Sanchez is one cool customer in playoff debut
Mark Sanchez grew up idolizing Carson Palmer. Sanchez was the ball
boy when Palmer was quarterbacking at Santa Margarita High School
in southern California before following in Palmer’s shoulder
pads at Santa Margarita. And just as Palmer quarterbacked the
University of Southern California, so did Sanchez.
But on Saturday night in Cincinnati, Sanchez did all the
leading.
The New York Jets’ rookie quarterback wasn’t
asked to do much with his arm in a 24-14 AFC wild-card playoff
victory against Palmer and the Cincinnati Bengals, but what he did
do he did it with all of the efficiency and accuracy Palmer could
not deliver.
Sanchez completed 12 of 15 passes for 182 yards, one
touchdown and no turnovers as the Jets backed up last
Sunday’s 37-0 rout of the Bengals at the Meadowlands to
advance to next weekend’s AFC divisional playoffs.
New York, 10-7 and the conference’s No. 5 seed, will
play on the road at either No. 1 Indianapolis or No. 2 San Diego
depending on the outcome of Sunday’s other first-round game
between Baltimore and New England.
“He’s coming into his own,” said center
Nick Mangold -- a native of Dayton, Ohio, 50 miles north of
Cincinnati -- who is accustomed to weather elements like the
9-degree wind chill the teams played in Saturday. “Those
California guys can sometimes have a tough time with this weather,
but he is handling it. I think he took it to heart when we said he
didn’t have to do anything special, just rely on us. When he
has had to make a decision or a throw, we want to make it as easy
as possible for him.”
Running the ball 41 times for 171 yards as the Jets did
helped make Sanchez’s decisions easy. But while the Bengals
(10-7) got healthy production out of their run game with Cedric
Benson rushing for a franchise-playoff-record 169 yards and one
touchdown on 21 carries, Palmer and the Cincinnati passing attack
weren’t up to the task against the NFL’s top-rated
defense.
Palmer completed just half of his passes (18 of 36) for 142
yards, one touchdown and one interception. Leading receiver Chad
Ochocinco had just two receptions for 28 yards, the first of which
didn’t come until there was 11:51 left in the fourth quarter.
Cincinnati's longest pass play was for 19 yards on
Ochocinco’s second reception, which came late in the fourth
quarter when the Jets already led by 10 points and conceded the
yardage in lieu of time off the clock.
The Jets sacked Palmer three times. And when he did get
throws off, the Bengals weren’t very good at holding on to
the ball. Bernard Scott’s opening kickoff return for 56 yards
gave Cincinnati prime field position, but the Bengals failed to
capitalize when wide receiver Laveranues Coles fumbled away what
would have been a completion good for a third-down conversion at
the Jets’ 26.
“I was throwing the ball a little high,” said
Palmer, who was the No. 1 overall pick in the 2003 draft but has
yet to win his first playoff game. “I don’t know if it
was jitters or not, but I was missing some balls early.”
Even after the Bengals did score the first points of the game
on an 11-yard Palmer throw to Coles, Sanchez and the Jets never
panicked. The Jets tied the score on a 39-yard run by Shonn Greene
in the second quarter. They took the lead for good on a 45-yard
pass from Sanchez to tight end Dustin Keller with 6:19 left in the
second quarter.
Thomas Jones’ 9-yard run in the third quarter pushed
the New York advantage to 21-7.
The Bengals crept back into the game when Benson broke free
over the right side for a 47-yard touchdown run to make it 21-14
with 11:04 left in the fourth quarter. It was Cincinnati’s
first rushing touchdown since Week 11 and the Paul Brown Stadium
crowd sensed the kind of comeback that had marked their
team’s rise to the top of the AFC North after a 4-11-1 season
in 2008.
Sanchez quelled the crowd by leading the Jets on an
eight-play, 66-yard drive that ate up 5:17 and added an extra
three-point nail into Cincinnati’s fate via a 20-yard field
goal by Jay Feely.
“It felt great the entire game,” Sanchez said.
“It just felt real comfortable with the game plan. I studied
my tail off all week with Dustin, Jerricho (Cotchery) and with
Braylon (Edwards). It really paid off today.”
Sanchez was asked to throw the ball just twice on the
decisive drive, but he delivered both times; once for a 43-yard
gain to Keller that began as a bootleg to the left, and then a
quick slant to Cotchery for 3 yards to the Cincinnati 3. It was a
tight throw with Bengals cornerback Leon Hall nearly jumping the
route for the interception.
As was the case with the Bengals all game, nearly
wasn’t good enough.
“He’s growing up right in front of our
eyes,” linebacker Bart Scott said of Sanchez. “He made
the tough throws when he had to, but most importantly he protected
the ball and played to the strengths of our team. When a young
quarterback does that, that’s when a team starts believing in
him."