saints last week caught Jet Nation moving before the snap.

And Sanchez, though saying all the right things about lessons instantly absorbed, won't spend tonight in Miami on the beach, instead playing against the defending AFC East champs.

Jerricho Cotchery's uncertain status makes Edwards' arrival seem perfectly well timed, but be careful what you wish for.

If he is what the doctor ordered for Cotchery, seeing more double coverage than he can handle in the long run, and promises to get another defender out of the box, this nevertheless puts a rookie quarterback in position to play shrink to a No. 1 target who had 18 drops last season.

That's a ton, yet the Jets are waiving the allowable weight limit for a guy carrying considerable baggage.

Edwards has argued with teammates, pulled the shirt of a quarterback at the end of a 30-0 rout, solicited an opponent between plays for advice about an acting career, been caught driving 120 miles an hour, run up a $3,443 bar tab with Dante Stallworth on the latter's fateful night and just this week got into a fight outside a nightclub, the final straw apparently for Mangini.

Of course, modifying such destructive behavior is not the domain of a first-year quarterback.

In this case, it is in the hands of an effervescent first-year head coach who has no disciplinary track record.

We admire Ryan's courage during the first year of what could prove his only head coaching opportunity.

But Son of Buddy either thinks Sanchez is already nearly as smart as Peyton Manning or the coach is naive about the potential for Edwards doing to Sanchez what Owens did to Tony Romo.

This is not to suggest that coach and quarterback can't get police help in a largely responsible Jets locker room, or that Edwards doesn't understand that as an upcoming free agent, his career is on the line.

People do respond to changes of scenery, do grow up, as Moss, headed into Year Four of living happily ever after in New England, clearly has done.

But he went to a team one season removed from three Super Bowl Championships in four years to play with an already all-time quarterback and for an all- time coach.

As a price, Chansi Stuckey, Jason Trusnick and a couple picks certainly was more reasonable than the Jets' belief that they are already a Super Bowl team.

Our hunch is they will get there by 2011 or 2012, the only way sooner being Sanchez proving far beyond his years.

One way to find out is to foist upon him a Braylon Edwards.
 

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Sanchez vows to learn from disaster, move on

Sanchez vows to learn from disaster, move on

Sanchez vows to learn from disaster, move on
By MARK CANNIZZARO


MIAMI -- Minutes after Mark Sanchez had put the finishing touches on the worst performance of his young NFL career last Sunday in New Orleans, he said the tape from that game would be more valuable than any he has watched since becoming a Jet.

Tomorrow night, when the Jets play the Dolphins at Land Shark Stadium, we'll see how much Sanchez learned from those three interceptions he threw and one fumble he lost against the Saints.

"It's gone. It's behind me," Sanchez said. "I took some valuable lessons from that game and hopefully the next time I'm on the field. I'll play a lot better."

Everyone around him believes that'll happen.

JETS BLOG

"Oh, no doubt he's back," coach Rex Ryan said. "Bad games are going to happen. He just has to be himself. He can't wait for Monday night. He's ready to go."

Ryan's message to Sanchez in his first comeback game after a loss was this: "Turn it loose. Have fun. Play quarterback and rely on your teammates."

"He's smart, he's studying, he's doing all those types of things, but then game time ought to be fun," Ryan said. "That's what this game ought to be about. Obviously, we'll want to protect the football. I mean, protect the football. Protect the football. Protect the football. Protect the football. No question we want to do that [and] give ourselves a chance to win.

"He'll play better if he's having fun and he's staying loose. He'll play better and that's what we want him to do."

Sanchez, who has had ball security issues, even before his four-turnover performance last week (he has six turnovers in the last two games), said he feels ready to take a step forward.

"The most important thing was to get away from the emotional side," he said. "Don't get upset, frustrated or mad at yourself. You have to move on -- for yourself and for the rest of the guys in the locker room. Everyone is looking right here [at him]. I've shown that I can help this team win the last three weeks and that's what I need to do [tomorrow]."

He has the confidence of his teammates and coaches.

"He doesn't have the mentality of a rookie," tight end Dustin Keller said.

"Mark is a confident guy. [The Saints game] doesn't shake his confidence," offensive coordinator Brian Schottenheimer said. "It's all part of the process. I'm not saying this because I'm happy that it happened, but I'm not surprised that a game like [that] happened.

"What he has to do, what he is doing, is he's learning from it. . . . Every day there is something he learns that makes him a better and more complete quarterback. If he continues to do that, he will have a terrific career."

Schottenheimer said Sanchez has been "great" this week in practice bouncing back. To some degree, the attention from the Braylon Edwards trade has been a blessing for him because it took a lot of focus off Sanchez's struggles.

"He was disappointed," Schottenheimer said. "There were things that he would like to have back. There are things that I would like to have back."

*

WR Jerricho Cotchery (hamstring) is questionable after missing practice yesterday for a second straight day. CB Lito Sheppard (strained quad) was limited and is listed as doubtful. CB Donald Strickland (ankle) is out. S Kerry Rhodes (knee) and RT Damien Woody (foot) are questionable. Rhodes was limited in practice, while Woody sat out.
 

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Braylon studies, bonds with Jets

Braylon studies, bonds with Jets

Braylon studies, bonds with Jets
By BRIAN LEWIS


After a late night Wednesday -- studying the playbook in Florham Park, not clubbing in the city -- Braylon Edwards was back in the Jets training complex yesterday by 7 a.m. He is quizzing offensive coordinator Brian Schottenheimer, befriending QB Mark Sanchez, and simply enjoying his escape to New York.

"It's a fresh start for me, in a situation where everything's moving in the right direction from the coach to the owner, great players, great camaraderie. I saw it at practice, these guys are really happy. Practice was a breath of fresh air," said Edwards, who got a new start but kept his old No. 17.

"Coach (Rex) Ryan, he's loose but when it's time to work, we work. Guys are where they're supposed to be, but soon as we're finished you can breathe. It was relaxed when it was supposed to be relaxed, and it was serious when it was supposed to be serious. It was fun."

JETS BLOG

Which is what the staff had watching Edwards' first practice. Schottenheimer watched him bring down several deep throws with defenders draped all over him, and relished in his new weapon.

"Even when he's covered, doesn't mean he's covered," Schottenheimer said. "There were some deep balls . . . and saw the guy draped all over him and he was able to elevate and make the play."

Gang Green is banking on Edwards not only making plays but commanding double coverage, taking doubles away from WR Jerricho Cotchery and eight-man fronts from the ground game. And after yesterday's surprisingly-seamless integration, they think it will happen sooner rather than later.

"He looked tall, big, fast -- he's everything. He caught 50 balls and dropped one. He's way ahead of where I thought he'd be. It's great," Ryan said. "He knows formations already, the verbiage. He's way ahead of the game."

That's because Cleveland's offensive coordinator in 2007 and 2008, Rob Chudzinski, coached under Schottenheimer in San Diego, and this year's coordinator, Brian Daball, had been the Jets' quarterbacks coach in 2007 and 2008.

So with the terminology already familiar enough for Edwards to work at both the X and Z spots yesterday, and a system in place to remind him of the routes, his most vital task is forging a rapport with Sanchez.

"The big thing for me is just stay on his page, see how he likes to call plays, throw passes, his hots, his sights, just get a feel for him, be it here or at his house or wherever," Edwards said. "Once I get on his page, I can roll from there."

That's advice he got from Reggie Wayne when they met in the 2007 Pro Bowl, how the latter latched onto Peyton Manning and formed a bond. Edwards is hoping to do the same with Sanchez and have a good season -- which could net him an extension here or a payday elsewhere.

"Mark puts the ball where it's supposed to be, and I did see that in practice. I liked it right away," said Edwards, who likes the idea of a long-term partnership with a star quarterback.

"It's a good situation for that possibly to be the case. Whether I'm here next year or not, this guy's going to be really good. I'd be a lucky guy if I was able to work hard this year, play well, we establish a good rapport and they keep me past this year.

"Nothing's guaranteed. It's not about contract; it's about proving every play that I deserve to be here and deserve to be the guy he's throwing the ball to."
 

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Feely would get kick out of defeating Dolphins

Feely would get kick out of defeating Dolphins

Feely would get kick out of defeating Dolphins
By MARK CANNIZZARO


Nobody has more incentive to defeat the Dolphins Monday night in Miami than Jets kicker Jay Feely.

Inexplicably, the Dolphins snubbed Feely after he made 91.3-percent of his field goal attempts in 2007.

Unsigned in 2008, he landed with the Jets as an emergency signing after Mike Nugent was injured in the season opener against the Dolphins and he has been a model of consistency ever since.

JETS BLOG

On Monday night, Feely gets a crack at delivering a debilitating blow to the 1-3 Dolphins' postseason hopes with a big game that might include a game-winning field goal.

"I would love to be a part of knocking off the Dolphins this week," he said.

Jets running back Leon Washington remembers checking Feely's statistics when the Jets signed him. He saw Feely made 21-of-23 field goal attempts with the Dolphins the year before and wondered why Feely was not still kicking in Miami.

"He had a tremendous year down there, and I couldn't fathom why they wouldn't have kept him there," Washington said.

Coach Rex Ryan said he could understand the Dolphins not bringing Feely back "if you've got Lou 'The Toe' Groza coming in, maybe."

Dependable kickers are hard to come by in the NFL, and Feely is one of those, having made 81.8 percent of his 253 career field goal attempts. Entering tomorrow night's game, he's made 30-of-34 field goals as a Jet, an 88-percent success rate.

"We always want to score a touchdown, but when we have to kick a field goal it's not like guys are on the sideline on their knees, praying, 'Please make this field goal,' " fullback Tony Richardson said. "With Jay, it's automatic. It's great to have that type of security, knowing he's going to hit it."

This is what makes Feely's departure from Miami so curious.

Bill Parcells, the Dolphins vice president of football operations and notorious for being hard on kickers dating back to his coaching days, always has said his criteria for a kicker was making 80-percent of his field goals.

"Jay is a tough kicker and Parcells is a tough guy that likes tough players," Jets long snapper James Dearth said. "That's why it didn't make sense."

Feely, in his ninth NFL season, remains somewhat perplexed by his Miami situation as well, though he said: "I don't think it had anything to do with my kicking.

"I know that I can kick and I know that I can be one of the best kickers in the NFL and that's been my focus ever since I left," he said.

He called not returning to the Dolphins "definitely humbling."

"You go from having the best year of your career to all of a sudden not being on a team you thought wanted you," Feely said. "I'm grateful to have come to the Jets and to have been a part of this team. I feel like I have a home where I'm wanted and I enjoy being here."

Feely, who makes his offseason home in South Florida and sees a number of the Dolphins players and coaches, as well as Parcells, on the golf course, said he's not bitter about his ouster in Miami.

"I don't know necessarily about hard feelings," he said. "When I see those guys it's not awkward and there's no animosity, but at the same time when a team doesn't believe in you, you want to go out there and continually prove them wrong at every opportunity you get."

*

Jets receiver Jerricho Cotchery (hamstring) didn't practice yesterday and is questionable for the game. Ryan said Cotchery not playing "is a possibility" but added, "I'm definitely not ruling him out."

If Cotchery cannot play, Brad Smith, David Clowney and Wallace Wright will see more action opposite newcomer Braylon Edwards.

The only other player who did not practice yesterday was CB Donald Strickland (ankle), and he is not likely to play. CB Lito Sheppard, who has practiced all week, will return to start after missing the last two games with a pulled right quadriceps muscle.
 

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Braylon could be next Keyshawn

Braylon could be next Keyshawn

Braylon could be next Keyshawn

The Jets' new No. 1 receiver is a tall, physical downfield threat. He was a top-3 draft pick from one of college football's most storied programs. He also carries a diva reputation.

The depth chart changed Wednesday when the Jets acquired Braylon Edwards from the Browns, but the description above seems straight out of 1996, when the team used the No. 1 overall pick on USC's Keyshawn Johnson.

The similarities do not stop there. Johnson posted arguably his finest campaign in 1998, his third pro season, when he caught 83 balls for 1,131 yards and 10 touchdowns. Edwards' third season established him as one of the top receiving talents in the NFL and earned him his first trip to the Pro Bowl: 80 catches, 1,289 yards and 16 touchdowns, second to Randy Moss' record-setting 23.

After four seasons, Johnsons salary demands and me-first antics, which had a shorthand in the title of his autobiography "Just Give Me the Damn Ball!," got him traded to Tampa Bay. Edwards lasted a bit longer, shipped east four games into his fifth year with Cleveland, a season in which the most newsworthy thing he has done with his hands is allegedly punch a friend of LeBron James (it's certainly not his 10 receptions).

The Jets' regression heralded the tempestuous Johnson's departure. In 1998, under Bill Parcells, they lost the AFC Championship game to the Broncos. The next year they went 8-8 and missed the playoffs. Same with the Browns, who have gone from AFC North champs in 2007 to 4-12 last year to an 0-4 start this season that might be worse than the record indicates.

The Jets can hope Edwards' change of scenery works out as well as Johnson's stint with the Bucs. In 2001, his second year with the team, Johnson registered career highs with 106 receptions and 1,266 yards. The next year, he was the offensive star on a team that rode its defense (wink) to a Super Bowl title.

In his time with the Jets, Johnson often butted heads with Parcells, but Parcells had a personality to match his stubborn, standout wideout and brought out the best in him. Loquacious Rex Ryan may be more successful in that regard with Edwards, who battled a case of the drops throughout last season, than Romeo Crennel or the player kryptonite known as Eric Mangini.

Another interesting note, courtesy of Pro-Football Reference:

The history of notable wide receivers traded midseason is rather brief: 14 have played for multiple teams in a season and averaged at least 35 receiving yards per game for one of them.

Given the intricate dynamics between quarterback and wideout, and playbook differences, it can be awfully hard to establish chemistry on the fly, as Edwards and rookie Mark Sanchez will soon find out. Roy Williams, a Pro Bowl-level talent, caught 19 balls in 10 games after his trade to Dallas a year ago. Positive recent examples include Chris Chambers (Dolphins/Chargers, 2007), Antonio Bryant (Cowboys/Bucs, 2004) and Andre Rison, who helped the Packers to a Super Bowl crown after joining them from the Jaguars in 1996.
 

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Jets go on attack with Edwards

Jets go on attack with Edwards

Jets go on attack with Edwards
By MARK CANNIZZARO


Can it be that Braylon Edwards is the final missing piece to the Jets' Super Bowl puzzle?

The Jets think so, which is why they aggressively executed the trade for the ultra-talented receiver with the dubious reputation yesterday, giving up two productive, good-soldier players -- receiver Chansi Stuckey and special teamer Jason Trusnik -- as well as two draft choices (conditional third- and fifth-round picks in 2010) to acquire him.

The Jets believe Edwards, who has had a number of off-field problems, will be the classic case of a player who flourishes with a change of scenery. Edwards himself acknowledged that yesterday.

JETS BLOG

"Our goal is to win a Super Bowl, and Braylon gives us the best chance to do that," tight end Dustin Keller said.

"That's why we were so aggressive with this move, because there were certain things that we needed to complete this team and I think this is the next step to get us to the next level, to get that Super Bowl ring," cornerback Darrelle Revis said.

Edwards, according to Rex Ryan, will start against the Dolphins Monday night in Miami.

"I've had to go against this guy twice a year now for a long time," Ryan said. "He's young, fast, big. . . . When he's covered, he's still open."

There was a distinct buzz in the Jets locker room since early morning when word of the trade began to spread.

You couldn't wipe the smile off the face of wide receiver Jerricho Cotchery, who has been shadowed with double coverage all season.

"It makes me smile, because this is a guy that's going to demand a lot of attention," Cotchery said. "With the numbers over first four games that I've had [23 catches, 356 yards, 1 touchdowns], teams are starting to pay a little more attention to me. But with Braylon coming in, they're going to have to choose what they want to do. Whatever decision they make is not going to be good."

The Jets insist they did extensive homework on Edwards' past. His latest transgression was an alleged assault of a friend of LeBron James outside a Cleveland nightclub earlier this week. Though Edwards was not arrested, the incident is under NFL investigation, and it's not a lock Edwards won't be disciplined.

"We're well aware of some of his issues, but we told Braylon this is a fresh start; he gets a clean slate here," general manager Mike Tannenbaum said.

Edwards, a former first-round draft pick in his fifth year out of Michigan, has 10 catches for 139 yards and no touchdowns this season for the 0-4 Browns.

His best season was in 2007 when he caught 80 passes for 1,289 yards and 16 touchdowns and went to the Pro Bowl. Last season, he had 55 catches for 873 yards and just three touchdowns and he was heavily criticized for some 16 drops.

"I think we're going to get the best out of Braylon Edwards," Ryan said.

Edwards, who feels he's been unfairly stereotyped as a bad guy, said he does hope to come here and "brush up" his image.

Edwards can do that only by staying clean off the field and putting up the same kind of numbers he did in 2007.

"I want to go out and prove that I am that receiver," he said. "I believe I'm in a place now where I can do it."

*

Mark Sanchez said yesterday that he was fined $5,000 for the low block on Saints linebacker Jonathan Vilma Sunday in New Orleans. Sanchez, too, said he called Vilma, the former Jet, yesterday and apologized.

Cornerback Lito Sheppard practiced yesterday for the first time since he hurt his right quadriceps against the Patriots in Week 2. Right tackle Damien Woody (ankle) and cornerback Donald Strickland (ankle) didn't practice.
 

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Duel of young QBs highlights Miami Dolphins-N.Y. Jets matchup

Duel of young QBs highlights Miami Dolphins-N.Y. Jets matchup

Duel of young QBs highlights Miami Dolphins-N.Y. Jets matchup

Monday night's quarterback matchup of Jets rookie Mark Sanchez and the Dolphins' Chad Henne could be first of many meetings between the two rivals.


Maybe it will never reach the heights of Montana-Elway. Perhaps it will never merit the prestige of Manning-Brady. It probably won't ever reach the catty nature of that less-elite, more recent quarterback rivalry between Philip Rivers and Jay Cutler.

``I don't think so,'' said Dolphins coach Tony Sparano, laughing lightly about the latter comparison of those three.

But if all goes as planned, tonight's nationally televised showdown between the Jets and the Dolphins could mark the first of a significant chapter in a rivalry that already includes volumes of well-documented history between these teams.

The title of the latest book? Chad Henne vs. Mark Sanchez.

``I was thinking about that the other night,'' Sparano said of the quarterback tandem. ``These two guys are going to be seeing an awful lot of each other for a long time. I think that's kind of interesting when you look at your division right now, and you see those two players at their positions, to think that they'll be going at it.''

Despite being separated by a year of NFL experience, Henne, 24, and Sanchez, 22, are enduring their first seasons as the starters for their respective teams. Sanchez has started four games. Henne has started one.

``They say it's a rivalry with the Jets,'' Henne said this week. ``I don't know anything about it until I get into the game.''

EXPECTATIONS

Can't you envision how silly that quote might seem in three years? Six years? A decade? Maybe even by the end of Monday's game? Should Henne embrace the starting role, and prove to a fan base what he has already shown coaches during his first year-and-a-half with the team, he could end up knowing as much about Sanchez as he does his own family.

Of course, that's assuming the quarterback dubbed ``Sanchise'' will also live up to the load of weight placed upon his own shoulder pads. As linebacker Joey Porter put it last week, Monday could be a potentially long day for both of the young guns.

``They have a young quarterback, we have a young quarterback,'' Porter said. ``Who can force the quarterback into making the most mistakes?''

Porter would prefer to place his money on his own guy. But make no mistake, the Jets have not lost a shred of confidence in Sanchez even after he endured the first loss of his short career during a three-interception, one-fumble performance.

``[Sanchez] can make mistakes, and he really hadn't made mistakes up until that point,'' Jets coach Rex Ryan said. ``But it's something that happens, and I think he's going to learn from it and hopefully not go out and repeat the same things.''

To this point, Sanchez has completed 63 of 110 passes (57.3 percent) with four touchdowns and five interceptions. Henne has completed 24 of 41 passes (58.5 percent) with one touchdown and one interception. Sanchez is 3-1. Henne is 1-0.

But when it comes to the Dolphins-Jets rivalry, the numbers are much simpler for both: Zeros across the board. And while one or the other will have the chance to get out to an early lead, it might be more likely to expect the real drama of the quarterback rivalry to begin down the road.

START SMALL

After all, with Monday night's game expected to be a hard-hitting showdown between two blue-collar running teams, the roles of Henne and Sanchez might be limited to simple game management.

Asked what the key for Sanchez will be this game, Ryan said he wants his rookie to ``just go out, rely on his teammates, prepare and just be part of the solution. You don't have to be the solution, you just have to be part of it. Have fun, compete, and let's see what happens.''

No doubt about it, this has the makings of being fun. Although Henne and Sanchez never played against each other in college (Henne's Michigan team played USC in the 2007 Rose Bowl, but John David Booty was still the Trojans' starter), they will have two games each year to make up for lost time.

Sparano said, by the end of their careers, Henne and Sanchez might have the potential to have faced off maybe ``20 or 24 times.'' If that turns out to be the case, this quarterback rivalry could go down as one of the greats, since that means both players would have been successful enough to stick around for a decade or longer.

But that's looking too far into the future. This rivalry only has just begun, even if the idea is an entertaining thought.

``I think it's special when the quarterbacks are going at each other and they start to take on their own personalities with their own teams,'' Sparano said. ``I can't speak for them, but our quarterback has only played one game right now. As far as taking on the personality, that's still going to be a work in progress here for us.

``But I think eventually it's going to happen, and once that starts to happen with both of those guys, it will make for an interesting, long deal.''

Both teams can only hope.
 

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Miami Dolphins, Jets don't reflect the same philosophies

Miami Dolphins, Jets don't reflect the same philosophies

Miami Dolphins, Jets don't reflect the same philosophies

Peel off the uniforms, yes, even the pumpkin orange ones the Dolphins are wearing Monday night, and suddenly the two teams seem surprisingly similar.

The Dolphins and Jets both have unproven quarterbacks, both have snarling defenses, mammoth offensive lines, passionate head coaches and a physical style of play that's as subtle as a brick.

The Dolphins and Jets are almost mirror images because neither has won a Super Bowl in more than a generation, both are perennially chasing the Patriots, and both think pretty highly of themselves and their chances this year.

But dig beyond those visible similarities on display Monday before a national cable TV audience and you can finally unearth the distinguishing factor that most separates Miami and New York:

No, not good Cuban food.

Philosophy.

Even though their front offices are similarly rooted -- as New York general manager Mike Tannenbaum worked for Dolphins football czar Bill Parcells years ago -- the Jets and Dolphins have a different view of how to chase a title.

The Jets?

They're about winning now. Every major personnel move they have made the last 18 months screams they are chasing a chance at not just any Super Bowl, but the next Super Bowl.

``If giving away draft picks to move up to No. 5 [in the first round] wasn't evident enough, I don't know what other indicator the rest of the league needs to realize we're trying to win this year, and it's not a rebuild and build for the future type of deal,'' New York's Bart Scott proclaimed this week.

The Dolphins also want to win now. But study their approach under Parcells and general manager Jeff Ireland and the moves speak of a guarded, steady, logical pace that refuses to mortgage the future for the present.

Sure, coach Tony Sparano wants to win the AFC East this year every bit as much as he did last year, and wants to win Monday's game every bit as much as Jets coach Rex Ryan.

But part of Sparano's job is to balance what he wants today versus what everyone wants tomorrow.

NOW OR LATER?

``When I'm talking to Jeff Ireland or when I'm talking to Bill and we're talking about future, I can't get [build for the future] out of my mouth because I'm worried about now,'' Sparano said. ``I would say when we came here and put this together, we knew in order for us to change the culture the way we really wanted to change the culture, that it would take us a little while to do that.

``I think every time you go out there, it's a win-now deal. No question about that. But in order for us to get where we want to go, and even after last year, we haven't come full circle yet. We still have a ways to go.''

And so the Jets and the Dolphins, so similar in so many ways, approach team building from opposite poles.

The Dolphins have added only one free agent over 30 years old since Parcells came to town -- and that's only because Jason Taylor agreed to play well below his market value. The strategy in Miami is to sign free agents who can help this year, but will still be playing at a high level in four or five years.

The Jets don't live by such constraints. They signed guard Alan Faneca and right tackle Damien Woody when they were over 30. Last year they traded a third-round pick for then-38-year-old Brett Favre.

The Dolphins view their future draft picks like gold in a skyrocketing market. The Jets see their future draft picks as chips to be played for the benefit of the present.

So this week New York traded two picks (that could be as high as a second and a fifth) plus two players for receiver Braylon Edwards.

``I want to win now,'' Ryan said. ``In my opinion, I think it's a cop-out for any team to say, `We got a four-year program.' Well, how convenient, your contract is four years or whatever.

``We're going for the Super Bowl championship, and I don't care if people [say] `That's ridiculous.' I think it's ridiculous that you'd have any other goal in mind.''

NO QUICK FIX

The Dolphins studied Edwards, according to Sparano, and despite needing receiver help, decided he wasn't a fit. The Dolphins opted not to go for the quick fix even when their 1-3 record suggests they need exactly that.

``What I believe is the players I have right now are the right 53 players, and I believe this football team is good enough to compete at that level,'' Sparano said. ``I don't like talking about it a whole lot, but I do believe this football team is good enough to win our division and give us a chance to go play in the tournament and see what happens.

``But I also know that the cycle that it takes to change the culture completely doesn't get done in one year. These other teams that had good years like we did last year might tell you different, but we think it takes longer to get this thing turned completely the way you want it turned. And we're doing it.''
 

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Who has the edge: Miami Dolphins vs. N.Y. Jets

Who has the edge: Miami Dolphins vs. N.Y. Jets

Who has the edge: Miami Dolphins vs. N.Y. Jets

WHEN THE DOLPHINS RUN THE BALL
The Dolphins run the ball better than any team in the NFL. Goodie for them. They not only lead the NFL in rushing yards (quality) but also lead in rushing attempts (quantity), which says they don't give up on the run. If it's not Ronnie Brown or Ricky Williams out of the base offense, it's Ronnie and Ricky out of Wildcat. Interestingly, the Dolphins have seemingly figured out that Brown gets better with more carries. The Jets can be had in this area. They yielded to the New Orleans running game last week and are a mediocre 19th in rushing yards per attempt on defense.

ADVANTAGE: Miami.

WHEN THE DOLPHINS PASS THE BALL

Coach Tony Sparano said this week the Dolphins will challenge Jets corner Darrelle Revis on his third of the field. Be careful because Revis is now one of the NFL's top-5 cornerbacks, and the Dolphins don't exactly counter with Mark Duper and Mark Clayton. Chad Henne will make his second start, and aside from completing passes and avoiding interceptions, he has to concentrate on holding on to the ball because he fumbled twice last week.

ADVANTAGE: New York.

WHEN THE JETS RUN THE BALL

The Jets offense is not explosive in the least, but it runs the football often. Thomas Jones is certainly not living up to last season's career year, and Leon Washington remains dangerous as a change of pace as well as a receiver out of the backfield. The wild card is rookie Shonn Greene, who got his first work last week and responded positively, gaining 23 yards on only four carries and adding pop to the running game. The Dolphins pride themselves on stopping the run as their No. 2 ranking indicates. Why should that change this game?

ADVANTAGE: Miami.

WHEN THE JETS PASS THE BALL

Rookie Mark Sanchez didn't exactly live up to his ``Sanchise'' nickname last week when he made serious mistakes such as locking on to receivers and throwing a pass that was intercepted and returned for a touchdown. It will be interesting to see how the Jets incorporate recently added wide receiver Braylon Edwards to the offense after only three days of practice. The Jets might try to feature Dustin Keller. The Dolphins have trouble with good tight ends. Miami's secondary is coming off perhaps its best outing of the season, but hold your breath because Buffalo quarterback Trent Edwards missed on a handful of passes to open receivers.

ADVANTAGE: Even.

SPECIAL TEAMS

Interesting bedfellows in that Mike Westhoff is perhaps the best special-teams coach the Dolphins ever had, but he's working for the Jets. Larry Izzo is perhaps one of the best special-teams players the Dolphins ever had, but he's playing for the Jets. And kicker Jay Feely was the most-quoted kicker the Dolphins ever had, but now he's talking mostly to the New York media and on Sean Hannity's great, great American panel. The Jets are diminished by the loss of linebacker Jason Trusnik, who went to Cleveland as part of the Braylon Edwards trade.

ADVANTAGE: New York.

COACHING

Bill Parcells interviewed Rex Ryan and Tony Sparano for Miami's coaching job in 2008 and obviously picked Sparano, who coached under the Miami football czar in Dallas. But Ryan helped author two Miami defeats last year when his Baltimore defense dismantled the Dolphins. Now Ryan is on the schedule at least twice a year for the foreseeable future. Thank God he said last week that revenge is not on his mind.

ADVANTAGE: Even.
 
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