Jets Unsure of How to Use Tebow

Jets Unsure of How to Use Tebow
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Seven games into the Jets season and one thing is clear: the Jets still don’t know how to use popular, dual-threat quarterback Tim Tebow.

Is he just a straight backup in case Sanchez falls even farther? Is he a gimmick that makes opposing defensive coordinators work extra hard to defend? Or are they just trying to light a fire under the former first-round pick Sanchez?

All those are definite possibilities though none is clearer than the next. After Sunday’s disappointing loss in New England, things look even murkier.

Case in point: with the Jets coming out of halftime down 16–10, Mark Sanchez led the offense on an 11-play drive that ended at New England’s 3-yard line. Facing a third-and-two from the three the Jets elected to put Sanchez in the shotgun and run a slant to Chaz Schilens that just missed. The Jets had to settle for the second of four field goals on day where first place was up for grabs.

The opportunity missed was the perfect time for the 240-pound dual-threat Tebow to shine. Instead he was on the sideline where he spent most of the game, totaling 12 yards on four carries.

“In hindsight when you lose a game you can say ‘Well I wished I would have called this or this.’ That’s always going to be the case,” said Ryan, according to the Jets website, after his team’s fourth loss.

While a Tebow run on third-and-two seemed like the ideal call in the third quarter, hindsight surely shows his run just before the two-minute warning would have been better off being a Sanchez pass.

With 2:01 left on the clock in the fourth quarter any play—run or pass—is going to end with the clock stopping so why call a conservative run up the middle when Sanchez has been finding creases down the field for most of the game? Instead Tebow went up the middle for two yards, the clock stopped anyway, and the Jets came away with yet another disappointing field goal.

Dave Martin
Dave Martin
Author
Dave Martin is a New-York based writer as well as editor. He is the sports editor for the Epoch Times and is a consultant to private writers.
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