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Jets HC Robert Saleh may have been right about those ‘receipts’

NFL - Jets running back Michael Carter (32) celebrates with teammates after scoring a touchdown against the Miami Dolphins.
Jets running back Michael Carter (32) celebrates with teammates after scoring a touchdown against the Miami Dolphins.
AP Photo/Seth Wenig

Jets head coach Robert Saleh said earlier in the season that he was “keeping receipts” on those who doubted the team — and his faith seems to be paying off. 

The Jets have a winning record after topping their AFC East-rival Miami Dolphins on Sunday with a dominating 40–17 victory.

Gang Green has been clearly playing with a greater sense of enthusiasm through their 3–2 start to the year, as opposed to the lackluster 4–13 record they recorded last season. 

Even on the sidelines, the team looks notably more optimistic that they are in every game they play, and with two comeback victories, and their first win against an AFC team in over 12 matchups, they is a renewed sense of confidence at MetLife Stadium.

“We have a long way to go, let’s be very clear,” wide receiver Braxton Berrios said. “But we’re trying to turn these pages left and right. Being good in the fourth quarter, winning those close games, being in those moments that we know and love, and then pulling away from teams.

“These are all stones that were starting to turn. And it’s been different since the day this whole staff got here. And now it’s finally showing a little more.”

They won their first game against the Cleveland Browns with a comeback win led by backup passer Joe Flacco, and followed that up in Week 4 with a 24-20 comeback victory at Pittsburgh, led by quarterback Zach Wilson in his season debut.

Then the game against Miami, which forced ever doubter to take notice of the Jets. 

This also marks the first time the Jets are over .500 since 2018 — when they won the season opener.

“You had no say, you had no input, you had no doing in what previous teams did and how they performed and all that,” defensive tackle Sheldon Rankins said. “So everything we do going forward, everything we did on Sunday, down there, four quarters, it’s about establishing who we are, who we want to be known for and what we want to do going forward.”

For quite a few years, all the Jets have been known for is losing. Their 11-year postseason drought is the longest active skid in the league.

Ending that this year is the expectation and focus. But now comes the hard part: being consistent winners and regularly good. The Jets’ previous three-game winning streak, which they’ll be trying to match in Green Bay on Sunday, was in 2019.

The game Sunday was close — 19-17 — in the fourth quarter, until both the offense and defense took over and scored 21 unanswered points. The Jets put an opponent away, and that was another sign of progress that might not have happened in recent seasons.

“We have a young group that doesn’t flinch,” Saleh said. “When we get a chance in the fourth quarter, I mean, you just don’t have any quit.”

It’s still only October optimism, but it’s a chance for the Jets to build upon success and keep it going the next few months.

WHAT’S WORKING

The pass rush is making its impact felt, even if the sack totals aren’t eye-popping. The Jets had two sacks Sunday, including Carl Lawson’s strip-sack of Skylar Thompson that helped seal the game. But they also were credited with 16 quarterback hits, with Lawson getting seven — the most in a game by a Jets player since 1970. John Franklin-Myers had five quarterback hits. He and Lawson join Cleveland’s Myles Garrett and Jadeveon Clowney as the only teammates to each have at least five in the same game in the past two seasons.

WHAT NEEDS HELP

While the pass rush is thriving, the run defense is struggling a bit. The Jets gave up 137 yards rushing against the Dolphins, including 113 by Raheem Mostert. That came after they allowed 113 at Pittsburgh.

STOCK UP

RB Breece Hall. The rookie second-rounder has been nicknamed “Beast” since his high school days for his combination of physical style and speed. All of that was on display Sunday when he set a Jets rookie record with 197 all-purpose yards — 100 yards receiving on two catches and 97 yards rushing and a TD on 18 attempts. He also dragged a few defenders on some of his plays.

STOCK DOWN

Doom and gloom. It would’ve been easy for Jets fans to panic a few weeks ago when the Jets were drubbed by the Cincinnati Bengals 27-12 in Week 3 to drop them to 1-2. It was a case of “here we go again,” and understandably so. But this squad has shown an ability to bounce back from adversity — something that has been a bit uncharacteristic of recent New York squads.

INJURIES

Rookie DE Jermaine Johnson is day to day with an ankle injury. Saleh said the Jets will know more by the end of the week, but the team doesn’t think it’s severe.

KEY NUMBER

58 — The Jets have outscored opponents 58-20 in the fourth quarter, including the 21 points they scored Sunday against Miami. The 58 points are the most by any team in the final quarter this season.

NEXT STEPS

The Jets get another chance to prove they’re for real Sunday when they head to Lambeau Field to take on the Packers. Saleh is close friends with coach Matt LaFleur, whose brother Mike is New York’s offensive coordinator. There’s plenty of familiarity there, but it’ll likely come down to how the defense handles Aaron Rodgers after putting away rookie Kenny Pickett and Skylar Thompson the past two games.

For more coverage of the Jets, head to amNY.com.