Jets vs. Rams: A look at Sunday's matchup

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  • #57350
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    NorthJersey.com : Sports

    Jets vs. Rams: A first look at Sunday’s matchup

    http://www.northjersey.com/sports/jets-vs-rams-a-first-look-at-sunday-s-matchup-1.1689243

    Early Line: Jets by 1 1/2

    This could have been an interesting, meaningful game for the Jets. But after they imploded in Miami on Sunday, it just feels like an empty matchup as the Jets begin to play out the string. At 3-6 their chances of making the playoffs are virtually non-existent. The Jets plan is to start Ryan Fitzpatrick, but if he’s too limited from a sprained knee, second-year QB Bryce Petty will make his first career start.

    In the spotlight
    Case Keenum: The Jets aren’t the only fan base angry with their starting quarterback. Keenum has been awful during a four-game losing streak that has Rams fans clamoring for change. But coach Jeff Fisher has refused to start No. 1 overall pick Jarred Goff because he believes Keenum gives his team the best chance to win. Sound familiar?

    Game plan
    Each team’s secondary would probably be willing to walk to the stadium for this game, because there are interceptions to be had. Fitzpatrick leads the NFL with 13 picks, Keenum is second with 11. The team that makes the fewest mistakes will likely win. And while the Jets have the more talented team, they’ve also been one of the league’s most mistake prone squads this season.

    #57353
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    Jets’ Ryan Fitzpatrick (knee) thinks he will play vs. Rams, report says

    http://www.nj.com/jets/index.ssf/2016/11/jets_ryan_fitzpatrick_knee_thinks_he_will_play_vs.html#incart_river_index

    Jets quarterback Ryan Fitzpatrick, who sprained his left MCL in last week’s loss at Miami, believes he will be healthy enough to play Sunday against the Rams, according to ESPN’s Ed Werder, who cited a league source.

    File this one under “for what it’s worth.” Fitzpatrick still needs to practice this week in order to show coach Todd Bowles he is ready to face the Rams’ strong defense.

    Bowles said second-year pro Bryce Petty will be ready to go if Fitzpatrick can’t play. The Jets are off Tuesday and resume practice Wednesday. Bowles said he will start Fitzpatrick over Petty if Fitzpatrick is healthy enough to play Sunday.

    But Bowles said Monday it wasn’t clear yet if Fitzpatrick would be able to play against the Rams. Petty made his NFL regular season debut against the Dolphins, as he played four snaps in place of Fitzpatrick, before returning to the sideline.

    Despite his injury, Fitzpatrick went back into Sunday’s game in Miami, though he wore a brace on his knee.

    He said after the game he was hopeful about playing this week at home against the Rams, because he was able to reenter Jets-Dolphins.

    #57496
    JackPMiller
    Participant

    I got the Jets winning 27-6

    #57498
    Avatar photowv
    Participant

    I got the Jets winning 27-6

    ———–

    Why? The Jets suck, dont they.

    w
    v

    #57514
    TSRF
    Participant

    No, they don’t.

    They did beat the Bills in Buffalo. Their running game with Forte has been better than ours and their D ain’t too shabby.

    Ironically, I’m going to be at Met Life on Saturday for my son’s last marching band performance (The Yamaha Cup). I’m in the pit crew, so I’ll get to be inside the restricted area of the stadium. Maybe, as we’re pushing our props off the field and back down the tunnel, I’ll fake a leg cramp and go hide in the rafters…

    Nah, it’s just Rams / Jets. maybe I’d do it if a real team like the Giants had a home game the next day.

    #57541
    bnw
    Blocked

    No, they don’t.

    They did beat the Bills in Buffalo. Their running game with Forte has been better than ours and their D ain’t too shabby.

    Ironically, I’m going to be at Met Life on Saturday for my son’s last marching band performance (The Yamaha Cup). I’m in the pit crew, so I’ll get to be inside the restricted area of the stadium. Maybe, as we’re pushing our props off the field and back down the tunnel, I’ll fake a leg cramp and go hide in the rafters…

    Nah, it’s just Rams / Jets. maybe I’d do it if a real team like the Giants had a home game the next day.

    Ouch.

    The upside to being a Rams fan is heartbreak.

    Sprinkles are for winners.

    #57563
    JackPMiller
    Participant

    I got the Jets winning 27-6

    ———–

    Why? The Jets suck, dont they.

    w
    v

    We are worse.

    #57620
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    Opponent Breakdown: Fitzpatrick, Marshall and the Jets Offense

    Myles Simmons

    http://www.therams.com/news-and-events/article-1/Opponent-Breakdown-Fitzpatrick-Marshall-and-the-Jets-Offense/73e3904e-95ee-45cc-a071-d90e548f38a4

    When it comes to the Jets’ offense, much of this week’s focus — if not this entire year’s focus — has been on the team’s quarterback situation.

    After a career year in 2015, quarterback Ryan Fitzpatrick signed a one-year deal with the Jets on the eve of training camp, immediately re-claiming his status as the team’s starter. Last year, Fitzpatrick completed nearly 60 percent of his passes for 3,905 yards with 31 touchdowns to 15 interceptions. His strong performance helped drive New York to a 10-6 record in Todd Bowles’ first year as head coach.

    This year, however, has not gone nearly as well. Fitzpatrick has been particularly turnover prone in 2016, tossing a league-high 13 interceptions. He threw six picks against the Chiefs in the Jets’ 24-3 loss in Week 3. He eventually lost his starting job to Geno Smith in Week 7, but Smith suffered a torn ACL in the middle of his Week 7 start against Baltimore.

    In the two games since, Fitzpatrick has earned the backing of Bowles, though the quarterback has completed just 53.2 percent of his 62 passes for 421 yards with two touchdowns and two interceptions.

    Fitzpatrick, however, did suffer an MCL sprain last week against the Dolphins. While Fitzpatrick has been limited in the Jets’ first two days of practice, Los Angeles is still expecting to see him rather than second-year quarterback Bryce Petty behind center on Sunday.

    “We don’t know what the status of the quarterbacks are, but we expect to see Ryan,” Rams head coach Jeff Fisher said early in the week. “And we expect to see him at his best, because this is an important game for them.”

    “Right now, we’re still expecting Fitzpatrick to play. He got hurt and came back into the game, and finished out the game,” middle linebacker Alec Ogletree said. “But we’re going to prepare how we prepare every week and get ready to play our style of football.”

    That brand includes wanting to force more turnovers. In the Rams’ current four-game skid, the club has only one takeaway — a fumble early in the matchup with the Giants in London.

    “I think our biggest thing now is just creating more turnovers, and being able to help our offense out and give them more offensive possessions,” Ogletree said.

    If there were ever a favorable matchup for Los Angeles to do just that, it would be this one. The Jets have the most giveaways in the league at 19 — 14 interceptions and five fumbles. They also have the No. 31 turnover differential at -11.

    As Ogletree put it, the defense wants to do its part to put the other side of the ball in better position to score.

    “If we can do that as a defense, I think that will help us be a much better defense,” Ogletree said.

    Perhaps Fitzpatrick’s best offensive weapon is wide receiver Brandon Marshall. The well-traveled wideout, now in his 11th NFL season, has caught 40 passes for 585 yards with just two touchdowns. This after making 109 receptions for 1,502 yards with a league-leading 14 touchdowns last year. It may have to do with the play of Marshall’s quarterback, but he’s caught a career-low 46.5 percent of his targeted passes so far this season.

    Still, at 6-foot-4, he can pose significant problems for a defense.

    “We’ve played guys his size,” safety Maurice Alexander said. “Our corners, they’re very confident and they compete very well. So, we’re just going to play him as we do every week.”

    #57634
    Avatar photoInvaderRam
    Moderator

    they gotta get to fitzpatrick a lot.

    #57774
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    Ryan Fitzpatrick questionable, will be game-time decision

    http://www.theredzone.org/BlogDescription/tabid/61/EntryId/59849/Ryan-Fitzpatrick-questionable–will-be-game-time-decision/Default.aspx

    New York Jets quarterback Ryan Fitzpatrick will be a game-time decision to play against the Los Angeles Rams on Sunday after being listed as questionable with a sprained knee, the Associated Press reports.

    Fitzpatrick participated on a limited basis during all three practice sessions this week. Coach Todd Bowles says Friday that the quarterback is getting “better,” but his status will be determined before the game.

    Bryce Petty, a fourth-rounder last year, will get his first NFL start if Fitzpatrick is unable to play.

    Fitzpatrick injured his left knee at Miami last Sunday during New York’s 27-23 loss.

    #57778
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    Rams and Jets find themselves in similar situations — strong defenses with struggling starting quarterbacks and young backups aching to play

    Sam Farmer

    http://www.latimes.com/sports/rams/la-sp-rams-jets-quarterbacks-20161110-story.html

    NFL is a copycat league, and in many ways — good and bad — the Rams and New York Jets are essentially photocopies of each other.

    Both have three wins and defensive head coaches. Both are built around their big-money defensive lines, each stocked with a trio of first-round picks, and, theoretically, want to run the ball — although the Rams are lightning-quick to bail out on that.

    Most notably, each team has a scrappy, journeyman starting quarterback who can’t help but glance over his shoulder at the younger player behind him. Jets fans want to see backup quarterback Bryce Petty play, just the way Rams fans are clamoring for No. 1 pick Jared Goff.

    For the moment, the Rams are sticking with Case Keenum as the starting quarterback, even though they’ve lost four in a row and have strayed far from building the offense around running back Todd Gurley. Goff is left to watch from the sideline in a baseball cap, occasionally retiring to the bench to study his digital tablet.

    Rams coaches know that once they put him in the game, the clock starts on them. They presumably have a certain grace period to get him up to speed and start winning, with the heat already turned up on Jeff Fisher, only the third NFL coach in modern NFL history to be brought back for a fifth season after four consecutive losing ones.

    Keenum has 11 interceptions, second only to the 13 of Jets starter Ryan Fitzpatrick, who is trying to hold off Petty, a fourth-round pick in 2015. The Jets play host to the Rams on Sunday, and the quarterback question is the elephant lurking in both locker rooms.

    “Case and I were together in Houston for a little bit,” said Fitzpatrick, a seventh-round pick of the St. Louis Rams in 2005. “He wasn’t a high draft pick and he works his tail off. He hasn’t had an easy path to get where he is… It’s not easy, but you’ve just got to block out the noise.”

    Keenum had his strongest performance of the season almost a month ago at Detroit, a game the Rams lost, but the L.A. offense has sputtered the past two games, generating one touchdown in each and wasting a pair of defensive gems. In last Sunday’s game against Carolina at the Coliseum, Rams fans booed and chanted, “We want Goff!”

    Fitzpatrick can commiserate. He had two interceptions in Sunday’s 27-23 loss to Miami, and suffered a sprained medial collateral ligament in his left knee when Dolphins defensive lineman Jordan Phillips rolled up on the quarterback’s leg. He briefly left the game, and Petty made his first appearance, completing a pair of passes before Fitzpatrick returned.

    Around the league, seven rookie quarterbacks have played this season, and five of them have started, among them No. 2 pick Carson Wentz in Philadelphia, the offensive centerpiece of that franchise, and fourth-rounder Dak Prescott in Dallas, who has done enough to supplant the recovering Tony Romo for good (even though the Cowboys haven’t made that move officially).

    For all their similarities, there’s one major difference between the Jets and Rams. The Jets are at the bottom on the AFC East, and New England looks to be running away with the division at 7-1. Some Jets are already talking about playing for pride. Meanwhile, the NFC West is a mush pot of mediocrity, with the 3-5 Rams in third place behind Seattle (5-2-1) and Arizona (3-4-1).

    That could either be a flicker of hope for the Rams. Or, if they stay on their current path, merely drag out their agonizing downward spiral.

    Close calls

    The NFL is still trying to figure out the reasons for its sagging TV ratings, but the league can rule out an abundance of blowouts. So far, games have been closer than ever.

    The average margin of victory through nine weeks is 9.68. There has never been a complete season in which that number is less than 10. There have been 99 games that have been within one score at some point during the fourth quarter — including every game played by Detroit, Washington and the New York Giants. Also, 71 games have been decided by a touchdown or less. That’s a record.

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