Jets-Cowboys Postgame Interviews

Transcripts of news conferences and interviews in the Jets locker room following their 27-24 victory over the Cowboys at MetLife Stadium on Sunday night:

HEAD COACH REX RYAN

We knew this was going to be a dogfight, there’s no doubt. We told our team before the game, “Whoever plays the hardest for the longest will win this game.” You’ve always heard me talk about it, but they’re not in there till they’re in there, and we said that tonight. It looked bleak, there’s no question about it. That’s an explosive team both on offense and defense.

There is a stat about them being 241-0 when they have a 14-point lead in the fourth quarter. It just shows you the resolve of our football team. You talk about a team effort — that was it, there is no doubt. From special teams getting the blocked punt to Nick Folk nailing a 50-yard field goal. All we needed was a little more time for our offense to throw the football. Mark [Sanchez] did a great job. Plax [Burress] was huge for us. You saw those captains. You saw how Sione [Pouha] got the fumble recovery around the goal line. You saw how Darrelle [Revis] got the pick. We leaned on our captains, and they did a great job for us. Obviously, we have a ton of work to do. That’s an excellent football team. You don’t win many games when you give up that kind of yardage, but it was an unbelievable team effort. That might have been the best team effort I can remember being a part of.

I will say this — we fed off of our fans. There’s is no doubt. Nobody left. They hung in with us the entire time. This one was also for our community. Believe me, we all felt it. We just hung in there and hung in there and believed we could get it done, and that’s exactly what happened. I couldn’t be more proud of our team. We have a lot of work to do, but we’ll take this kind of victory any day of the week.

On the emotions of the game…

This was amazing. It doesn’t get much better than this, especially the way we got it done. You saw the resolve this football team has. I spoke earlier in the week about the kind of pressure I felt, and I’m sure our players felt it as well. We played far from a perfect game — not even close, but you have to give the opponent credit. That is an excellent football team. I will sign up right now to play them in the Super Bowl, and I know they would. That’s a heck of a team and it was a great challenge for us. I tried to take all of the emotion we were feeling and turn it into passion, and it was frustrating. We made a lot of mental mistakes on defense, and they took advantage of it. When [Tony] Romo gets hot like that, he’s as good as there is.

I don’t know what to say. It was just a draining game. I’m so proud that we were able to pull this thing off, and for the town as well. I probably feel better about that than I do for our football team.

On RB Joe McKnight

I asked Joe for his five favorite plays, his five best plays. I gave them to Schotty [Brian Schottenheimer], and we didn’t call one of them today. I said, “Son, if you keep making plays like that, you’re going to be a part of this offense.” That was a huge, huge play. We all saw it. It was unbelievable. You have to tip your hat to Mike Westhoff. Obviously, Schotty did a good job. He and Rob [Ryan] go at it all the time, so it’s a championship fight seeing those two go at it.

I will say this — Mike Pettine might have had the call of the day. We have this play called “Jet Mike Mix” that we call, and we’d been getting a lot of one-on-one’s on the outside. We wanted them to think it was one-on-one, but we actually had help on top. Revis was able to undercut it and get the interception. It was a huge call by Mike Pettine at the perfect time. Revis made a super play.

On playing on September 11…

I think we all felt it. It affected everybody in that locker room. You can see where the Towers were from our stadium. There was a lot of pressure, but also a lot of excitement. We wanted to show our fans and everybody else, “Hey, look, we’re your team,” and all that. It didn’t go the way we wanted early, but with the way we fought, very few teams will fight like that. Very few. That’s why I’m so proud of our team. When I say it was an unbelievable team effort, it really was.

On Jets offense…

I was proud of the way we responded. We were getting it handed to us pretty good in the first half by a good defense. At the end of the day, we would have signed up for Mark finishing with an 82.0 rating. We hit on six of 14 third downs, which is pretty good considering that defense. They have some guys who can rush the passer over there. We put up 360 yards. I think that defense over there is going to be really good.

On the Jets offensive game plan, throwing at a 2-to-1 ratio…

I think we evolved to it based on the flow of the game. You have to give them a lot of credit. We averaged 2.8 yards a rush. They were getting off blocks and they were blitzing the run. They did a good job up front. You have to give them credit.

On if the team was deflated after QB Mark Sanchez’s fumble…

Man, no chance. You’re down. I was down beyond belief when they returned that thing all the way to our 3, when [Jason] Witten made that great catch. You guys have been around this football team to know there’s no quit in this bunch. None. We just kept thinking momentum is coming our way and sure enough it did.

On safety Jim Leonhard’s play to keep Dallas TE Jason Witten out of the end zone…

We’ve seen it before. Obviously, some guys let a guy get in, but we don’t give up anything without a fight. Obviously, Witten is a great player, he made some huge plays tonight, but Jimmy made a great stop on that.

On coaching against his brother, Rob Ryan…

It was rough, but I’ll say this — I’d much rather be on this end than on the other end. As much as I love him, I always want to beat him and that’s it. Like I said, hopefully we’ll meet again. I think both of these teams are good football teams, and hopefully that happens. We have a long way to go. We have to do a huge job, we have a lot of corrections to make. But I’ll take this anytime.

On throwing toward CB Darrelle Revis

I’ll say this — Romo made one of the most amazing throws I’ve ever seen, and Dez Bryant made an unbelievable catch early in the game. Revis had perfect coverage and I’m like, “He had to step out of bounds,” but he didn’t. Sometimes it’s hard to stop the perfectly thrown ball. I think Romo was so hot that he thought he was Y.A. Tittle back there. He looked like it to me today.

QB MARK SANCHEZ

On what it was like going against Rob Ryan’s defense…

They had a great gameplan for us. They were down in the secondary, they were hurting in the secondary a little bit. They played hard, all their guys. Even though [Mike] Jenkins got hurt a little bit, he kept coming back in. He had a pretty good scheme for us. Their D-line is probably one of the best we’ll see, especially with [DeMarcus] Ware. It was a good fight and an emotional win. I’m just proud of the way our guys hung in and rallied after a couple mistakes. One, the interception, that was just a poor decision and gave them a cheap one, and then I helped them out with a fumble, and I’ve got to get rid of the ball. They had a good plan for us and played hard.

On winning on the 10-year anniversary of 9/11…

It was an emotional atmosphere. I’m just proud of the guys for playing up to this kind of emotion. I think that our team really knows how to play in these kind of situations. It was a good win for this community and this city after a big memorial game like this.

On if he is OK after taking some hits tonight…

Oh yeah, I’m feeling all right.

On having his back turned when Nick Folk hit the game-winning field goal…

Yeah, I don’t look at us. I don’t know, I usually just go stand next to Cav [quarterbacks coach Matt Cavanaugh].

On being able to connect with Plaxico Burress in the second half…

I missed him early in the game on a third down. We came back and we hit him for the touchdown, so that was big. They gave us that same coverage, they tested us again. I missed it the first time, I knew we wouldn’t miss it again should we get the coverage. We got it and I made the most of it, and he made a heck of a grab.

On what beating Rob Ryan meant to Jets head coach Rex Ryan…

It’s huge and as a head coach to beat his brother twice, that’s big. They’re going to have a good group. That’s a team that is going to make a good push for the playoffs. That’s a tough team. They’re injured, they’re beat up in the secondary, but when they’re healthy, that’s going to be a good group. That’s a big win for Rex, we knew there was a lot. With September 11th and Rex Ryan and Rob and a home opener, this was a monster. So obviously there was a lot of room for improvement, but we’ll take the W and that’s the most important thing.

On how he is feeling emotionally after the game…

I’m thrilled about the team. Just personally, I want to get better and I think our guys could have gotten a couple more touches and we could have broken this thing open. We were so close on a couple of runs, so close on a couple of passes, without a few of those mistakes, we score 30-plus points like we should. There’s no excuse why we can’t, but I’m so proud of our guys and so happy for this team and this ball club. It was a huge win. It was a big memorial day and to see our firefighters and military personnel and the first responders out there, it was really cool. It’s hard to separate the emotion from the game, but it’s so big for us and I’m really happy.

On playing against another Latino quarterback in Tony Romo…

It was great, he had a heck of a game. We both made our share of mistakes, but this team really rallied and we were trying to represent our community well.

On getting off to a good start at home…

It was important to win a home game, I think. Teams understand how hard it is to come in here and play. It should be a place you want to protect and we should have huge homefield advantage here and hopefully we’ll get a playoff game here. So we have a lot of work to do, but this is our spot. We have to be comfortable here and we have to play well.

On taking a lot of hits and how he feels…

I’m good. I’m all right. It’s a rough game. Some games you get knocked around a little bit, but you keep playing. Obviously there’s nothing I’d rather be doing, and I was proud of our guys. It was a heck of a game.

RB LaDAINIAN TOMLINSON

On holding the American flag prior to the game alongside the first responders…

I felt honored, I really did. Those were the guys that did the ground work. Recovery, first responders. The guys got in and did the dirty work, and I felt honored to be standing next to them.

On watching the 9/11 memorials on television today…

Yeah, I watched that, but I also heard a lot of people on radio stations talking to different people that were affected by it. Some of the first responders were on there talking about their experience. It was really moving. You really got the sense of how special a day it was.

On winning as a team…

Yeah, we’re a team. That’s one thing that we talk about around here is being a team. I think you guys saw that tonight. Especially with Joe McKnight getting in there and blocking the punt and [Isaiah] Trufant running it in for a touchdown. [Darrelle] Revis, obviously, coming up with a pick. Plaxico playing huge. A lot of guys doing a great job tonight.

On the fans in the stadium tonight…

Oh my goodness. Exciting. It was rocking. I felt like I was at a concert, but we were on stage. It felt great tonight. You could feel the energy in the building, and that was a tribute to the fans.

WR PLAXICO BURRESS

On what his feeling was following his touchdown…

It feels good to finally go out and play a regular season game. It’s definitely a special time for my family and myself, [after] everything we’ve been through. [We’ve] just been waiting for this game for a long time. I’m just happy to be able to go out and make a few plays and help our team win the game. Mark [Sanchez] made a great throw. We felt like we had a mismatch with [Mike] Jenkins out. He just put it up there and I made a play.

On how special it was to give his touchdown ball to his son…

I’m just happy for him. He’s at an age now that he understands. I’m just happy for him. He hung in there. Stayed up, stayed awake. He’s only four years old. It was a great day for him.

On the Jets being able to win on an emotional day…

I think it says a lot about our team. We were down 14 points going into the fourth quarter. Especially everything that’s going on today. What this day symbolizes, 9/11, 10-year anniversary. We kind of emulate what this city is all about, just sticking together, being resilient through everything that was going on. We kind of got off to a slow start on offense, but the second half we came out and made some plays. Defense did a great job getting some stops, a big special teams play, a blocked punt. We were able to get the win.

CB DARRELLE REVIS

On winning on the 10th anniversary of 9/11…

It was a great honor, for us to win this game, let me back it up, for us to be scheduled for this game on 9/11, on this Sunday. It means a lot to people. It means a lot to this world. It was a tragic moment in our history, everyone’s world. We’re happy to get this win and we’re happy to be chosen to play on this Sunday. It was a tough-fought game for us, we came back and we held them and we won at the end.

On his interception…

I was just trying to make a play. I was just trying to fight out there and compete and that’s all I try to do and I think that’s what the whole team tried to do the whole game.

On not playing their best but still winning…

We haven’t played our best ball yet. We did escape one, but I’ll say one thing, we did show heart at the end. We showed heart and toughness and we fought back. Nobody held their heads down, and that’s a positive thing too, that we’re going to keep playing for four quarters.

RB-ST JOE McKNIGHT

On how much he has practiced blocking punts…

It wasn’t really supposed to be for me. It was supposed to be for Eric Smith. It just happened that it opened up for me, so I had to take advantage of it.

On what he did on the blocked punt…

I just dove for it. The punter has a fast hit off time, so Mike Westhoff told me when you get back there, just try and get it. I took two steps past the line and just dove out for it.

On how it felt to block a punt late in the game…

It felt really good, especially on the anniversary of 9/11 and we came out and won. It feels good with the stuff I’ve been through and just to get to this point today. It feels real good.

CB-ST ISAIAH TRUFANT

On the blocked punt that he returned for a touchdown…

It was a great call, great block by Joe McKnight and I was hoping to not bobble the ball. I got a good bounce on it and was trying to run it in.

On what was going through his mind when he saw the block…

Your eyes light up and you pick up the ball and run. I saw daylight and fans cheering.

On the mood of the team when they were down 14 points….

Truthfully, we were picking everybody up. We believed we were still in the game. The game wasn’t over.

K NICK FOLK

On how it felt to kick a game-winning field goal against his former team…

I think it was more emotional as far as 9/11 goes, than playing the Cowboys. That’s the honest truth. I felt a lot of emotions about it when we were holding the flag out there and all that stuff we were doing pre-game. The fans were great tonight. They did a great job and we’re just happy to come out with a win.

On if he started preparing for his opportunity as soon as Darrelle Revis intercepted the pass…

I kind of went into preparation mode when we got the ball back before we punted it. I kept telling T.J. [Conley], “You don’t need to punt. You don’t need to punt in the net. We’re not going to need it. We’re going to drive down and score.” We ended up punting it and then as soon as he [Revis] started returning it, I think I kicked two balls in the net and I was already ready. I just said, “Let’s go.”

On how the kick felt as it left his foot…

I hit it really well. I hit it just about as good as I could. I just trusted myself tonight, made sure it looked just like an extra point and just put it down the middle.

WR SANTONIO HOLMES

On the team coming through late

Win the game when it counts. Play the game for four quarters, however many minutes on the clock, until the clock strikes zero. We never think about giving up. Just like our gloves said, “We never forget,” we never give up on this team.

On the offense struggling to find a rhythm in the first half…

Those guys were doing a lot of good things on defense. They were different guys from every angle at [Mark] Sanchez and we just have to be better prepared for it. We have a long season ahead of us and I’m pretty sure we’ll have the right things dialed in come next week for whatever team that wants to send those guys in and blitz us.

On the offense still clicking late in the game despite having new players…

We just have to keep putting it together. We had a short offseason, but we can’t complain about anything. We just have to get back in the lab and make sure we are prepared come next week.

S JIM LEONHARD

On what tonight’s win meant to the team…

It’s huge. Obviously, there was a lot of emotion playing in New York, where the attacks happened. It was very emotional for a lot of people. Seeing all the first responders gathered on the field, there were a lot of emotions in this. You wanted to win for yourself, but you wanted to win for the city. Rex [Ryan] came in and said it was a team win and everyone stepped up. The city stepped up. The city stepped up 10 years ago and this was really a celebration of what’s gone on in the last 10 years. We were glad we could pull out a win. We kept fighting, just like they kept fighting.

On the fans and the noise they created in the stadium tonight…

I would say to [the fans], just thanks for being yourself. That’s what they do. We always have a great crowd. We feel like we have one of the best crowds, if not the best crowd, in football. They came in and they represented. They represented for New York. They represented for the Jets.

On if he thought he would catch Jason Witten before he reached the end zone in the fourth quarter…

I thought I had a pretty good angle. It’s just one of those plays where you just keep running. You never know what can happen. We always say, “They’re not in until they’re in.” It was very fortunate to get him out of bounds. He’s a big guy, but you have to do whatever you have to do to get him out of bounds. Then obviously coming up with that huge turnover really turned the game for us.

DT SIONE POUHA

On what tonight’s win said about the character of the team…

When you get to situations like this, the thing that really starts to surface is the character of the team. In situations like this, obviously, there were situations last year that went down to the last minute, and the team prevailed. The fact that the team can prevail just mirrors the character of individuals out here laying it out for the team. The field goals or whatever it is, you can’t practice that in practice. It only comes out at game-time. You can have mock situations and everything, but when it comes time to dig deep, when it’s crunch time like this, your character as a team starts to rise to the surface.

On recovering Tony Romo’s fumble at the goal line…

He was scrambling, he was going everywhere. He found an opening right down the middle and he started running through. I think he got stopped by [Mike] DeVito and some other guys and just mishandled the ball. It fell right in between DeVito’s legs. Next thing you know, we’re all diving for it. Calvin [Pace] was fumbling with it a little bit and kind of just kept a guy occupied while I kind of got it. It was me, DeVito and Calvin in there all fumbling with it. Then once it got in my grasp, I kind of just fell on it and laid on it. Our whole thing down there is they are not in until they’re in. In that situation, they are not in until they’re in and we were fortunate enough to get the ball back.

On how important that fumble recovery was…

I think it was huge because they could have kicked a field goal, gotten three points and put them up by a little bit. I think the fact that the whole defense showed its guts and put everything on the line. We have a standard that they are not in until they are in. Fortunately, they went in, they didn’t get in and we got the ball back, which took away a potential three points from them. You never know what that situation will hold, so I was glad we got the fumble.

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New York Jets : News

Jets Post Stirring Comeback over Cowboys, 27-24

It was a night filled with emotion and teary eyes as the Jets, the Cowboys, the NFL and NBC observed the 10th anniversary of September 11th before and at halftime of the teams’ Sunday night season opener at MetLife Stadium.

And when the night turned to football, only one of those teams could stand taller on this biggest of stages. That team was the Green & White, although it took them almost every available minute to seal the deal.

The Jets got two touchdown passes from Mark Sanchez, one to Dustin Keller and one to Plaxico Burress, plus a blocked-punt TD return by just activated Isaiah Trufant, all of which set up Nick Folk for his game-winning 50-yard field goal with 27 seconds to play for their stirring 27-24 triumph.

The win equaled the second-largest fourth-quarter comeback in franchise history.

What a way to put the finishing touches on an emotional night for New York City and the metro area.

Most of the evening was looking like a deflating repeat of the Jets’ first regular-season game ever played in this stadium a year ago, when they lost to the Baltimore Ravens in primetime, 10-9. But this rousing triumph helped put teeth into the Jets’ offseason slogan to “Bring It Home” for the playoffs by winning more games — a lot more games — at home during the regular season.

Romo was sharp for the first three quarters game, including on his second touchdown pass, a 36-yarder that WR Miles Austin wrestled away from Antonio Cromartie as the two tumbled across the goal line. That put the visitors ahead, 17-7, with 8:05 left in the third quarter.

From there Sanchez, who caught a little fire on the first half’s two-minute drive to his TD throw to Dustin Keller, led the Jets to Folk’s first field goal of the night and the Jets were within 17-10 with 19 minutes of regulation play remaining.

Then the Jets got the ball back and Sanchez had just hit Plaxico Burress with his first reception since November 2008. But no sooner did a big hand from the fans die down than Sanchez underthrew a seam route for Keller, with LB Sean Lee returning it into the shadow of the goal line on the last play of the third quarter. The play was ruled a touchdown, reviewed and changed to out-of-bounds at the 1. But on the second play of the final frame, Felix Jones took the toss left for that yard and the Jets were staring at a 24-10 hole.

The Green & White have overcome only two fourth-quarter deficits of 14 or more points in franchise history, but they set to work on No. 3. And Sanchez made it suddenly interesting when he hit Burress on a fade over CB Bryan McCann with 11:56 left to make it 24-17.

It was Plax’s first touchdown reception since Nov. 9, 2008, for the Giants at Philadelphia, and his first Meadowlands TD since Oct. 19, 2008, vs. San Francisco.

No sweat for Romo, who led the Cowboys back to the Jets 4 with a 64-yard pitch-and-catch with TE Jason Witten. But the drama thickened when, on third down, Romo was forced to scramble by David Harris, fumbled when hit by Mike DeVito and recovered by Sione Pouha. Disaster averted.

And then bad times returned when Sanchez, near midfield, was hit from behind by Mike Jenkins, with S Danny McCray recovering. Six minutes remained and the Cowboys again had the ball.

But the Jets held firm, the ‘Pokes set themselves back with two 5-yard penalties, and finally Mat McBriar dropped back to punt. But his punt was rejected by a diving Joe McKnight coming unblocked up the middle off the Jets’ left-side overload. Isaiah Trufant, just activated from the practice squad to the active roster on Saturday, took the bouncing ball 18 yards and MetLife erupted as the Jets had finally caught the Cowboys at 24-24 with five minutes left.

The stage was set for this next Jets fantastic finish.

Slow Start for the Green Team

After a stirring pregame ceremony featuring a coin flip presided over by former President George W. Bush, Robert De Niro reading a passage, “Taps” being played from Ground Zero and “Amazing Grace” on bagpipes in the stadium, and a full-field American flag fluttering to the National Anthem by Lady Antebellum, the Jets seemed the more emotionally rent at the outset.

The defense gave up a 74-yard drive to a touchdown from Romo to Dez Bryant on Cromartie in the end zone as the visitors took a 7-0 lead just 4½ minutes into the proceedings.

But soon the Jets D showed up. On a second-down blitz, Romo stepped up into trouble as Bart Scott touched him down for his first sack since Game 8 last season at Detroit, helping to force the ‘Pokes’ first punt. Then after T.J. Conley‘s artful drop punt downed by Jamal Westerman at the Dallas 7, more Jets pressure forced the Jets’ first 3-and-out.

Next drive, Scott applied a tackle for a 3-yard loss on slipping Felix Jones, then Calvin Pace, who said his goal for 2011 is to reach double-digit sacks, got his first of the season, taking down Romo again on second down and leading to Dallas’ third straight punt.

But Sanchez and the Jets offense, out of sync and bothered by the Cowboys’ pressure, punted on their first four series, three of which were 3-and-outs.

Given that window of opportunity, the Dallas offense we saw on the opening drive showed up again on their fifth drive as Romo drove them from his 37 to the Jets 15. But this time the defense stiffened and Dan Bailey, the visitors’ rookie kicker, came on for a 34-yard field goal and a 10-0 lead with 3:16 left in the half.

Finally, the offense awoke in — surprise — the two-minute drill. Sanchez, who had hit five of his first 11 passes, went 6-for-7 for 90 yards on the 87-yard march to the Jets’ first TD of the season. And three of those completions, including the rifled 4-yarder for the score, went to Keller, who’d been held catchless to that drive.

Also featured was LaDainian Tomlinson‘s 32-yard catch-and-run to the Big D 4 — LT’s longest reception in his 19th game as a Jet. And the 87-yard drive was the second-longest in the Green & White’s last four seasons, trailing only the 96-yarder in Game 14 last year at Pittsburgh.

It was a rough start, yet it gave the promise of a better second half for the home team.

Game Notes

Derrick Mason had his first two receptions as a Jet but for just 6 yards on the opening series of the second half. … Romo’s first-half passing line was 12-for-16 for 150 yards and his opening-series TD pass. … Dallas held an 18:25-11:35 possession time edge but the Jets closed the gaps in other areas, trailing in yardage by 163-135 and in first downs by 10-8. … There were no first-half turnovers. … Antonio Cromartie was the deep back on both first-half Dallas KOs and returned both for 41 yards. … The Jets’ gameday captains were the five permanent captains named by Ryan last month — Sanchez, Santonio Holmes, Revis, Sione Pouha and Eric Smith.

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New York Jets : News

Jets-Cowboys Storyline: Keep an Eye on Pace

One storyline will dominate all others tonight when the Jets meet the Cowboys, and that’s the somber 10th anniversary of September 11th. Much coverage in the days leading up to the game dealt with the Jets and NFL players who were in uniform a decade ago when terrorism struck America. It will be the focus of the pregame and halftime ceremonies at MetLife Stadium and of NBC’s broadcast.

“A lot of people want to make this game out to be about 9/11. And yeah, that’s true,” Jets linebacker Calvin Pace mused on Friday. “But once that’s all gone, once that first hit gets in, we’ve got to really focus in on what we’ve got to do.”

And when the night turns to football, many other themes will rise and fall. Jets WR Plaxico Burress will be playing in his first NFL game in almost three years, Dallas QB Tony Romo will be playing in his first game since October. It’ll be Ryan vs. Ryan, Jets head coach Rex against Cowboys coordinator Rob. It’ll be America’s Team vs. J-E-T-S.

Yet here again let’s turn to Pace and his side of the ball. This game will be the first opportunity for the Jets defense to show it’s back and better than ever.

“Our guys are flying to the ball — the defense is to the point where it’s almost ridiculous, flying to the ball and then flying back to the huddle,” Rex Ryan said Friday as he closed the public portion of the Jets’ preparation for the game. “They want to be great. They want to be champions. They want to make it happen this year.”

And among the many reasons that the Jets defense feels it can rival the 2009 unit’s achievements and surpass the 2010 D is a healthy No. 97 roaring off of the edge, crashing the other team’s pocket.

“Calvin’s had a good camp,” coordinator Mike Pettine said this week. “He’s fresh. Mentally he’s in the third year of the system. I think he knows it really well. We can do some graduate-level things with him now. I think he’s poised to improve on what he’s put out there the last two years.”

“When you look at this defense,” Ryan said, “you have 10 of the 11 starters back, and we have Calvin for the whole season. I expect big things from Calvin. We all do.”

As does Calvin. “A big year? I plan on it, I really do,” he said.

Just the numbers suggest that Pace can supply a lot of the pass rush that Green & White fans have been clamoring for. Even despite missing the first four games due to suspension in ’09 and the first four last year due to a broken bone in his foot, he has 23.5 sacks in his three seasons since coming to the Jets from the Cardinals as an unrestricted free agent for the ’08 season. That’s the most by a Jet in that three-year span, and in fact the most by any Jets linebacker in any three-year span since sacks became official in 1982.

“I feel good. I feel healthy,” he said. “People say everything happens for a reason, and that is true. But I’m really trying my hardest not to live in the past. Last year was last year, last week was last week, yesterday was yesterday. So I’m moving forward.”

But can he move forward with more production than any other linebacker in recent Jets history? The Jets’ most celebrated sackers were down linemen, Mark Gastineau and Joe Klecko. As for linebackers, Mo Lewis has the most sacks in a season, 10 in 2000. Can Pace match that or exceed that? Does he think about getting to double digits?

“I do, I do,” he said thoughtfully. “I think about it, I write it down and look at it. And I think you should do that. Sometimes you make your goals, sometimes you don’t make them. But it is something that I do. I’m not going to say I know, but I do think this is the year that I get to those goals.”

It’s all for the betterment of his defense and his team. If Pace adds major pressure numbers to those generated by the unpredictable blitzing from the other Jets linebackers and the DBs in the Ryan/Pettine scheme, the pressure will go a long way toward helping the Jets realize their most important goal for 2011, challenging for a second Super Bowl trophy that has long eluded them.

One game won’t decide if the Jets pass rush is dominant. Especially this game, in which the defense will be trying to chase down the elusive Romo and some will measure Pace’s production against the game put together by DeMarcus Ware, the Cowboys’ top pass rusher — indeed, the NFL’s top sacker for the past two, three and four seasons — when Mark Sanchez and the Jets’ retooled offense are on the MetLife turf.

“If you flip it on the other side, DeMarcus vs. me — and I’m not comparing myself to him — but there’s a 99 percent chance that he’s going to be the one rushing and they’re going to probably drop the other guy in coverage. [Miami's] Cameron Wake’s the same way,” Pace analyzed. “If you break down the film, look at all the stuff I do. And I’m cool with that, I really am.

“But when Rex calls my number, I’m going to try and do everything I can to get there for him, you know?”

And how Pace and the defense fare in their goals will have a lot to say about how the Jets as a team fare in theirs. We’ll know a lot more about that once the ceremonies are done and the football begins on the Jets’ national stage tonight.

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New York Jets : News

Woody Johnson News Conference

Transcript of owner Woody Johnson’s news conference following Friday’s midday practice at the Atlantic Health Jets Training Center:

On his thoughts about playing on 9/11…

It’s just a big game for us. It’s a great honor to have been selected by the NFL to play this game. It brings back a lot of memories. We had our kickoff luncheon in New York City last Wednesday before we played the Eagles. Some of us had a chance to visit part of the site. You can’t get close to the site. It was pretty close to the site, but you could feel it through the people that were working there. The site just gives off a feeling of what happened. A lot of our guys were [young] when it happened. But for those of us who were there, it will be a poignant moment.

On what he remembers from 9/11…

Just how the country became focused instantaneously on one thing, and that was what happened at that site, on that day, at that moment. Everybody of course remembers where they were. I remember just the fact that New York, and the country, became paralyzed momentarily. The whole country. The bridges were stopped. My brother was over in New Jersey. He couldn’t get back. He was on his bike. He persuaded a fisherman and gave him a couple bucks to take him across the Hudson to get him back, and then he rode up. My wife, who wasn’t my wife at that point, but she was late to work. She was working for Sandler O’Neal. They lost I think 40 or 50 percent of their workers at Sandler O’Neal, typical of a lot of companies, and she just happened to be late because she was out with clients the night before and didn’t go in. And she talked to her boss as she was coming in late and he said, “Get the hell out of here.” And then the phone went dead.

Memories of the appearance of 9/11, we saw the buildings go down. Before they went down you saw the little post-its come down and people jumping. And the cops. It’s tough. I was at the memorial dinner on Wednesday and there was one tree that made it. And that tree is going to be in the memorial, it’ll be on the memorial site. I served for the last 10 years on the memorial board, so I’ve watched this thing. I’ve had a chance to meet a lot of the families and talk to them about their kids or their wives or husbands that were lost.

And then going through the process of building it, and it seemed forever to get it done, but that’s what it takes. We had a lot of different constituencies that wanted and should have had been a part of the discussion and they were a part of the discussion because we took the time. The process lent itself to creating something that will, I think when you see it, there’s no way to describe it. When you see it, you’re going to feel it immediately.

On if his wife’s office was in one of the towers that got hit…

Her office was in the tower.

On which building his wife’s firm was in…

I don’t really recall which one it was.

On if his wife’s boss was lost…

He was lost. Some of them made it out, because I guess they saw the side of the building. They could see the other building. I guess it was Building 2, it was the second building to get hit. They saw it, and so those guys went down and they just made it apparently.

On him relating a pretty harrowing story about 9/11…

Everybody has a story. There are thousands of stories from that day.

On playing football Sunday…

We will be playing football on Sunday. I think it’s a great honor in light of that and in light of this 10th anniversary.

On if he spoke to the NFL about being selected to host a game on 9/11…

Did I speak to them? No, I didn’t ask specifically for this. But the previous year I was asking for things, if you remember [joking].

On the security measures for the game, since it occurs on 9/11…

I can tell you that we, for every game, do everything that we know to protect our fans and to protect the stadium. We are extremely rigorous, our security people are in [contact with] all the security forces in the world as far as I know. Anything that comes up, we know about. So we’re very well plugged in with New Jersey, New York and other areas. Our job is to create a safe environment and we fully intend to do that.

On if the terror threat caused the team to increase security…

As far as I know, no. Our security is already at a pretty high level. We’ll wait to see any recommendations any of these security forces make and we’ll, of course, go by that. We’re prepared.

On if there will be any kind of national security presence at the game…

I can’t go in to specific details, but yes. I think you’ve been around me long enough to know that we’re pretty thorough.

On if players should be allowed to wear special equipment commemorating 9/11 without getting fined…

I’m not aware of this controversy, but shoes don’t seem like a big thing to me.

On Coach Ryan saying that he hopes no Cowboys fans are in the stadium…

Yes, I heard that. You know Rex, Rex didn’t mean it that way. Rex is enthusiastic. He’s very confident in his team. He has a high degree of affection for his team and I think it was coming from that light rather than the other. We have to provide safety. I don’t care what jersey you’re wearing, you’re going to be safe at our stadium. That’s just the fact of the matter. We have a responsibility to protect you and make sure you have a good time, as well, so he didn’t mean it that way.

On how ready his team is to begin the season…

It’s our team. This is the fans’ team.

On how ready he thinks the team is to begin the season…

They look good, they really do. It’s a Friday practice, so it’s when you see it all come together, so they looked ready. They’re ready. They can’t wait to play a real game. It’s Sunday night at 8:20.

On where he was on Sept. 11…

I was working out.

On if he was in New York City…

I was in the city. I was working out. I saw it [on television]. I saw a little thing hit the building and, like a lot of other people, I thought it was just like a little Cessna or something. I didn’t know what happened.

On if he saw it on television…

I saw it. All the women, they were all on the machines and they were looking at this thing and I was somewhere else. I remember hearing this collective gasp that got everybody’s attention. We all walked over to see what was going on. It wasn’t until a few minutes later that people started to realize the potential enormity of this. At first it didn’t seem like it was that much of a [problem].

On if the people in the room saw it on the television…

They saw it on the TV. It came on and then by the time I made it back to Fifth Avenue, it was totally bizarre because people were walking the wrong way on Fifth Avenue. Fifth Avenue had been closed. The bridges had already been closed. It’s amazing how fast you can shut this place down, the whole country down. Then, it was everybody being glued to their TVs trying to figure out what is going on here.

On what he thinks this team has that can put it into the Super Bowl…

Number one, it has another year with Rex and our great coaching staff, with the coaching staff, essentially, intact. All of the veterans are back, almost, so you have the same team with more experience and more desire really, because they know how close they’ve been.

On if it’s the Super Bowl or bust for this team…

I don’t know about bust. We’re always going to set our goals the highest possible way. That’s the only way to lead. You don’t lead your troops in to come in 47th.

On if he would consider the season a failure if he does not get to the Super Bowl…

I never consider it a failure because we always get 100 percent. We give it everything we have to give, so that’s all I can ask of our guys to do.

On if he ever thought the season would start on time during the work stoppage…

To be quite honest, I wasn’t sure. I don’t think anybody had a total fix on it because what you do with each agreement is you never know until both parties sign on it. There is no way to know that. We could hear sides and this and that, but really until you sign the thing, you don’t know. I’m happy it worked out, particularly for the fans.

On if he thinks his hiring of Rex Ryan has sparked others to hire head coaches who are not from the typical head-coaching mold…

Absolutely, I think we’ve led in a lot of different ways with the things we’ve done. You can never judge a book by its cover. Although with Rex, I judged it by its cover because when I saw the guy and talked to him for two minutes, he was 45 minutes late to the interview, and even with that, in two seconds you got past that and just could realize that this was a natural leader. He has an affection for the players and he has the Xs and Os, for sure. Beyond that he was always a top defense for the last three years. He had that. I thought he could connect with the players.

On if he thinks the NFL will see more coaches that act like Ryan…

I think Rex is who Rex is, so I think if anybody is going to try to be Rex, that’s not going to work. I think if you are authentic, it’s going to work. If you’re not authentic, the players are going to see right through you, right?

On what he expects from QB Mark Sanchez

Mark is a very talented young guy and once again it’s his third year. He’s very talented and I think if his confidence level and all that keep going, I think it’s an upward projection for him. He’s going to continue to do very, very well. I could just see him today. He looks good.

On what specifically he saw…

Just his reads and how quickly he’s doing it, and all that.

On if he is happy that he drafted Sanchez…

Absolutely.

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New York Jets : News

Rex’s Friday News Conference

Transcript of head coach Rex Ryan’s news conference following Friday’s midday practice at the Atlantic Health Jets Training Center:

First off, there are three changes in the injury report. Mark Brunell and John Conner fully practiced today, so they are full participants. Santonio Holmes had an illness but he practiced full. So [the players who are] out, you have Logan Payne and Rob Turner. Everybody else on this list I read will be probable for the game, and they all practiced full. Plaxico [Burress] with an ankle, Mark Brunell, calf, John Conner, ankle, [Jeff] Cumberland, hamstring, [Marcus] Dixon, knee, Kenrick Ellis, hamstring, Santonio Holmes, illness, Derrick Mason, knee, Joe McKnight, illness, Brandon Moore, illness, Ropati [Pitoitua], ankle, Sione Pouha, a knee, and Darrelle Revis, hip. Now, a comment about that first game last night [Packers vs. Saints], it was just an average game, I thought, so it wasn’t that exciting to me [joking]. I thought our Giants-Jets preseason game was much more entertaining than that.

On if the Eagles-Jets preseason game was more exciting than last night’s game…

The Eagles-Jets game was probably right up there [joking].

On if he could be any happier about the current health of the team…

You never want to lose anybody. We’ve lost two guys, but you’re exactly right. We feel healthy, we feel strong. We’re ready to go. Our guys are flying around right now.

On the offensive line…

Well, [there is] the one new starter in Wayne Hunter, but he did start four of the biggest games of the year for us last year, so we feel really confident with Wayne there. [We are] breaking in some backups. Our depth probably isn’t as experienced as you might like, but they’re young, ascending players. Our starting five’s been together now for a while. I feel great about it.

On what Nick Folk showed during training camp to win the kicker battle…

Nick Novak kicked really well for us, so it was good. I think competition sometimes brings out the best in everybody. I felt great about Nick Folk all along anyway, but that Novak kid, I think, will be kicking in this league. The young man did a tremendous job for us. I feel great about where Nick Folk is right now. There’s so many Nicks it gets confusing [joking], but Nick Folk was a Pro Bowl kicker his first year, [then] kind of had an off year. He kicked well for us last year, hit some game winners for us, broke the all-time record, longest field goal in Jets history. There’s a lot of things to like about Nick Folk.

On Folk playing against his former team this Sunday…

I think there always is something extra. I don’t think there’s any doubt. Maybe he doesn’t realize it, but it’s going to be special going against them. It’s almost like, “Well, I’ll show you.” You’re right. When I go back to Baltimore, even in that preseason game, I want to win. [I] never did. You want to show them that, “Hey, you made a mistake.” I think that’s human nature.

On how he would’ve handled the situation between Burress and the Giants…

I don’t really want to deal in the what-ifs and all that kind of stuff. I don’t think that’s fair to anybody. You got the hindsight being 20-20. I’d rather not comment on that.

On how he knows his team is ready for Sunday’s game…

I think everything. Just seeing the way guys are, the energy that they have in the huddle, even. Guys running the ball. You see the defense is almost to the point it’s ridiculous. Our guys are flying to the football, and then they fly back to the [spot of the] ball. They challenge themselves to get better every day. That’s what I’m seeing. Today was our best practice. So that’s where you like it. Our offense, with Plax and Mason and all of those guys, I think we’re going to do some great things.

On how much information he really got from recently-signed Andrew Sendejo, a former Cowboy…

Nothing. I loved Romo’s comments, because he knows that I know, that it’s like, “Who cares?” And then when I mentioned yesterday about how we stole their hand signals and all that. If they flinched for one second, that is amusing to me. I hope my brother did, I hope he flinched a little bit on it, but I don’t think so.

On how often he speaks to his brother, Dallas Defensive Coordinator Rob Ryan, during the year under normal circumstances…

Probably three or four times a week, at least.

On if he has spoken to his brother yet this week…

Oh yeah. The usual. Business as usual with each other, that’s for sure.

On if he is worried about trading secrets with his brother…

No, we rip each other. That’s what this week’s about. You’re just ripping each other. The rest of the time you’re comforting, you’re asking questions, you kind of pick each other’s brains a little bit, but this week is strictly about ripping the other guy.

On if he’s gotten a particularly good rip on his brother…

I have, but, really, this being the tenth anniversary of 9/11, I just want to share those with my brother and back and forth, because this game is so special to so many people and I certainly don’t want to take away from that.

On Sendejo commenting that if Rob lost weight and cut his hair he would look more like Rex…

That’s what I’m talking about. I like the way you build people up, because that’s what I’m always about. I appreciate that. [joking]

On the team running back to their positions after a play in practice…

Literally, running back to where you spot the ball. It’s just one of those things, I don’t think I’ve ever seen it. “Jog back,” well, no, our guys are sprinting back to it. They want to be great. They want to be champions. They’re going to try find a way to see that happen this year.

On Shonn Greene being able to carry the load this season…

I’ve said all along, I feel he’s ready. I don’t think there’s any doubt. We have only a first-ballot Hall of Famer [LaDainian Tomlinson] behind him, but he’s also going to be a primary guy in third down. Shonn’s ready. There’s no doubt. It’s going to be interesting to see how people play us. If people want to play us back there in seven-man space and guard against our weapons on the outside, then you may see a whole lot of Shonn Greene. Having Shonn back there, I think people are going to still have to stop the run first. I think that’s going to open up things on the outside for us.

On if he referred to Joe McKnight as a first-ballot Hall of Famer…

I wasn’t going to say Joe right now. He might be a first-ballot Hall of Famer at his high school [joking]. Joe’s got talent, there’s no question, but I think LT has earned that right.

On what he has seen from DE Muhammad Wilkerson

I think we knew we were going to be real fortunate if he fell to where we were picking. But he has come in, he understands what we want from that position. I think he has great leadership with Sione Pouha and Mike DeVito. He’s come in here, he works every day and he has some God-given ability. This guy, let’s face it, he can touch both walls here. He has a lot of things that are good. And he reminds me a little bit of Shaun Ellis. He does, he reminds me a lot of Shaun.

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New York Jets : News

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