WEBVTT - Inside the Jets with Bart Scott and EA (10/23)

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<v Speaker 1>On the world. You play to win the game, Jet

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<v Speaker 1>sucks down, can't. You're listening to the official Jets podcast,

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<v Speaker 1>Jets three sixty production. Good evening and welcome say inside

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<v Speaker 1>the Jets, Eric Allen and Part Scott Here at Vanderbilt's

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<v Speaker 1>the word is out. So come down to the Windham

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<v Speaker 1>Hamilton's Park here in Florida Park, New Jersey. We have

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<v Speaker 1>an excellent show in store for you tonight. It's Linebacker

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<v Speaker 1>University because Darren Lee is hereby, and so is Jordan

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<v Speaker 1>Jenkins as well, and we've got our linebacker up here

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<v Speaker 1>that is the mad Backer. Bart Todd Bowles said the

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<v Speaker 1>Jets have to develop a killer instinct after squandering a

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<v Speaker 1>fourteen point lead in the fourth quarter against the Miami

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<v Speaker 1>doll Funds. When the Heck coach says killer instinct, well

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<v Speaker 1>what goes through your mind? But we're going to get

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<v Speaker 1>into all that. But how can you sit here so calm?

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<v Speaker 1>Did you just see the panic were for everybody out here?

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<v Speaker 1>It was we were like ducks, right, we were calm

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<v Speaker 1>on the service, but our feet was flapping. We couldn't

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<v Speaker 1>hear anything. Ten seconds before the show, we couldn't hear anything.

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<v Speaker 1>Guess what it was ladies and gentlemen. It wasn't a breaker,

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<v Speaker 1>wasn't a transformer. They forgot to plug it in. Wow,

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<v Speaker 1>anybody that that I t T ticket education came in. Man,

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<v Speaker 1>you know. But at any time I hear Brittany's voice

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<v Speaker 1>back at ESPN, I was nervous and I know good shape.

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<v Speaker 1>And by the way, we've been taking taking care of

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<v Speaker 1>Brittany with the coffees. Yeah, let me tell you something, man, Brittany.

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<v Speaker 1>Brittany hit me with the but dan then the tail

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<v Speaker 1>pipe to pump fake. You know. So I'm texting her

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<v Speaker 1>on the way to the show and I'm like, hey,

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<v Speaker 1>because you know, I lost the bet. I owed her

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<v Speaker 1>coffee for everybody didn't know. We had a bet that

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<v Speaker 1>Chris can't he would come in to work six minutes late.

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<v Speaker 1>He came in seven minutes late. So I lost the bet,

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<v Speaker 1>you know, so I owe her. I think pumpkin. I

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<v Speaker 1>don't speak coffee. I don't speak Starbucks, something with y'all,

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<v Speaker 1>something with pumping spice in it, older that. But then

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<v Speaker 1>she hit me with the punk fake because I call

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<v Speaker 1>her and then she wasn't even then work that day.

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<v Speaker 1>So I'm sitting up here, I am in Starbucks in line,

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<v Speaker 1>about to jeopardize my you know, my job, and she's

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<v Speaker 1>not even there. I come in with hot coffee, she's

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<v Speaker 1>not even there to drinking. So thanks a lot, Brittany

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<v Speaker 1>Sor come on now. But I'll tell you what. She's

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<v Speaker 1>got a good taste that she's going for the pumpkin spice. Yeah. Absolutely, yeah,

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<v Speaker 1>it's good to have good taste with somebody else's money.

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<v Speaker 1>I'm balling on the budget, man, I ain't making that

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<v Speaker 1>money like these boys right here. No more this this, this,

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<v Speaker 1>This is what I This is what I hate. This

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<v Speaker 1>is what I missed most about playing in the NFL.

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<v Speaker 1>I never had to I never had to buy Christmas presents,

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<v Speaker 1>right I never had to buy myself any gym shoes

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<v Speaker 1>because we all had a Nike deal. And these guys

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<v Speaker 1>come here swagged out in Nike. You know what I mean,

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<v Speaker 1>because it's free ninety nine and I'm sitting here having

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<v Speaker 1>to go to foot locker wait in line for some George.

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<v Speaker 1>So late in your career when you had that lucrative deal,

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<v Speaker 1>I mean, how much was that stipend so you could

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<v Speaker 1>take care of those Christmas kists? Well, I wasn't a quarterback.

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<v Speaker 1>So Mims was like, yeah, yeah. MYMS was like, well

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<v Speaker 1>I could have qualified for No, I ain't even gonna

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<v Speaker 1>go there, no shots fight on sanchize. Um, you gotta

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<v Speaker 1>take it easier. But well, you know what I think,

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<v Speaker 1>Moms like fifty thousand. You know, Darren's the first round

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<v Speaker 1>draft pick from Ohio State, so he probably took a

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<v Speaker 1>pay cut to come to the NFL. So you know,

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<v Speaker 1>his contracts probably about two twenty five. You can't even

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<v Speaker 1>spend you can't spend that. And the thing is, if

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<v Speaker 1>you don't spend it before the end of the season,

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<v Speaker 1>then it rolls over. So it's like it's it doesn't

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<v Speaker 1>roll over, so you lose it. So you find yourself

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<v Speaker 1>just buying. Everybody found his decked out in a Nike gear,

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<v Speaker 1>which I'm sure everybody your friends decked out of knock gear.

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<v Speaker 1>All right, listen, So part is it is known for

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<v Speaker 1>a few jokes once in a while, and now he

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<v Speaker 1>takes a shot the Ohio State University and won't let

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<v Speaker 1>darrenly the game is week two. Oh my god, huge game,

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<v Speaker 1>oh Ohio State Penn State. We'll talk to Darren about

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<v Speaker 1>that momentarily, but let's talk about the New York Jets

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<v Speaker 1>did a lot of times. I was trying to avoid it,

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<v Speaker 1>you know what I mean. Listen, this is inside the Jets.

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<v Speaker 1>And I know you want to make this parking with part,

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<v Speaker 1>but it's inside the Jets. So what happened in the

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<v Speaker 1>fourth quarter and when the head coach says we got

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<v Speaker 1>to develop a killer instinct, Well, speaking about the killer instinct,

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<v Speaker 1>you know, when you're a head, it's just natural for

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<v Speaker 1>you to relax, right and you you try and and

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<v Speaker 1>just make it to the end of the game. You

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<v Speaker 1>try and win, but you don't. You're not as a

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<v Speaker 1>as aggressive as maybe you were early in the game.

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<v Speaker 1>And what happens is the the opposing team is desperate.

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<v Speaker 1>They have nothing to lose, so so they're doing things

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<v Speaker 1>that maybe they wouldn't do if the game was tight.

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<v Speaker 1>And I feel like what happens is when you give

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<v Speaker 1>up some plays, you start getting tight and momentum shifts

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<v Speaker 1>and it takes a mature squad to really understand how

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<v Speaker 1>to weather the storm but still be coming the eye

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<v Speaker 1>of hurricane and they have to develop that. This was

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<v Speaker 1>the This wasn't the first time that we saw this

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<v Speaker 1>happen with this young Jets team, and they're learning lessons.

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<v Speaker 1>The first time it happened, at least that I really

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<v Speaker 1>picked up on it was in Jacksonville, right where the

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<v Speaker 1>game should have been over with. And what happens is

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<v Speaker 1>you don't want to make it interesting to the you know,

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<v Speaker 1>at the end of the game. So you have to

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<v Speaker 1>learn how to get a killer instinct. You have to

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<v Speaker 1>make sure that you continue to make the team figure

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<v Speaker 1>out to think that it's not their day. And to

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<v Speaker 1>do that, you gotta continue to play smart and you

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<v Speaker 1>have to make the plays that present themselves. But you

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<v Speaker 1>can't give a big place. You have to understand situational football.

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<v Speaker 1>So you talk about having a killer instinct, it's about

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<v Speaker 1>still doing the little things and not giving teams opportunity

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<v Speaker 1>to see the light and not give them a chance

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<v Speaker 1>to see his momentum, because momentum is crazy because when

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<v Speaker 1>you lose, it is hard to get it back. Listen

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<v Speaker 1>to Jets were playing great, complimentary football for the first

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<v Speaker 1>three quarters of that ball game, and what we saw

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<v Speaker 1>in the fourth quarter was field position. People talk about

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<v Speaker 1>it and hitting yards and things like that, but when

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<v Speaker 1>you look at how the Dolphins got back into this

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<v Speaker 1>game their first scoring drive in the fourth quarter was

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<v Speaker 1>forty two yards. Kenny Stills gets open on a third

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<v Speaker 1>and seven play where the Jets have their four safety

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<v Speaker 1>package in the game. Terrorice Brooks comes off the edge,

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<v Speaker 1>looks like he was gonna get Matt Moore there for

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<v Speaker 1>a second, but Matt Moore dials up the long ball

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<v Speaker 1>to Stills, who gets a step on. Bust your screen,

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<v Speaker 1>and before you know it, it's early in the fourth quarter.

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<v Speaker 1>It's then penalties raised their ugly heads in that fourth quarter.

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<v Speaker 1>UM twelve penalties I think at all for the Jets

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<v Speaker 1>over a hundred yards UM taken back. Now, what do

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<v Speaker 1>you what do you do? As far as Todd Bowles

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<v Speaker 1>is concerned, you're talking about a young team learning to

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<v Speaker 1>finish things like that with with the penalties, Well, it's

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<v Speaker 1>about being disciplined and you have to understand who you're

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<v Speaker 1>playing and who the referees are. I'm sure Darren um

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<v Speaker 1>Jordan can tell you. I'm sure they still get the

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<v Speaker 1>Scotting report on not only the team, but the refereee rees.

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<v Speaker 1>Is this a staff, It's this a crew that's gonna

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<v Speaker 1>allow you to play or are they gonna be ticky? Tag?

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<v Speaker 1>Are you gonna have to be more disciplined and maybe

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<v Speaker 1>cover more with your feet. Now I understand it was

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<v Speaker 1>a bad It was a bad field surface. So what

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<v Speaker 1>happens is if you don't really plan off the correct foot, right,

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<v Speaker 1>if you plan out the off the outside foot and

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<v Speaker 1>not the inside foot, you know what I mean, what

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<v Speaker 1>happens is, I'm sorry I said that backwards, if you

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<v Speaker 1>don't plan out the outside, but then you lose your footing.

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<v Speaker 1>So all the little things are magnified when you have

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<v Speaker 1>a bad surface, and you have to understand you have

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<v Speaker 1>to sink your weights. You have to come, You have

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<v Speaker 1>to come, You have to come to balance. When you

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<v Speaker 1>want to make a big hit, you may not get

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<v Speaker 1>that big hit, so you have to adjust um to

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<v Speaker 1>the to the crew, but also to the field surface,

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<v Speaker 1>which you know, the field was a mess cores in Miami, right,

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<v Speaker 1>but they're playing on the same fields, but the advantage

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<v Speaker 1>goes to the offense. Right. So Kenny Steals knew exactly

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<v Speaker 1>where he was going. So you have to understand what

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<v Speaker 1>you got going on. And sometimes the system can help

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<v Speaker 1>you as well because you can play more of his

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<v Speaker 1>own and understanding formation, you know, and a lot of

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<v Speaker 1>times a young team and young defense. They don't understand

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<v Speaker 1>formation because formation tells you you know, what they can do,

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<v Speaker 1>what they can't do. And Matt more Sometimes the best

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<v Speaker 1>thing and the worst thing that ever happens is a

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<v Speaker 1>starting quarterback get gets hurt because you prepare for one

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<v Speaker 1>quarterback all week and then when he comes in, it's unexpected.

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<v Speaker 1>You don't really know what his strengths, what his weaknesses is,

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<v Speaker 1>who he has chemistry with, who he practices with, you know.

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<v Speaker 1>So it wasn't surprising to me that a guy like

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<v Speaker 1>Kenny Steells is the beneficiary uh playing with Matt Moore,

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<v Speaker 1>because that's probably who he plays with in practice. More so,

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<v Speaker 1>he has a feel or where Kenny likes the ball.

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<v Speaker 1>He can understand that non verbal communication. You know. That's

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<v Speaker 1>why a lot of times, you know, depend on who

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<v Speaker 1>the quarterback is. You wanna yo, you want to you

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<v Speaker 1>want to make sure that you don't drive Jay Cutler

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<v Speaker 1>into the ground. You want to help him up. You're okay.

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<v Speaker 1>I sacked you, but you're okay, right because you want

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<v Speaker 1>to keep him in the game. I remember being responsible,

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<v Speaker 1>us being responsible for getting Ben broselsberger career started. Um

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<v Speaker 1>sacking Timmy Max and put him out the game, and like,

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<v Speaker 1>let the young kid get to start. He almost came back.

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<v Speaker 1>So the Jets did a lot of good things on

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<v Speaker 1>Sunday in Miami. They raced out to another lead. They

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<v Speaker 1>scored on two of their first three possessions. They had

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<v Speaker 1>two takeaways. Marcus May continues to flash in that secondary

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<v Speaker 1>with an interception Jamal Adams. That's because he came on

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<v Speaker 1>his show. Yeah, that's right. You can expect these guys

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<v Speaker 1>get at player defensive player of the week co you know,

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<v Speaker 1>because they're donna step on the stage right here. So good. Well,

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<v Speaker 1>I'll tell you what. Both of these guys played solid games.

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<v Speaker 1>You look at j j I. E. We talked about

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<v Speaker 1>it all last week. Hey, the Jets have to contain

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<v Speaker 1>this guy because we know what the Dolphins are gonna do.

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<v Speaker 1>You look at the numbers. J j I didn't do

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<v Speaker 1>anything against the Jets. Twenty plus carries, fifty yards. I

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<v Speaker 1>think it was more the penalties. The penalties were in

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<v Speaker 1>opportune times, and they extended drives and it was opportunity

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<v Speaker 1>to get off the football field and and in some

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<v Speaker 1>incident bustled in. Have a choice because if he didn't,

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<v Speaker 1>you know, commit the file, then it would have been

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<v Speaker 1>a huge play um. But with all that being said,

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<v Speaker 1>you know, a football game usually comes down to one

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<v Speaker 1>or two possessions, and you know it's something to learn from.

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<v Speaker 1>This young team is gonna have to learn, you know,

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<v Speaker 1>even situation football, when you're trying to come back and

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<v Speaker 1>it's tied up, what you can do understanding what the

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<v Speaker 1>defense does. You know, everybody that that play defense, that

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<v Speaker 1>plays defense, understands when the clock is short that they're

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<v Speaker 1>going to take away the sideline, take away the boundaries.

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<v Speaker 1>The middle field is always gonna be open. It's gonna

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<v Speaker 1>be a lot of trap coverages. They're gonna allow you

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<v Speaker 1>to throw the ball in the middle. They're not gonna

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<v Speaker 1>allow you to throw the ball to the side you're

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<v Speaker 1>referring to. Late in the game, Jets get the ball.

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<v Speaker 1>There's forty seven seconds on the clock, three time outs left.

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<v Speaker 1>What's the first play? What I tell you, what's the

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<v Speaker 1>drive starters? Well, if Bart's playing offensive coordinator, is he's

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<v Speaker 1>going with the screen or draw? Absolutely, And if you

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<v Speaker 1>get ten yards in that screen and draw, then it's

0:10:53.920 --> 0:10:56.080
<v Speaker 1>on right. We're going forward. If now we're gonna let

0:10:56.120 --> 0:10:58.079
<v Speaker 1>the clock run out, and we're gonna go to overtime.

0:10:58.440 --> 0:11:00.360
<v Speaker 1>You know, when you throw the ball back, it's especially

0:11:00.360 --> 0:11:02.240
<v Speaker 1>when you're in the middle of the field when you

0:11:02.320 --> 0:11:05.880
<v Speaker 1>throw a deep comeback. Already, you know, a football fields

0:11:05.920 --> 0:11:09.040
<v Speaker 1>fifty three yards wide, right, fifty three yards wide, So

0:11:09.400 --> 0:11:12.439
<v Speaker 1>he ran uh ten yard fifteen yard comeback, so that's

0:11:12.480 --> 0:11:15.720
<v Speaker 1>ten yards talking about another twenty or thirty yards to

0:11:15.720 --> 0:11:17.839
<v Speaker 1>throw the ball. That's like a thirty five yard pass

0:11:18.000 --> 0:11:19.760
<v Speaker 1>right there, you know. And that was in the in

0:11:19.800 --> 0:11:21.760
<v Speaker 1>the air a long time. They ran a trap coverage,

0:11:21.760 --> 0:11:24.000
<v Speaker 1>you know where where they tried to show that it

0:11:24.080 --> 0:11:26.760
<v Speaker 1>was man and man or on top man, free cover,

0:11:26.880 --> 0:11:29.040
<v Speaker 1>three press, bell whatever. They tried to play it, but

0:11:29.080 --> 0:11:31.520
<v Speaker 1>then they inverted the safety who took who took away

0:11:31.559 --> 0:11:33.600
<v Speaker 1>the out route and jumped and made a big play,

0:11:33.640 --> 0:11:35.480
<v Speaker 1>but it was it was a bad spot to have

0:11:35.559 --> 0:11:39.840
<v Speaker 1>a have a penalty. Uh yeah, there, you know. The

0:11:39.920 --> 0:11:43.080
<v Speaker 1>one The one thing that I noticed that the Miami

0:11:43.400 --> 0:11:45.959
<v Speaker 1>when I was looking at the game film today was

0:11:46.120 --> 0:11:49.679
<v Speaker 1>what Miami was doing defensively late in that ball game.

0:11:50.320 --> 0:11:56.439
<v Speaker 1>They were sending their safety oftentimes five guys, five rushers,

0:11:56.800 --> 0:11:59.920
<v Speaker 1>and the Jets were not able to establish that red

0:12:00.040 --> 0:12:02.079
<v Speaker 1>him in the fourth quarter that they had early in

0:12:02.160 --> 0:12:05.880
<v Speaker 1>the game with defense. Again, like I mentioned, those two

0:12:05.920 --> 0:12:09.920
<v Speaker 1>takeaways were in plus territory and what the Jets did

0:12:10.440 --> 0:12:14.160
<v Speaker 1>good on Sundays they converted those takeaways with points. You

0:12:14.240 --> 0:12:18.480
<v Speaker 1>talk about. Jamal Adams comes on a blitz from the edge,

0:12:18.480 --> 0:12:21.200
<v Speaker 1>he deflects it in their Mohammad Wilkerson comes up with

0:12:21.240 --> 0:12:24.599
<v Speaker 1>the interception, your first in goal there. Late in the

0:12:24.640 --> 0:12:28.280
<v Speaker 1>first half. McCown gets his own number called from offensive

0:12:28.320 --> 0:12:31.600
<v Speaker 1>coordinator John Morton. You take a Lee fourteen, the Marcus

0:12:31.640 --> 0:12:37.120
<v Speaker 1>May intercepts Matt Moore and almost houses it. That was

0:12:37.160 --> 0:12:41.480
<v Speaker 1>a nice return, gets the Jets in the plus territory there,

0:12:41.840 --> 0:12:45.040
<v Speaker 1>and then ultimately you finished the drive with Josh mccollin's

0:12:45.120 --> 0:12:48.120
<v Speaker 1>third touchdown past of the day to Austin Safari and

0:12:48.200 --> 0:12:52.839
<v Speaker 1>Jenkins who. Now, let me give you a little stat

0:12:52.920 --> 0:12:57.920
<v Speaker 1>for you right now, because a fantasy dual fantasy analysis

0:12:58.480 --> 0:13:01.200
<v Speaker 1>brought to you by fan of course, have all the

0:13:01.240 --> 0:13:05.120
<v Speaker 1>fantasy that football has to offer. Listen up, folks, if

0:13:05.120 --> 0:13:08.360
<v Speaker 1>you need a tight on, how about Austin Safari and Jenkins. Man.

0:13:08.360 --> 0:13:13.240
<v Speaker 1>That was a seamless drop right there. Three three touchdowns

0:13:13.760 --> 0:13:16.080
<v Speaker 1>in the last three games, and it should be four,

0:13:16.320 --> 0:13:18.640
<v Speaker 1>but we're not gonna go back because the Jets are

0:13:18.640 --> 0:13:21.400
<v Speaker 1>looking ahead. Atlanta's coming to town this week. That was

0:13:21.440 --> 0:13:23.840
<v Speaker 1>smooth man, Yeah, that was really smooth. Did you like that?

0:13:24.559 --> 0:13:26.719
<v Speaker 1>Maybe you get me some coffee? That was That was

0:13:26.760 --> 0:13:29.560
<v Speaker 1>a smooth with Jordan's waves. Man actually have waves like

0:13:29.600 --> 0:13:33.040
<v Speaker 1>that in nineties six Brokay, Well, you're you're dating yourself

0:13:33.160 --> 0:13:34.679
<v Speaker 1>right now. Now. Every day I wake up, it is

0:13:34.679 --> 0:13:37.120
<v Speaker 1>a blessing that is that that I don't touch my scout.

0:13:39.440 --> 0:13:42.440
<v Speaker 1>We'rena come right back here on Inside the Jets with

0:13:42.520 --> 0:13:45.720
<v Speaker 1>Darren Lye. Welcome back to Inside the Jets here at Vanderbilts.

0:13:45.960 --> 0:13:48.720
<v Speaker 1>We got companies, yes we do. Our player guest segment

0:13:48.840 --> 0:13:51.960
<v Speaker 1>is presented by M and T Bank, the official community

0:13:51.960 --> 0:13:55.520
<v Speaker 1>bank of your New York Jets. They forementioned Darren Lee

0:13:55.880 --> 0:13:59.840
<v Speaker 1>has now joined us. Darren, you were all over the

0:14:00.760 --> 0:14:07.280
<v Speaker 1>against Miami, eleven tackles and all the stats say three

0:14:08.080 --> 0:14:10.800
<v Speaker 1>carries for the Dolphins as a fifty three yards. You

0:14:10.800 --> 0:14:14.600
<v Speaker 1>guys emphasized stopping the run and you're really effective doing that.

0:14:15.160 --> 0:14:19.080
<v Speaker 1>What do you credit that success to? Uh? Obviously got

0:14:19.160 --> 0:14:21.600
<v Speaker 1>a credit to the d line up front. Um obviously

0:14:22.200 --> 0:14:26.080
<v Speaker 1>Mark Man just um, you know we were all we

0:14:26.080 --> 0:14:28.240
<v Speaker 1>were clicking up on full cylinders on that. We came

0:14:28.280 --> 0:14:30.400
<v Speaker 1>in trying to execute the part of our game plan. Um,

0:14:30.440 --> 0:14:31.800
<v Speaker 1>that's at the top of the game plan is to

0:14:31.800 --> 0:14:34.440
<v Speaker 1>stop and run. We knew that was the main part

0:14:34.440 --> 0:14:37.520
<v Speaker 1>of their offense. Um, try to make them one dimensional.

0:14:37.760 --> 0:14:40.160
<v Speaker 1>Uh so I felt that we executed that well. A

0:14:40.200 --> 0:14:42.240
<v Speaker 1>lot of credit goes to d Line. Well, how about

0:14:42.280 --> 0:14:44.680
<v Speaker 1>the chemistry. It seems that you and de Mario starting

0:14:44.720 --> 0:14:46.680
<v Speaker 1>to develop because it looked at and watching the film,

0:14:46.760 --> 0:14:48.640
<v Speaker 1>me breaking the film down early in the season, it

0:14:48.680 --> 0:14:50.400
<v Speaker 1>didn't look like you guys on that string. And what

0:14:50.440 --> 0:14:52.640
<v Speaker 1>people don't understand how important it is for you guys

0:14:52.840 --> 0:14:54.520
<v Speaker 1>to be on that stream because a lot of times

0:14:54.560 --> 0:14:57.080
<v Speaker 1>it's loud out there, you really can't communicate. So you

0:14:57.120 --> 0:14:59.840
<v Speaker 1>have to have that non verbal communication and being able

0:14:59.880 --> 0:15:02.440
<v Speaker 1>to anticipate with your partner. Next year're gonna do because

0:15:02.640 --> 0:15:05.280
<v Speaker 1>if he spills, you gotta scrape forward. If he squeezes,

0:15:05.320 --> 0:15:07.240
<v Speaker 1>you gotta go underknee. You know, you guys have to

0:15:07.280 --> 0:15:09.920
<v Speaker 1>be on the string house that development coming on. My

0:15:09.920 --> 0:15:13.480
<v Speaker 1>mom's watching right now on Facebook. But my mom, dude,

0:15:13.880 --> 0:15:18.080
<v Speaker 1>So you gotta explain some of these football terms. When

0:15:18.120 --> 0:15:20.920
<v Speaker 1>you start going, yeah, I want you talking football access

0:15:20.920 --> 0:15:24.040
<v Speaker 1>and all, give me a couple of definitions. Bad, I

0:15:24.080 --> 0:15:26.080
<v Speaker 1>went straight to the graduate course. Let me go down

0:15:26.120 --> 0:15:28.680
<v Speaker 1>to football one on one. So when I talk about spilling,

0:15:28.920 --> 0:15:31.680
<v Speaker 1>that means taking the blocker on in his inside shoulder.

0:15:31.720 --> 0:15:34.320
<v Speaker 1>You see the inside gap with your body, trying to

0:15:34.360 --> 0:15:36.880
<v Speaker 1>put him back and make him bubble out, so that

0:15:36.920 --> 0:15:39.080
<v Speaker 1>makes the runner have to bounce the ball. So if

0:15:39.120 --> 0:15:42.000
<v Speaker 1>your backside linebacker is going to be inside out of

0:15:42.080 --> 0:15:44.440
<v Speaker 1>the ball, care he can scrape over the top. Understanding

0:15:44.480 --> 0:15:46.160
<v Speaker 1>that the runner isn't going to be able to gain

0:15:46.240 --> 0:15:49.280
<v Speaker 1>any ground because he's running laterally, not vertically. So you

0:15:49.320 --> 0:15:51.160
<v Speaker 1>get over the top, hit him in the ear hole,

0:15:51.680 --> 0:15:53.360
<v Speaker 1>you know, tell him about itself, and try and get

0:15:53.360 --> 0:15:56.040
<v Speaker 1>the ball of things on the flip side. You know,

0:15:56.080 --> 0:15:57.920
<v Speaker 1>if you get the out blocking the down block, and

0:15:57.960 --> 0:16:00.720
<v Speaker 1>said full back comes and you're taking if you're outside

0:16:00.760 --> 0:16:03.800
<v Speaker 1>shoulder free, you're pretty much taking an inside gap with

0:16:03.880 --> 0:16:05.920
<v Speaker 1>his body and the outside gap your body. But what

0:16:05.960 --> 0:16:08.600
<v Speaker 1>that means now, it's your backside linebacker isn't going to

0:16:08.640 --> 0:16:11.000
<v Speaker 1>scrape over the top, he's inside out, knowing that the

0:16:11.080 --> 0:16:13.440
<v Speaker 1>runner is going to have to cut the ball inside

0:16:13.600 --> 0:16:19.560
<v Speaker 1>and then you hit him with the night night. So

0:16:19.720 --> 0:16:23.480
<v Speaker 1>do you talk about that? But yeah, so I'd say

0:16:23.480 --> 0:16:26.520
<v Speaker 1>the chemistry with me and called double Dan called to Mario,

0:16:26.600 --> 0:16:31.360
<v Speaker 1>but I call him Morris Chess. I like fake man.

0:16:32.200 --> 0:16:34.800
<v Speaker 1>Oh he go here about that one. He's heard it

0:16:34.800 --> 0:16:37.720
<v Speaker 1>as over, you know what it is. So I think

0:16:37.720 --> 0:16:40.200
<v Speaker 1>the chemistry with that, Um, definitely would come with just

0:16:41.000 --> 0:16:42.960
<v Speaker 1>playing fast and just playing fast and having the trust

0:16:42.960 --> 0:16:45.400
<v Speaker 1>with each other. Um. We talk a lot in the

0:16:45.400 --> 0:16:48.360
<v Speaker 1>film room, UM, just communicating simple things and we make

0:16:48.520 --> 0:16:50.280
<v Speaker 1>I guess certain checks that he would see, the subtle

0:16:50.320 --> 0:16:51.800
<v Speaker 1>checks that you see out there on the field. We

0:16:51.840 --> 0:16:53.400
<v Speaker 1>make those kind of the film room. So it's just

0:16:53.480 --> 0:16:56.200
<v Speaker 1>kind of innate. We go out and practice him. UM.

0:16:56.240 --> 0:16:58.240
<v Speaker 1>So I think that and then just just playing fast.

0:16:58.640 --> 0:17:00.520
<v Speaker 1>It's like, you know, if he sees something he place fast,

0:17:00.520 --> 0:17:02.960
<v Speaker 1>I'll make them right. UM. Just having that type of

0:17:03.000 --> 0:17:06.359
<v Speaker 1>trust definitely, Uh, definitely, you know presumes out there on

0:17:06.359 --> 0:17:09.160
<v Speaker 1>the field. How much of it is verbal communication and

0:17:09.200 --> 0:17:13.000
<v Speaker 1>how much of it is maybe signals uh that you

0:17:13.040 --> 0:17:17.399
<v Speaker 1>guys are doing pre snapp uh verbal communication. Yeah, but

0:17:17.400 --> 0:17:21.160
<v Speaker 1>it's definitely just formation recognition. UM and him we see

0:17:21.160 --> 0:17:24.199
<v Speaker 1>things formationwise. UM. So we aren't even kind of like

0:17:24.280 --> 0:17:26.000
<v Speaker 1>it's automatic to be able to call and what check

0:17:26.080 --> 0:17:28.840
<v Speaker 1>to get to. UM. So just how we go over that?

0:17:28.920 --> 0:17:30.960
<v Speaker 1>It's all starting the film and honestly, UM, we just

0:17:31.080 --> 0:17:33.000
<v Speaker 1>build that connection there and then go out and practice

0:17:33.000 --> 0:17:34.960
<v Speaker 1>it and then you see it out there on Sunday.

0:17:35.280 --> 0:17:39.280
<v Speaker 1>About thirteen years ago, I was considered a cover linebacker

0:17:39.320 --> 0:17:41.959
<v Speaker 1>as well. How are you? Yeah, back in the day,

0:17:42.000 --> 0:17:44.119
<v Speaker 1>we wore leather helmets, you know, how how how are

0:17:44.119 --> 0:17:46.920
<v Speaker 1>you adjusting to the rules? Um? In the NFL as

0:17:46.960 --> 0:17:51.119
<v Speaker 1>they continue to change with just how little physicality there is,

0:17:51.200 --> 0:17:53.359
<v Speaker 1>and you know you can't you can't touch them after

0:17:53.400 --> 0:17:55.760
<v Speaker 1>five yards, but then they're begging on you, they're pushing off,

0:17:55.800 --> 0:17:58.320
<v Speaker 1>their leaning from leverage. How are you adjusting? And how

0:17:58.359 --> 0:18:00.480
<v Speaker 1>frustrating is it? You know, when you have to go

0:18:00.520 --> 0:18:02.760
<v Speaker 1>against a guy like Gronk and he's pushing off, he's

0:18:02.960 --> 0:18:05.880
<v Speaker 1>you know, pushing your hips away, he's leaning into you, uh,

0:18:05.920 --> 0:18:08.040
<v Speaker 1>and he's getting the benefit of the doubt. How frustrating

0:18:08.040 --> 0:18:09.840
<v Speaker 1>can that be? And how's it going as far as

0:18:09.840 --> 0:18:16.040
<v Speaker 1>your development? Even know it's frustrating. So I think they

0:18:14.080 --> 0:18:18.520
<v Speaker 1>paid Yeah, I mean it's uh, it's difficult, but I mean,

0:18:18.760 --> 0:18:22.439
<v Speaker 1>that's where preparation goes into UM. If he goes out

0:18:22.440 --> 0:18:24.160
<v Speaker 1>there and allows you to execute, allows you to play

0:18:24.160 --> 0:18:28.560
<v Speaker 1>fast and UM not guests just more anticipate UM and

0:18:28.640 --> 0:18:30.720
<v Speaker 1>being able to timisipate those certain type of routes and

0:18:30.760 --> 0:18:33.080
<v Speaker 1>giving on the formations that you get allows you to

0:18:33.080 --> 0:18:35.399
<v Speaker 1>play fast and uh, you know, maybe be an interception

0:18:35.480 --> 0:18:37.560
<v Speaker 1>or take away. This is a serious question for both

0:18:37.600 --> 0:18:40.080
<v Speaker 1>of you. Your first NFL sack came in Week one

0:18:40.119 --> 0:18:43.119
<v Speaker 1>against the Buffalo Bills. You got a sack in the

0:18:43.200 --> 0:18:46.480
<v Speaker 1>first half. The sack, yeah, I do. I do call

0:18:46.520 --> 0:18:49.080
<v Speaker 1>it a sack because when you scrambled out the box,

0:18:50.280 --> 0:18:52.720
<v Speaker 1>I don't know, they called, oh you you didn't you

0:18:52.760 --> 0:18:55.960
<v Speaker 1>didn't review that yet? Get that. I can't watch every

0:18:55.960 --> 0:18:57.800
<v Speaker 1>play man, I got kids, all right, So do you

0:18:57.960 --> 0:18:59.919
<v Speaker 1>deal gets a sack in the first half when you

0:19:00.040 --> 0:19:02.800
<v Speaker 1>guys are reviewing that and everybody at home knows what

0:19:02.880 --> 0:19:06.400
<v Speaker 1>I'm talking about? Is there anything you can do differently?

0:19:06.520 --> 0:19:10.120
<v Speaker 1>That's a serious question. If I were to do anything differently,

0:19:10.240 --> 0:19:12.920
<v Speaker 1>it would basically make me play slower, and that's not allowed.

0:19:13.000 --> 0:19:17.200
<v Speaker 1>So I can't do anything different. First of all, I'm lost.

0:19:17.240 --> 0:19:18.560
<v Speaker 1>I have no idea what you guys are talking. You

0:19:18.600 --> 0:19:21.520
<v Speaker 1>guys talk. You talk about me explaining, spill the ball,

0:19:21.560 --> 0:19:23.400
<v Speaker 1>squeeze the ball. But you're just gonna talk right over

0:19:23.440 --> 0:19:27.040
<v Speaker 1>my head like that, like I don't count. Slow down.

0:19:27.080 --> 0:19:31.280
<v Speaker 1>Here Sently came out of blitz yesterday. Okay, he took

0:19:31.320 --> 0:19:34.720
<v Speaker 1>down Jatler behind the line of scrimmage. I think I'll

0:19:35.040 --> 0:19:38.440
<v Speaker 1>get going to get natch and that was a sec

0:19:39.000 --> 0:19:42.199
<v Speaker 1>But unfortunately we saw a piece of laundry go up

0:19:42.200 --> 0:19:51.320
<v Speaker 1>in there and they rule what targan or how many? Yeah,

0:19:51.359 --> 0:19:54.760
<v Speaker 1>you're right, you're right. But I get so confused nowadays

0:19:54.840 --> 0:19:57.400
<v Speaker 1>because I'm watching that and what I'm saying, well, there's

0:19:57.480 --> 0:20:00.000
<v Speaker 1>there no way that Well it's a dilemma, right because

0:20:00.040 --> 0:20:02.520
<v Speaker 1>what happens is for people out there that understand, you know,

0:20:02.560 --> 0:20:07.919
<v Speaker 1>the target is strict, strucking stricken strucking man. I got

0:20:07.960 --> 0:20:09.679
<v Speaker 1>I promise you. Got prom with you, guys. I have

0:20:09.760 --> 0:20:13.160
<v Speaker 1>a sociate's degree in universal studies. I promise you. Um.

0:20:13.440 --> 0:20:16.159
<v Speaker 1>But I believe it's right underneath the chin to the

0:20:16.320 --> 0:20:18.040
<v Speaker 1>about the waist man, because if you hit him anywhere

0:20:18.040 --> 0:20:20.040
<v Speaker 1>in the thigh boarder, even the little lower, it's gonna

0:20:20.040 --> 0:20:21.680
<v Speaker 1>be called you know, that's the tom Brady route. You

0:20:21.680 --> 0:20:24.000
<v Speaker 1>can't hit him low. So it's tough for you as

0:20:24.000 --> 0:20:26.000
<v Speaker 1>a defender because if you hit him in the mid session,

0:20:26.280 --> 0:20:27.960
<v Speaker 1>you know your body if you're not going to get

0:20:27.960 --> 0:20:30.320
<v Speaker 1>the helmet, the helmet contact, you're going to get the

0:20:30.440 --> 0:20:33.800
<v Speaker 1>driving with your body weight, which is to me, is

0:20:33.800 --> 0:20:37.560
<v Speaker 1>the dumbest call ever. Like, I don't know, I don't

0:20:37.600 --> 0:20:40.160
<v Speaker 1>want to make this in and you know a big

0:20:40.200 --> 0:20:42.960
<v Speaker 1>thing about the officials. I just a serious question when

0:20:43.000 --> 0:20:45.520
<v Speaker 1>you're watching this on on film and I'm looking at

0:20:45.520 --> 0:20:48.880
<v Speaker 1>it on saying I I don't know how we're we're

0:20:48.920 --> 0:20:53.639
<v Speaker 1>seeing this as a penalty here, but anyway, how quickly

0:20:53.720 --> 0:20:56.960
<v Speaker 1>you turn the page now to Atlanta Because the guys

0:20:57.000 --> 0:20:59.639
<v Speaker 1>who spoke to the media today said we have a

0:20:59.680 --> 0:21:03.160
<v Speaker 1>twenty four hour rule, win or lose. We gotta put

0:21:03.200 --> 0:21:06.720
<v Speaker 1>it behind us, no matter what happened. Uh yeah, well,

0:21:06.720 --> 0:21:08.600
<v Speaker 1>I mean inside you know that question right there. For

0:21:08.680 --> 0:21:10.800
<v Speaker 1>the game, it's behind us. You know, we watched the film,

0:21:10.880 --> 0:21:15.280
<v Speaker 1>got our corrections, so new we're focused on Atlanta. UM amazing,

0:21:15.440 --> 0:21:18.240
<v Speaker 1>basically focused on finishing. We're gonna emphasize that for sure,

0:21:18.880 --> 0:21:20.640
<v Speaker 1>um and try to get a job done on something

0:21:20.920 --> 0:21:24.080
<v Speaker 1>whatever you guys learned from being from Jacksonville to Miami.

0:21:24.200 --> 0:21:26.480
<v Speaker 1>So when this, when you get in another tight game,

0:21:27.080 --> 0:21:29.679
<v Speaker 1>what's some things that you guys have to do? What

0:21:29.760 --> 0:21:32.720
<v Speaker 1>are some things that you can't do? Uh to secure victory?

0:21:32.800 --> 0:21:34.360
<v Speaker 1>So that you know, because when you're a tight game,

0:21:35.160 --> 0:21:38.399
<v Speaker 1>nine times ten you win half of them. So the

0:21:38.480 --> 0:21:40.399
<v Speaker 1>key has not been in those tight games. What have

0:21:40.520 --> 0:21:44.600
<v Speaker 1>you guys learned as a group collectively? As a group collectively,

0:21:44.600 --> 0:21:46.240
<v Speaker 1>we have to continue to you know, come out with

0:21:46.240 --> 0:21:48.880
<v Speaker 1>that same intensity that we have and say the first half,

0:21:49.119 --> 0:21:51.320
<v Speaker 1>we gotta play to win the game, not play not

0:21:51.359 --> 0:21:54.240
<v Speaker 1>to lose or play scared. Um. And then you know

0:21:54.359 --> 0:21:57.159
<v Speaker 1>when you see that, uh, you see simple mistakes and

0:21:57.160 --> 0:21:59.000
<v Speaker 1>those they start to pile up, and it's just as

0:21:59.040 --> 0:22:01.399
<v Speaker 1>a young team and you saw saw him on the film. Um,

0:22:01.440 --> 0:22:03.040
<v Speaker 1>you know we corrected those and now we just gotta

0:22:03.080 --> 0:22:05.600
<v Speaker 1>keep attacking and stay in attack mentality. Um, And both

0:22:05.600 --> 0:22:07.000
<v Speaker 1>sides of the ball were aware of that. What do

0:22:07.000 --> 0:22:09.239
<v Speaker 1>you think about more Wilkerson yesterday? I thought it was

0:22:09.280 --> 0:22:12.640
<v Speaker 1>the best game of the season, not just because of interception.

0:22:12.760 --> 0:22:15.359
<v Speaker 1>He made a hell of a play on the screen

0:22:15.440 --> 0:22:17.560
<v Speaker 1>to j G I E A third and eight team

0:22:17.600 --> 0:22:19.520
<v Speaker 1>where it looked like a gi e was definitely gonna

0:22:19.560 --> 0:22:21.640
<v Speaker 1>get the first down, and Moll came out of nowhere

0:22:21.680 --> 0:22:24.679
<v Speaker 1>showing its athleticism. Yeah. I saw that a film and

0:22:24.680 --> 0:22:26.120
<v Speaker 1>I was, you know, just amazing. You know, a big

0:22:26.119 --> 0:22:29.040
<v Speaker 1>fellow can running get down the field. Um, but you

0:22:29.080 --> 0:22:31.080
<v Speaker 1>know that's why, you know, that's why he's here. He's

0:22:31.080 --> 0:22:33.000
<v Speaker 1>act of a playmaker as a leader, and that's what

0:22:33.080 --> 0:22:35.000
<v Speaker 1>leaders do. On top of that, it was his birthday,

0:22:35.320 --> 0:22:39.000
<v Speaker 1>so you know, you know, birthday birthday games go and

0:22:39.240 --> 0:22:46.200
<v Speaker 1>go out and ball out. Listen that ide. He loves

0:22:46.200 --> 0:22:49.480
<v Speaker 1>his little pause there. Hey, um, you know one thing

0:22:49.920 --> 0:22:53.440
<v Speaker 1>that I find very interesting right now is I really

0:22:53.480 --> 0:22:56.320
<v Speaker 1>liked the combination with you and Tomorrow, especially heading forward,

0:22:56.359 --> 0:22:59.200
<v Speaker 1>because when Tomorrow was drafted, a lot of people were

0:22:59.200 --> 0:23:01.240
<v Speaker 1>you just saying that, hey, maybe he's gonna be the

0:23:01.280 --> 0:23:04.040
<v Speaker 1>athletic speed guy. And he does have good athletics, says

0:23:04.080 --> 0:23:07.000
<v Speaker 1>I mean, and he is fast, but but not for

0:23:07.040 --> 0:23:10.160
<v Speaker 1>the board. But it's okay. But but now pairing up

0:23:10.160 --> 0:23:13.440
<v Speaker 1>with the Lee, he's playing more of that thumper role

0:23:13.960 --> 0:23:17.880
<v Speaker 1>and and Darren is covering the field. How did their

0:23:18.000 --> 0:23:26.400
<v Speaker 1>attributes match up and potentially give this duel? You know, uh, well,

0:23:26.520 --> 0:23:28.720
<v Speaker 1>an opportunity for long term success. Well, we all we

0:23:28.760 --> 0:23:31.000
<v Speaker 1>all assume roles, right, So you know when when de

0:23:31.080 --> 0:23:33.560
<v Speaker 1>Mario came in, he was my backup. He was brought

0:23:33.600 --> 0:23:36.760
<v Speaker 1>in to be like the uh cover linebacker come in

0:23:36.920 --> 0:23:40.119
<v Speaker 1>and some of our speed packages. Darren came in the

0:23:40.160 --> 0:23:42.639
<v Speaker 1>same way. And we assume roles in football, right, we

0:23:42.640 --> 0:23:45.639
<v Speaker 1>all assume roles. Where the Mario was known for running

0:23:45.800 --> 0:23:48.119
<v Speaker 1>and being an athletic guy, but now that's not the

0:23:48.200 --> 0:23:50.200
<v Speaker 1>role he has now. Now he has to be the thumper.

0:23:50.440 --> 0:23:52.400
<v Speaker 1>And um, I think early in the season, the first

0:23:52.440 --> 0:23:55.280
<v Speaker 1>couple of games, he he struggled with it. I think

0:23:55.280 --> 0:23:57.320
<v Speaker 1>now he's accepting his role and I think he's flourishing.

0:23:57.320 --> 0:24:00.240
<v Speaker 1>I think he's playing probably you know, top five back

0:24:00.240 --> 0:24:01.960
<v Speaker 1>in this league right now. But what it gives you

0:24:02.080 --> 0:24:04.240
<v Speaker 1>gives you scheme versatility. When you have two guys that

0:24:04.280 --> 0:24:07.560
<v Speaker 1>can run on the football field. Now, when the defense

0:24:07.720 --> 0:24:09.440
<v Speaker 1>wants to go in and get their Scotting report, they're

0:24:09.480 --> 0:24:11.480
<v Speaker 1>gonna label you. They're they're gonna say you're this type

0:24:11.480 --> 0:24:14.439
<v Speaker 1>of linebacker, and he's that type of linebacker. But what

0:24:14.520 --> 0:24:17.359
<v Speaker 1>happens is now Toy Bowls has the ability to to

0:24:17.359 --> 0:24:19.879
<v Speaker 1>to to play the bait and switch right where one

0:24:19.920 --> 0:24:22.360
<v Speaker 1>of these guys are are usually better than switching. Both

0:24:22.400 --> 0:24:23.960
<v Speaker 1>of them can blitch, both of them can cover to

0:24:24.040 --> 0:24:26.360
<v Speaker 1>the line the tight end, so they can't assume where

0:24:26.359 --> 0:24:28.560
<v Speaker 1>the cover just coming from. So you can play that game.

0:24:28.800 --> 0:24:31.120
<v Speaker 1>How noticeable is it for you as a player out

0:24:31.160 --> 0:24:35.800
<v Speaker 1>there to speed difference from year to year. They're considering

0:24:36.400 --> 0:24:39.760
<v Speaker 1>last season the unit what you guys have going right now,

0:24:40.440 --> 0:24:42.399
<v Speaker 1>just with the guys that we have on defense, I

0:24:42.480 --> 0:24:46.360
<v Speaker 1>mean playing very fast um. And you know, I think

0:24:46.359 --> 0:24:48.480
<v Speaker 1>that's building the chemistry as a whole as defense. And

0:24:48.520 --> 0:24:50.199
<v Speaker 1>you know that's Jordan's same thing. You know, we're all

0:24:50.240 --> 0:24:51.720
<v Speaker 1>just playing fast because you know, we're all trying to

0:24:51.720 --> 0:24:53.119
<v Speaker 1>get to the ball, trying to make that play. But

0:24:53.119 --> 0:24:56.480
<v Speaker 1>we're doing our job and executing. Um. As a comparison

0:24:56.480 --> 0:24:58.600
<v Speaker 1>to last year, I mean to me night and day,

0:24:58.840 --> 0:25:02.640
<v Speaker 1>Um'll be look at I fast out there, especially on film. UM,

0:25:02.680 --> 0:25:04.040
<v Speaker 1>And that's good. You know, I think our coaches are

0:25:04.040 --> 0:25:07.199
<v Speaker 1>putting this some great positions to enable us to play fast. Um.

0:25:07.320 --> 0:25:08.600
<v Speaker 1>And then we got a bunch of fast guys out

0:25:08.640 --> 0:25:10.800
<v Speaker 1>there too. It's a game slowing down for you now

0:25:10.920 --> 0:25:13.520
<v Speaker 1>where you can be more instinctual and not thinking about

0:25:13.600 --> 0:25:15.720
<v Speaker 1>where you need to be, worried about your proper stepps,

0:25:15.720 --> 0:25:17.680
<v Speaker 1>making sure you don't fall step and things like that.

0:25:18.040 --> 0:25:20.360
<v Speaker 1>How has just happen? A year under your belt, two

0:25:20.480 --> 0:25:23.000
<v Speaker 1>years in the system helped you become a better football

0:25:23.000 --> 0:25:27.560
<v Speaker 1>player this year? Uh? Definitely, you know had it, you know,

0:25:27.640 --> 0:25:30.560
<v Speaker 1>growing parents. Um, still a little bit here and there,

0:25:30.600 --> 0:25:33.760
<v Speaker 1>but definitely the Marios helped with that tremendously because you

0:25:33.800 --> 0:25:36.000
<v Speaker 1>know he's playing this before. Um, but you know he's

0:25:36.000 --> 0:25:38.520
<v Speaker 1>probably helping an aspect and just a little subtle clues

0:25:38.520 --> 0:25:41.760
<v Speaker 1>to help me play play faster. Um. And I can't

0:25:41.760 --> 0:25:43.480
<v Speaker 1>give you credit to him. He didn't. He didn't tell

0:25:43.480 --> 0:25:47.159
<v Speaker 1>you the wheel barrow story. Did he didn't. If you

0:25:47.200 --> 0:25:49.040
<v Speaker 1>say it's the wheelbarrow story, just walk out the room.

0:25:49.080 --> 0:25:53.480
<v Speaker 1>Don't even let him finish. Now, now you're old State guy.

0:25:53.520 --> 0:25:55.480
<v Speaker 1>Old State got a big game this week. I think

0:25:55.520 --> 0:26:00.040
<v Speaker 1>I heard about it right State, Open State. Now you

0:26:00.040 --> 0:26:02.399
<v Speaker 1>you're you're not a Nike guy, but you got Nike Garol,

0:26:02.480 --> 0:26:04.359
<v Speaker 1>but you don't have a shoe contract. No, no, no,

0:26:04.600 --> 0:26:07.040
<v Speaker 1>have you potentially thought about I hear big baller brand

0:26:07.080 --> 0:26:12.520
<v Speaker 1>is gonna come out with Have you thought about being

0:26:12.520 --> 0:26:17.200
<v Speaker 1>picked up a big baller barand uh, first of all,

0:26:17.200 --> 0:26:21.080
<v Speaker 1>shout out a big baller brand. Man. You know, man,

0:26:21.119 --> 0:26:24.600
<v Speaker 1>you don't really know, you know for sure, but nothing

0:26:24.640 --> 0:26:27.480
<v Speaker 1>nothing yet but not in the works, not nothing, no

0:26:27.560 --> 0:26:33.240
<v Speaker 1>big baller brand. Thanks for being a good sport Darrenly,

0:26:33.320 --> 0:26:37.880
<v Speaker 1>we're gonna come right back with one of your fellow linebackers,

0:26:38.240 --> 0:26:40.480
<v Speaker 1>of course on the New York Jets. That's Jordan Jenkins.

0:26:40.520 --> 0:26:44.399
<v Speaker 1>All right, listen, Uh we're back here on inside the Jets,

0:26:44.400 --> 0:26:47.000
<v Speaker 1>and we're probably gonna have a raffle for another co

0:26:47.200 --> 0:26:51.160
<v Speaker 1>host here in a moment, because uh, bart is really

0:26:51.200 --> 0:26:55.919
<v Speaker 1>taking his discipline problems to a new level out here tonight.

0:26:56.400 --> 0:26:59.600
<v Speaker 1>I can't believe it. And we are joined right now

0:26:59.680 --> 0:27:04.960
<v Speaker 1>by or in Jenkins part he is representing the state

0:27:05.000 --> 0:27:08.399
<v Speaker 1>of Georgia. Listen, this is airing on Facebook in New York,

0:27:08.480 --> 0:27:11.680
<v Speaker 1>ches dot com and later on ESPN Radio. But quick,

0:27:11.680 --> 0:27:15.360
<v Speaker 1>who who finishes rain higher? Georgia, Ohio State? All them

0:27:15.400 --> 0:27:19.840
<v Speaker 1>dogs on top? Now? I well, I want to say famously,

0:27:20.000 --> 0:27:22.439
<v Speaker 1>I put my Ferrari up against in Bentley right for

0:27:22.480 --> 0:27:24.719
<v Speaker 1>you guys win a certain amount of games. What are

0:27:24.760 --> 0:27:28.720
<v Speaker 1>you guys willing to bet that Georgia finishes hired in

0:27:28.720 --> 0:27:35.399
<v Speaker 1>Ohio state box my Xbox to his Xbox. Okay, so

0:27:35.480 --> 0:27:38.359
<v Speaker 1>you guys once, y'all a millionaires. You talking about Xbox?

0:27:41.960 --> 0:27:45.640
<v Speaker 1>What Xbox? What Xbox? Uh? Game? It ain't even three

0:27:45.680 --> 0:27:50.800
<v Speaker 1>six two Kstinity Call of Duty? Uh? Play a little

0:27:50.840 --> 0:27:53.399
<v Speaker 1>bit of Dragon Age? Mix it up a little. Who's

0:27:53.400 --> 0:27:56.320
<v Speaker 1>your team? Two K? I played with the Warriors because

0:27:56.359 --> 0:27:59.359
<v Speaker 1>everyone plays with the calves. Well, yeah, d Lee definitely

0:27:59.359 --> 0:28:03.200
<v Speaker 1>plays with the calves. Yeah he's but I mean real

0:28:03.280 --> 0:28:06.479
<v Speaker 1>big cavalier. He got a Cavalier colors on now. But

0:28:06.480 --> 0:28:10.920
<v Speaker 1>but nobody can play like stau front Runners. Okay, see

0:28:11.280 --> 0:28:13.480
<v Speaker 1>or the tea Pops or anything like. You want to

0:28:13.480 --> 0:28:15.080
<v Speaker 1>come back on the mics. I mean, we gotta bring

0:28:15.119 --> 0:28:17.560
<v Speaker 1>everybody up. I mean, these guys are going back and

0:28:17.640 --> 0:28:20.160
<v Speaker 1>forth right now. They're supposed to be, you know, tight.

0:28:20.400 --> 0:28:22.960
<v Speaker 1>That's the same drift class. That's a little look into

0:28:23.040 --> 0:28:25.520
<v Speaker 1>what the locker room is all about. All right, So

0:28:25.920 --> 0:28:28.960
<v Speaker 1>Jordan's we're not gonna bury the lead. Let's talk about

0:28:29.000 --> 0:28:31.200
<v Speaker 1>the hit on a cutler. You you got in there.

0:28:31.520 --> 0:28:33.680
<v Speaker 1>Let's just talk about the rush first, because this guy

0:28:33.760 --> 0:28:37.080
<v Speaker 1>hasn't done all his film study yet. So I might

0:28:37.119 --> 0:28:39.680
<v Speaker 1>be looking for a new co host. What what was it?

0:28:39.760 --> 0:28:42.040
<v Speaker 1>Was a long arm stab? Was it a slap rip?

0:28:42.120 --> 0:28:46.680
<v Speaker 1>What was it? Was? Bull? Stutter ball stutter bull and

0:28:46.760 --> 0:28:49.959
<v Speaker 1>a straight bull, straight bull off the snap, nice helmet

0:28:49.960 --> 0:28:53.280
<v Speaker 1>into helping into his jaw. Did you know right away

0:28:53.400 --> 0:28:57.200
<v Speaker 1>that he was hurting? I knew I hit him pretty

0:28:57.240 --> 0:28:58.920
<v Speaker 1>hard and not trying to drive me in the ground

0:28:58.920 --> 0:29:00.800
<v Speaker 1>a little bit. You know, it makes I hope you

0:29:00.840 --> 0:29:04.280
<v Speaker 1>don't get that envelope, that FedEx that that was perfectly

0:29:04.800 --> 0:29:08.240
<v Speaker 1>just how you listen. We're not getting anybody in truck

0:29:08.360 --> 0:29:11.760
<v Speaker 1>out here, just so you guys know, like you never

0:29:11.840 --> 0:29:14.200
<v Speaker 1>know that you got fine until you until you come

0:29:14.240 --> 0:29:16.520
<v Speaker 1>in Wednesday after your day all. And if it's a

0:29:16.520 --> 0:29:20.880
<v Speaker 1>FedEx envelope on your your your your stool, you already know.

0:29:21.080 --> 0:29:23.840
<v Speaker 1>And how many findes did you get in your playing career? Well,

0:29:24.080 --> 0:29:25.480
<v Speaker 1>the worst one I got is when I threw the

0:29:25.520 --> 0:29:27.560
<v Speaker 1>referee flag in the stands. I think that will call

0:29:27.560 --> 0:29:30.520
<v Speaker 1>for you about forty huh kids look that up. Of

0:29:30.560 --> 0:29:33.240
<v Speaker 1>course that was a Monday night football games, the Monday

0:29:33.320 --> 0:29:36.960
<v Speaker 1>night fel Yeah, I'm trying to fight the ref. It

0:29:37.040 --> 0:29:39.640
<v Speaker 1>was a bad day. The Baltimore Ravens versus the New

0:29:39.680 --> 0:29:44.640
<v Speaker 1>England Patriots. Yeah, what not to do? The Patriots team

0:29:44.640 --> 0:29:46.720
<v Speaker 1>will finish something. They didn't know what to do. They

0:29:46.840 --> 0:29:48.560
<v Speaker 1>was like, listen, it's never been done before. We don't

0:29:48.560 --> 0:29:50.080
<v Speaker 1>even know how to let you. We don't even know

0:29:50.080 --> 0:29:53.520
<v Speaker 1>what with the start. I'm glad I could be your first.

0:29:53.600 --> 0:29:55.959
<v Speaker 1>Can you imagine this guy picking up yellow and just

0:29:56.000 --> 0:29:58.719
<v Speaker 1>tossing it everywhere? Oh that's bold. Yeah, I mean that's

0:29:58.760 --> 0:30:01.080
<v Speaker 1>probably Travis Kelsey got a last. But you know what,

0:30:01.200 --> 0:30:02.960
<v Speaker 1>my street crew went up. You know what I'm saying.

0:30:03.200 --> 0:30:06.840
<v Speaker 1>I'm good in the hood. All right, all right, Jordan Um,

0:30:07.160 --> 0:30:10.000
<v Speaker 1>talk about the success, the success you guys had against

0:30:10.000 --> 0:30:14.240
<v Speaker 1>the run because you are key performer in this run defense,

0:30:14.320 --> 0:30:18.680
<v Speaker 1>because you are the guy in the strong side. I mean,

0:30:18.680 --> 0:30:21.840
<v Speaker 1>it was something we really are harped on all last

0:30:21.880 --> 0:30:24.080
<v Speaker 1>week because we knew we weren't real performing as well

0:30:24.120 --> 0:30:26.480
<v Speaker 1>as we should have throughout this whole season against the run.

0:30:26.560 --> 0:30:29.800
<v Speaker 1>We like to be known as just a run stopping defense,

0:30:29.880 --> 0:30:32.880
<v Speaker 1>and frankly, we just hadn't been getting done all seasons.

0:30:32.880 --> 0:30:35.120
<v Speaker 1>So we really will work on making sure we would't

0:30:35.120 --> 0:30:37.520
<v Speaker 1>have the right fits and just making sure everybody was

0:30:37.640 --> 0:30:39.360
<v Speaker 1>just knew they had to be physical this game if

0:30:39.400 --> 0:30:41.040
<v Speaker 1>we wanted to come out on top. What happened in

0:30:41.080 --> 0:30:44.040
<v Speaker 1>the fourth quarter? Uh, you know this is the last

0:30:44.040 --> 0:30:47.240
<v Speaker 1>time you're gonna have to talk about it, um from

0:30:47.320 --> 0:30:49.480
<v Speaker 1>us anyway here on Monday night, you might have to

0:30:49.520 --> 0:30:52.840
<v Speaker 1>face a couple of questions and Wednesday. From a defensive perspective,

0:30:52.840 --> 0:30:57.040
<v Speaker 1>though with lead, I know each man in that locker

0:30:57.120 --> 0:30:59.520
<v Speaker 1>room thinks that you guys should be walking away with

0:30:59.520 --> 0:31:02.040
<v Speaker 1>a victory. So from a defensive perspective, what do you

0:31:02.080 --> 0:31:05.400
<v Speaker 1>think happened? We just had Uh we weren't Uh, we

0:31:05.400 --> 0:31:08.120
<v Speaker 1>weren't completely focused. I mean, uh, if we were dialed in,

0:31:08.200 --> 0:31:09.800
<v Speaker 1>we wouldn't have had some of the penalties we had,

0:31:10.080 --> 0:31:13.080
<v Speaker 1>and we wouldn't have put ourselves in situations where you

0:31:13.160 --> 0:31:15.440
<v Speaker 1>might get a penalty. There's a time where we had

0:31:15.720 --> 0:31:17.960
<v Speaker 1>h one of our guys had to edge that, but

0:31:17.960 --> 0:31:19.520
<v Speaker 1>it was a soft deed, so the guy the runner

0:31:19.560 --> 0:31:22.160
<v Speaker 1>could still run outside. And we put some of our

0:31:22.200 --> 0:31:24.440
<v Speaker 1>line uh linebackers in tbs in the position they really

0:31:24.440 --> 0:31:26.160
<v Speaker 1>shouldn't ever had to be in if we would have

0:31:26.160 --> 0:31:27.920
<v Speaker 1>had a harder edge ship from the get go. Now

0:31:27.960 --> 0:31:30.520
<v Speaker 1>did the heat started to play a factor? Late in

0:31:30.600 --> 0:31:33.400
<v Speaker 1>the game it was reported that was but ninety two degrees.

0:31:33.480 --> 0:31:37.440
<v Speaker 1>The field was bad, but there were too But there

0:31:37.480 --> 0:31:40.640
<v Speaker 1>definitely probably was some wearing tearing some of guys out there.

0:31:40.720 --> 0:31:43.560
<v Speaker 1>But I mean, it's that goes for both teams, So

0:31:43.600 --> 0:31:45.480
<v Speaker 1>we shouldn't uh, we should have been able to play

0:31:45.480 --> 0:31:49.000
<v Speaker 1>through that adversity. So positive you guys always look at

0:31:49.000 --> 0:31:51.320
<v Speaker 1>the film on Mondays, what did you see from your

0:31:51.360 --> 0:31:54.480
<v Speaker 1>perspective as far as looking at it from a view

0:31:54.640 --> 0:31:58.600
<v Speaker 1>of sixty minutes of defensive football, I saw a lot

0:31:58.640 --> 0:32:00.760
<v Speaker 1>of guys given it, They're all a lot of guys

0:32:01.080 --> 0:32:05.200
<v Speaker 1>really playing really good football. And but at times and

0:32:05.560 --> 0:32:08.640
<v Speaker 1>other times I saw guys playing on this win football

0:32:08.960 --> 0:32:12.240
<v Speaker 1>and playing individual football, and as a defense really just

0:32:12.280 --> 0:32:15.200
<v Speaker 1>have to work. We have to work more towards being

0:32:15.200 --> 0:32:18.720
<v Speaker 1>more consistent and eliminating some of the selfish play and

0:32:18.880 --> 0:32:21.840
<v Speaker 1>just really coming together more as a defense and just

0:32:22.240 --> 0:32:25.520
<v Speaker 1>eliminating some of the uh, immature areas we had in

0:32:25.520 --> 0:32:28.640
<v Speaker 1>the fourth. When you say selfish play immateur play, do

0:32:28.720 --> 0:32:34.240
<v Speaker 1>you mean that guys might be over extending themselves in

0:32:34.280 --> 0:32:38.520
<v Speaker 1>an effort to make the play instead of maybe taking

0:32:38.520 --> 0:32:40.680
<v Speaker 1>care of their own role and responsibility, Like I know.

0:32:40.760 --> 0:32:43.120
<v Speaker 1>My job is to set the edge, make sure the

0:32:43.120 --> 0:32:45.640
<v Speaker 1>ball didn't get outside. If I peek inside trying to

0:32:45.680 --> 0:32:48.120
<v Speaker 1>make a play, ball bounces out. They hit us for

0:32:48.200 --> 0:32:51.760
<v Speaker 1>fifteen yards. That's my fault, and that was because I wanted.

0:32:51.880 --> 0:32:53.520
<v Speaker 1>I tried to make a play that wouldn't mind to make.

0:32:53.560 --> 0:32:55.320
<v Speaker 1>In the defense, you gotta know your role and you

0:32:55.400 --> 0:32:58.480
<v Speaker 1>have to perform well at that role. So Bart talked

0:32:58.560 --> 0:33:02.720
<v Speaker 1>before about preparation going into a game. You guys are

0:33:02.720 --> 0:33:05.480
<v Speaker 1>looking on a lot of film at Jay Cutler when

0:33:05.520 --> 0:33:09.760
<v Speaker 1>Matt Moore comes in. What happens from a defensive perspective

0:33:09.840 --> 0:33:11.960
<v Speaker 1>with you guys on the sidelines, when you're huddling it

0:33:12.040 --> 0:33:14.160
<v Speaker 1>up and then you're saying, hey, here's a new quarterback.

0:33:14.160 --> 0:33:18.040
<v Speaker 1>Because a lot of teams sometimes say system, we're gonna

0:33:18.040 --> 0:33:20.520
<v Speaker 1>approach it the same way. But is there anything as

0:33:20.560 --> 0:33:22.600
<v Speaker 1>far as keysy and talk about when a new guy

0:33:22.640 --> 0:33:24.400
<v Speaker 1>comes Well, I guess what we were really trying to

0:33:24.400 --> 0:33:27.360
<v Speaker 1>get to. How did their game plan change once Matt

0:33:27.440 --> 0:33:29.200
<v Speaker 1>Moore came in the game. Was it more of a

0:33:29.320 --> 0:33:31.719
<v Speaker 1>quick passing game with it more shots down to field?

0:33:32.040 --> 0:33:34.200
<v Speaker 1>What changed when Matt Moore came into the game. I

0:33:34.240 --> 0:33:36.560
<v Speaker 1>felt like when when Matt gotten into the game, they

0:33:36.640 --> 0:33:39.320
<v Speaker 1>really just tried. They try to do anything they try.

0:33:39.520 --> 0:33:41.720
<v Speaker 1>They got desperate and tried to do anything they could

0:33:41.760 --> 0:33:43.840
<v Speaker 1>in their playbook to get things going because they got

0:33:43.880 --> 0:33:45.600
<v Speaker 1>they got away this away from some of the stuff

0:33:45.640 --> 0:33:48.200
<v Speaker 1>they would do with Cutler in and uh, I mean

0:33:48.240 --> 0:33:50.520
<v Speaker 1>they hit us once or twice, but we really shot

0:33:50.520 --> 0:33:52.920
<v Speaker 1>ourselves in the foot and allowed them to keep going

0:33:52.960 --> 0:33:54.960
<v Speaker 1>down the field with some of those What has it

0:33:55.120 --> 0:33:57.920
<v Speaker 1>been like for you this year working under Kevin Green?

0:33:58.640 --> 0:34:02.320
<v Speaker 1>Guy has more set acts that any linebacker in the

0:34:02.400 --> 0:34:04.720
<v Speaker 1>history of the National Football League and he's coaching up

0:34:05.000 --> 0:34:08.160
<v Speaker 1>outside linebackers this year. I mean, working with Kevin Green

0:34:08.239 --> 0:34:11.040
<v Speaker 1>is it's just, uh such an honor. I mean, uh, people,

0:34:11.480 --> 0:34:13.839
<v Speaker 1>we really don't even realize it, and we probably won't

0:34:13.840 --> 0:34:16.200
<v Speaker 1>realize until we're done playing ball that this was such

0:34:16.200 --> 0:34:19.040
<v Speaker 1>a great honor to uh work under KG, because I

0:34:19.080 --> 0:34:22.960
<v Speaker 1>mean you look back and filming KG was destroying people

0:34:23.000 --> 0:34:26.640
<v Speaker 1>like he destroyed tackles that are probably three forty and

0:34:26.960 --> 0:34:28.640
<v Speaker 1>back in the day case he was only about maybe

0:34:28.760 --> 0:34:31.600
<v Speaker 1>two thirty two forty and he he just was a

0:34:31.680 --> 0:34:35.000
<v Speaker 1>dominant outside linebacker that knew how to get after quarterback.

0:34:35.040 --> 0:34:37.200
<v Speaker 1>They knew what it's at the edge, and it's uh

0:34:37.239 --> 0:34:39.000
<v Speaker 1>there's there's some learning curs that we have to go

0:34:39.080 --> 0:34:43.520
<v Speaker 1>through and uh it, uh it. All I can say

0:34:43.600 --> 0:34:46.719
<v Speaker 1>is I'm glad we got KG and it's gonna work

0:34:46.760 --> 0:34:49.000
<v Speaker 1>better for you. I know this guy liked him because

0:34:49.200 --> 0:34:52.440
<v Speaker 1>not only was he was one of my favorites ferocious player,

0:34:52.560 --> 0:34:57.080
<v Speaker 1>but he also participated in some wrestling like this guy.

0:34:55.920 --> 0:34:59.320
<v Speaker 1>That's all that's true. I got tapped out by Curtain.

0:34:59.520 --> 0:35:02.759
<v Speaker 1>It wasn't my finest moment, but it's so cost I

0:35:02.800 --> 0:35:07.200
<v Speaker 1>lived to find another day. And George are you, Oh yeah,

0:35:07.200 --> 0:35:08.320
<v Speaker 1>I hate it. I used to hate curd and go

0:35:08.400 --> 0:35:10.680
<v Speaker 1>back to day. I saw he came back and I was, well,

0:35:10.719 --> 0:35:12.759
<v Speaker 1>you gotta you gotta get the baby. You gotta get.

0:35:12.840 --> 0:35:14.359
<v Speaker 1>You gotta give me your top five, give me your

0:35:14.360 --> 0:35:18.520
<v Speaker 1>top five. Let's see top five all time, all time,

0:35:18.960 --> 0:35:22.719
<v Speaker 1>all time. I gotta throw Chris Jericho in there. Oh

0:35:22.800 --> 0:35:27.239
<v Speaker 1>he's so young, Chris Jericho. Okay, I'll put to you

0:35:27.440 --> 0:35:29.640
<v Speaker 1>with the young guys. My favorite John She is one

0:35:29.640 --> 0:35:36.040
<v Speaker 1>of my favorites. That's nothing but Martye, Marris Jericho and

0:35:36.080 --> 0:35:38.960
<v Speaker 1>the Hardy Brothers. They count this one. Hardy Brothers Okay,

0:35:39.000 --> 0:35:40.719
<v Speaker 1>you want to hear my top five? No, not really,

0:35:40.719 --> 0:35:43.080
<v Speaker 1>but yeah, go ahead one here. It depends on how

0:35:43.080 --> 0:35:45.840
<v Speaker 1>you want to go. You can go um Mr Wonderful

0:35:45.880 --> 0:35:49.880
<v Speaker 1>Paul arned Off, You can go ravishing Rick Rude. I

0:35:49.880 --> 0:35:52.759
<v Speaker 1>gotta go hawking Animal because Ohio states in the house

0:35:52.800 --> 0:35:55.560
<v Speaker 1>to road warriors, right. And you gotta go with Hawk

0:35:55.600 --> 0:35:58.839
<v Speaker 1>Holding because he revolutionized sport. He took it global. It's

0:35:58.920 --> 0:36:00.880
<v Speaker 1>kind of like Mohammed he's taking not that he was

0:36:00.920 --> 0:36:02.719
<v Speaker 1>the best because he was limited. You don't have like

0:36:02.800 --> 0:36:05.399
<v Speaker 1>three or four moves. But if I can go back,

0:36:05.440 --> 0:36:10.200
<v Speaker 1>I could probably go. Also Flair, you got you gotta

0:36:10.360 --> 0:36:13.759
<v Speaker 1>you gotta go nature Ball got many times I got

0:36:13.880 --> 0:36:15.719
<v Speaker 1>a trouble by putting my nephew in the finger four

0:36:15.800 --> 0:36:17.239
<v Speaker 1>leg lock. Yeah, I got kicked out of my ground,

0:36:17.280 --> 0:36:19.120
<v Speaker 1>my house every week today. Hey, let me tell you

0:36:19.160 --> 0:36:26.680
<v Speaker 1>something you guys are forgetting about. Roddy. Yeah, Piper, Piper's

0:36:26.680 --> 0:36:31.920
<v Speaker 1>pit was real. You can go Georgia, best show around,

0:36:32.120 --> 0:36:34.040
<v Speaker 1>Ricky the Dragon steam boat. You know what I mean?

0:36:34.320 --> 0:36:37.239
<v Speaker 1>But everybody around here, Tito Santana lives in Dover, so

0:36:37.280 --> 0:36:41.040
<v Speaker 1>you gotta go Tito Santana. Okay, So, uh, let's get

0:36:41.080 --> 0:36:43.279
<v Speaker 1>back football just for a moment. Okay, okay, I get

0:36:43.280 --> 0:36:47.200
<v Speaker 1>excited with Allen Park, Scott Here, Vanderbilts and Jordan Jenkins

0:36:47.280 --> 0:36:51.480
<v Speaker 1>got tickets. I'll tell you what. Um you are Georgian native.

0:36:51.800 --> 0:36:55.279
<v Speaker 1>You're playing Atlanta this week? Did you grow up a

0:36:55.360 --> 0:36:58.520
<v Speaker 1>fan of the Fucus? I actually did, because so much

0:36:58.560 --> 0:37:02.040
<v Speaker 1>time moving around as Millet's doing the thirty birth dance

0:37:02.120 --> 0:37:05.120
<v Speaker 1>up here. We can't see that on radio. But you know,

0:37:05.400 --> 0:37:08.560
<v Speaker 1>growing up in uh, in Georgia, every everybody was Falcons fan.

0:37:09.000 --> 0:37:11.560
<v Speaker 1>All my woys back home. I've been seeing me text

0:37:11.640 --> 0:37:15.760
<v Speaker 1>all yesterday. You gotta get we're playing tickets. I probably

0:37:15.760 --> 0:37:18.399
<v Speaker 1>got no scouting report, man right now. Probably tickets so far.

0:37:18.880 --> 0:37:24.960
<v Speaker 1>But alright, you're covered travels now your travels. But I

0:37:24.960 --> 0:37:27.640
<v Speaker 1>mean this is a big game for me, you know. Uh,

0:37:27.719 --> 0:37:30.680
<v Speaker 1>I mean Falcons is like that's a team everybody loved

0:37:30.680 --> 0:37:32.799
<v Speaker 1>growing up. That's a team everybody cheered for. Everyone was like, oh,

0:37:32.800 --> 0:37:34.440
<v Speaker 1>we gotta go to the Falcons game this Sunday. Oh

0:37:34.440 --> 0:37:38.520
<v Speaker 1>we gotta go to Falcons is. Everything is Falcons fans

0:37:38.520 --> 0:37:40.359
<v Speaker 1>back home. Man. I mean, it's it's a big week

0:37:40.400 --> 0:37:42.520
<v Speaker 1>for me, and uh, it's definitely gonna try. I'm gonna

0:37:42.520 --> 0:37:44.919
<v Speaker 1>try and play my artists out there and uh try

0:37:44.920 --> 0:37:46.719
<v Speaker 1>and play back to the wall. I'm trying to play

0:37:46.840 --> 0:37:49.720
<v Speaker 1>hundred miles an hour. Well, well just from the outside

0:37:49.719 --> 0:37:52.480
<v Speaker 1>looking in. You know, this week we talk about setting

0:37:52.480 --> 0:37:55.040
<v Speaker 1>that is it's gonna be vital this week is DeVante,

0:37:55.080 --> 0:37:58.640
<v Speaker 1>Freeman and Coma are one of the most dynamic in

0:37:58.680 --> 0:38:02.680
<v Speaker 1>the game. They're listen, that's a prolific tandem. But right

0:38:02.719 --> 0:38:05.360
<v Speaker 1>now that's an offense trying to find its way and

0:38:05.400 --> 0:38:08.320
<v Speaker 1>the rely on Maddie Ice a lot. And they've lost

0:38:08.680 --> 0:38:12.080
<v Speaker 1>three consecutive games. They've lost every team in the FC East.

0:38:12.120 --> 0:38:14.080
<v Speaker 1>So maybe the Jets can make it for But so

0:38:14.120 --> 0:38:15.920
<v Speaker 1>with that being said, you know they're gonna come in

0:38:16.000 --> 0:38:18.000
<v Speaker 1>trying to get back on track. How did you guys

0:38:18.120 --> 0:38:20.200
<v Speaker 1>walk out of MetLife staying with a victory? What do

0:38:20.239 --> 0:38:23.120
<v Speaker 1>you guys have to do and how can last week

0:38:23.200 --> 0:38:26.560
<v Speaker 1>help you win this week? I mean, first, first and foremost,

0:38:26.600 --> 0:38:29.120
<v Speaker 1>we have to be ready to be physical. Uh we

0:38:29.160 --> 0:38:31.239
<v Speaker 1>know it's gonna be physical battle up front, and we

0:38:31.280 --> 0:38:33.520
<v Speaker 1>have to make sure we win that. And also we

0:38:33.560 --> 0:38:36.600
<v Speaker 1>have to eliminate on the middle areas and eliminate the

0:38:36.760 --> 0:38:39.719
<v Speaker 1>eliminate the penalties we had last week because this uh,

0:38:39.800 --> 0:38:42.440
<v Speaker 1>we we got away with it once or twice throughout

0:38:42.440 --> 0:38:45.319
<v Speaker 1>the season, and this game really showed us that we

0:38:45.440 --> 0:38:47.719
<v Speaker 1>have to get better now if you want to get

0:38:47.760 --> 0:38:49.520
<v Speaker 1>wins in the future. What does Top Bowls doing in

0:38:49.520 --> 0:38:53.719
<v Speaker 1>a practice as far as eliminating the penalties are concerned,

0:38:53.760 --> 0:38:56.600
<v Speaker 1>Because he talked about that today. This is not something

0:38:56.680 --> 0:38:59.400
<v Speaker 1>that he's just gonna emphasize right now. He's been stressing

0:38:59.400 --> 0:39:03.200
<v Speaker 1>throughout the year. Yeah, I mean, gassers are definitely on

0:39:03.400 --> 0:39:06.759
<v Speaker 1>uh on one of the punishments for jumping offside and

0:39:06.760 --> 0:39:09.080
<v Speaker 1>getting getting some of the penalties, and uh, honestly, they're

0:39:09.080 --> 0:39:12.120
<v Speaker 1>probably gonna get harsher and harsher if we keep letting

0:39:12.160 --> 0:39:14.759
<v Speaker 1>them keep getting as many penalties as we had last game.

0:39:15.000 --> 0:39:17.440
<v Speaker 1>What was it? A fine line between playing aggressive and

0:39:17.520 --> 0:39:20.800
<v Speaker 1>under control and you know, still trying to be aggressive

0:39:20.840 --> 0:39:22.800
<v Speaker 1>at the same time. How do you find that balance?

0:39:23.200 --> 0:39:25.239
<v Speaker 1>I I mean it's it's a hard one to find. Uh,

0:39:25.520 --> 0:39:27.680
<v Speaker 1>Me as a younger player and Darren as well, we're

0:39:27.680 --> 0:39:31.560
<v Speaker 1>still trying to find find that line. And uh, it's uh,

0:39:31.560 --> 0:39:33.520
<v Speaker 1>it's a tricky one because you really want to just

0:39:33.560 --> 0:39:35.600
<v Speaker 1>go flying in a thousand miles per hour and just

0:39:35.640 --> 0:39:37.719
<v Speaker 1>try and level somebody when you get the chance. But

0:39:37.920 --> 0:39:39.920
<v Speaker 1>in this day and age, you can't do that all

0:39:39.960 --> 0:39:41.279
<v Speaker 1>the time. You have to find a way to be

0:39:41.360 --> 0:39:43.640
<v Speaker 1>safe as you're doing it well, Jordan, thank you so

0:39:43.760 --> 0:39:46.720
<v Speaker 1>much for joining us tonight, and good luck this weekend,

0:39:46.719 --> 0:39:48.960
<v Speaker 1>of course, and we'll come right back here on Inside

0:39:49.000 --> 0:39:51.719
<v Speaker 1>the Jets in preview the Jets and the lineup falls.

0:39:51.920 --> 0:39:54.280
<v Speaker 1>All right, we're back at Vanderbilt's for a final segment

0:39:54.320 --> 0:39:57.080
<v Speaker 1>here on Inside the Jets, Eric Ellen along with part Scott.

0:39:57.120 --> 0:39:58.800
<v Speaker 1>I told you I was gonna find a new co host,

0:39:58.840 --> 0:40:02.279
<v Speaker 1>and indeed I did. Brielle McKnight has now joined us

0:40:02.320 --> 0:40:05.800
<v Speaker 1>on SAD I'm sober. I'll tell you what. Brielle has

0:40:05.840 --> 0:40:12.600
<v Speaker 1>been following Inside the Jets loyally for three four years

0:40:12.640 --> 0:40:19.360
<v Speaker 1>every week. Thank you for joining us. All right, superstar

0:40:19.640 --> 0:40:22.160
<v Speaker 1>in the making. Let me tell you something. The trip

0:40:22.200 --> 0:40:25.480
<v Speaker 1>of the game is brought to you by Antiqua in Bermuda.

0:40:25.760 --> 0:40:28.879
<v Speaker 1>The beach is just the beginning part. And I'll tell

0:40:28.880 --> 0:40:31.600
<v Speaker 1>you the trip of the game for the Jets yesterday

0:40:31.760 --> 0:40:35.600
<v Speaker 1>was John Morton having the Jets offense firing on all

0:40:35.680 --> 0:40:40.279
<v Speaker 1>cylinders after they got the ball at the kickoff. Uh.

0:40:40.360 --> 0:40:43.880
<v Speaker 1>They actually won the coin toss and usually typically they defer,

0:40:44.320 --> 0:40:47.240
<v Speaker 1>but they take the ball down beautiful play called screen

0:40:47.280 --> 0:40:50.680
<v Speaker 1>the ball paal thirty one yards. They culminate that possession

0:40:51.000 --> 0:40:54.600
<v Speaker 1>with the scoring pass. I believe Josh McCown checked out

0:40:55.160 --> 0:40:58.160
<v Speaker 1>and he got one on one coverage with Jermaine Curse

0:40:58.680 --> 0:41:03.160
<v Speaker 1>on a Dolphin's corner back on the outside boom Man touchdown. Uh.

0:41:03.200 --> 0:41:06.200
<v Speaker 1>So the Jets got out in front seven nothing. It

0:41:06.239 --> 0:41:08.799
<v Speaker 1>would be great if they can do that again this

0:41:08.840 --> 0:41:11.960
<v Speaker 1>week against Atlanta. It's important as well because you want

0:41:12.000 --> 0:41:13.920
<v Speaker 1>to get ahead and let the deepense play from the head,

0:41:13.920 --> 0:41:16.000
<v Speaker 1>so then they can be aggressive as well, and it

0:41:16.000 --> 0:41:17.960
<v Speaker 1>also gets the other team out of the game plan.

0:41:18.200 --> 0:41:20.120
<v Speaker 1>You know, you talk about taking the taking the ball.

0:41:20.239 --> 0:41:22.120
<v Speaker 1>Usual teams defer because they want to have the choice

0:41:22.120 --> 0:41:24.319
<v Speaker 1>depend on how the game goes. But you talk about

0:41:24.400 --> 0:41:26.800
<v Speaker 1>making sure that you have good field position and also

0:41:26.920 --> 0:41:28.640
<v Speaker 1>being able to come out on your fift team play

0:41:28.719 --> 0:41:30.880
<v Speaker 1>script and come out with a different place where you

0:41:30.880 --> 0:41:32.640
<v Speaker 1>can set everything up for the rest of the game.

0:41:32.680 --> 0:41:35.840
<v Speaker 1>You talk about setting up different personnels, different groupings and

0:41:35.880 --> 0:41:38.520
<v Speaker 1>all those things. What do you think about that? Yeah,

0:41:38.560 --> 0:41:40.160
<v Speaker 1>what do you think think it's pretty good? Yeah, what

0:41:40.200 --> 0:41:42.640
<v Speaker 1>do you think about the personnel group? And Johnny Martin's

0:41:42.920 --> 0:41:45.839
<v Speaker 1>been an implementing Here is the first year's Jets off

0:41:46.480 --> 0:41:49.239
<v Speaker 1>doing a good job. Yes, So my favorite player is

0:41:49.280 --> 0:41:54.040
<v Speaker 1>Tomorrio Davis. No, why is tomorrow your favorite player? I've

0:41:54.040 --> 0:41:56.279
<v Speaker 1>met him when I was little, super nice and he's

0:41:56.320 --> 0:42:00.239
<v Speaker 1>been playing can I'll tell you what great analysis there

0:42:00.280 --> 0:42:03.680
<v Speaker 1>by Brian McKnight and Tamario Davis. Of course one of

0:42:03.680 --> 0:42:06.360
<v Speaker 1>your former teammates. You've known him. You just have to

0:42:06.360 --> 0:42:09.759
<v Speaker 1>get my donuts. Yep, because Bart make sure that the

0:42:09.800 --> 0:42:13.600
<v Speaker 1>beginners get donuts. So maybe next week Briale will bring donuts.

0:42:13.719 --> 0:42:17.480
<v Speaker 1>Um inside the Jets is supported by selective insurance. Response

0:42:17.680 --> 0:42:21.680
<v Speaker 1>is everything. Mohammed Wokerson on his twenty eight birthday had

0:42:21.719 --> 0:42:25.480
<v Speaker 1>a tremendous response because a lot of critics have been saying, hey,

0:42:25.520 --> 0:42:28.200
<v Speaker 1>where's mo Ben and he showed up in a big way.

0:42:28.239 --> 0:42:30.759
<v Speaker 1>We talked to Darren Lye about that. He gets down

0:42:30.800 --> 0:42:34.200
<v Speaker 1>the field, tremendous effort play against j J I E

0:42:34.640 --> 0:42:40.279
<v Speaker 1>and then again beneficiary of Jamal Adams deflection and he

0:42:40.400 --> 0:42:42.879
<v Speaker 1>comes up with an interception. Well you get that when

0:42:42.880 --> 0:42:45.359
<v Speaker 1>you play hard and sometimes in football the numbers lie.

0:42:45.440 --> 0:42:47.440
<v Speaker 1>And you know, you talk about pressures, that's not a

0:42:47.440 --> 0:42:50.000
<v Speaker 1>stat that people really keep. You talk about being able

0:42:50.000 --> 0:42:51.800
<v Speaker 1>to hold double teams, set in the ash, making a

0:42:51.920 --> 0:42:54.760
<v Speaker 1>runners bounds. Those are stats, you know, and it depends

0:42:54.800 --> 0:42:57.320
<v Speaker 1>on the system. Some systems are set up for for

0:42:57.320 --> 0:42:59.799
<v Speaker 1>for the defensive tackles to make plays. Some are set

0:42:59.840 --> 0:43:02.120
<v Speaker 1>up the linebackers to run. He's doing his job allowing

0:43:02.360 --> 0:43:05.000
<v Speaker 1>you talk about your to Mario Daves. You talked about

0:43:05.040 --> 0:43:08.040
<v Speaker 1>Darren Lee having good games. That's all based on Mohammed.

0:43:08.200 --> 0:43:11.200
<v Speaker 1>You'll get into respect of opposing team's offensive line, allowing

0:43:11.239 --> 0:43:13.560
<v Speaker 1>his linebackers to go free and being able to split

0:43:13.560 --> 0:43:15.880
<v Speaker 1>double teams. And you don't get you don't get balls

0:43:15.960 --> 0:43:18.880
<v Speaker 1>like that if you're not hustling. What do we have

0:43:18.960 --> 0:43:22.000
<v Speaker 1>to know about Atlanta Here, they're gonna come piste off.

0:43:22.000 --> 0:43:24.320
<v Speaker 1>They're still trying to find ways to get Julio Jones.

0:43:24.520 --> 0:43:26.080
<v Speaker 1>It's gonna be tough. You know, you're gonna have to

0:43:26.120 --> 0:43:28.200
<v Speaker 1>make sure you stay clean because he's a powerful guy,

0:43:28.200 --> 0:43:30.440
<v Speaker 1>but you have to try and get your hands on him. Um,

0:43:30.480 --> 0:43:32.600
<v Speaker 1>they're gonna have to make sure that you know that

0:43:32.800 --> 0:43:36.279
<v Speaker 1>they can't get Julio Jones on track, and they're going

0:43:36.360 --> 0:43:38.160
<v Speaker 1>to have to stop this run game. The hack of

0:43:38.200 --> 0:43:41.240
<v Speaker 1>a show tonight thanks to Darren Lee and Jordan Jenkings,

0:43:41.640 --> 0:43:45.040
<v Speaker 1>Krea McKnight and of course Bart Scott as well. We'll

0:43:45.040 --> 0:44:04.080
<v Speaker 1>see you next week on the Cha