The Jets better check their Black Friday return policy. They keep finding new lows to reach.
Trailing 10-6 with just two seconds left in the first half of their Black Friday matchup with the Dolphins at MetLife Stadium, Tim Boyle launched a Hail Mary from the Jets’ own 49-yard-line.
It somehow ended in yet another disaster.
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Dolphins cornerback Jevon Holland intercepted the pass just in front of the end zone and returned it 99 yards for a hard-to-believe pick-six to close the second quarter.
“Can you believe this? That is insanity,” legendary NFL broadcaster Al Michaels said.
“That’s as crazy as anything you’ll ever see.”
After Jason Sanders’ extra point, Miami extended its lead to 17-6.
According to ESPN, it was the first pick-6 on a Hail Mary pass since at least 2006, when the outlet began tracking Hail Mary’s as a play type.
“If there was ever a play that embodied an entire season this is for the New York Jets,” Prime Video expert analyst Kirk Herbstreit said.
Holland travelled 124.4 yards on the play, the most distance travelled by a ball carrier on a scrimmage play this season, according to Next Gen Stats.
“That was unfortunate, we’ll get back up, get ready to play the second half,” Jets head coach Robert Saleh told Prime Video sideline reporter Kaylee Hartung on the broadcast.
It was as if the Holland Tunnel opened up in front of Holland, who was hardly even touched as he sprinted the length of the field.
He badly juked Boyle for his final act toward the end of his run before waltzing into the end zone.
“Typical Hail Mary,” Saleh said. “Give them credit, made the play. … Just unfortunate.”
The Jets’ only points came via a Brandin Echols pick-six of his own before Greg Zuerlein subsequently missed the extra point amid another brutal offensive showing.
The change to Boyle has not improved anything, as the Jets finished the first half with just 47 yards of offence and two first downs.
Boyle completed 7 of 11 passes in the first half for 35 yards and the interception.
“It’s a young group,” Saleh said. “We just gotta keep out heads up, keep trying to find plays, keep trying to string plays together and attack the second half.”
This article first appeared on the New York Post and has been republished with permission.
































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