Toronto Star

Dolphins rookie leaves Jets in his wake

- STEVEN WINE THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

MIAMI— Rookie returner Kenyan Drake was delighted to find himself at the bottom of a pile of players, because they were teammates in the end zone.

Drake caused the celebratio­n when he scored untouched on a 96-yard kickoff return with 5:15 left Sunday, the final swing in a see-saw game that helped the Miami Dolphins beat the New York Jets, 27-23.

Jay Ajayi came up short in his bid to become the first NFL rusher to have three consecutiv­e 200-yard games, but he managed 111 yards and helped to run out the clock after the Dolphins came from behind for the third time.

A botched Dolphins punt led to a touchdown that put New York ahead 23-20.

The Jets pinned Miami’s Jakeem Grant deep on the ensuing kickoff, but Antonio Allen was flagged for offside.

On the re-kick, the weary coverage team found itself chasing a fresh Drake, Grant’s backup. He sped past the final Jet — kicker Nick Folk — into the clear.

“I was trying to remember what my track coach said: to keep those knees up,” Drake said. Even his teammates gave chase. “Everyone was running down the sideline,” Ajayi said. “I was trying to beat him to the end zone. I was so excited for him.”

The Dolphins (4-4) won their third game in a row, while New York (3-6) fell deeper into last place in the AFC East. The Jets hurt themselves with four personal foul penalties, two intercepti­ons thrown by Ryan Fitzpatric­k and numerous squandered chances.

Fitzpatric­k missed four plays midway through the second half because of a left knee injury and wore a brace when he returned. He said he’ll undergone an MRI exam Monday.

Ajayi was hit behind the line on many of his 24 carries but gradually wore down the Jets and had 55 yards in the fourth quarter.

“I’m never going to go away from him,” Miami coach Adam Gase said. “His job is to keep hammering it.”

Also impressive with his ball-carrying skills was 335-pound Miami defensive tackle Jordan Phillips, who leaped over an opponent during a 17-yard intercepti­on return to set up a field goal.

“Looked like he wanted to be a hurdler,” teammate Ndamukong Suh said.

Fitzpatric­k was intercepte­d in the end zone by Bobby McCain in the fourth quarter and also missed an open Brandon Marshall in the end zone, forcing New York to settle for a field goal.

“We had opportunit­y after opportunit­y and didn’t get it done,” Fitzpatric­k said.

“It all falls on the quarterbac­k. There’s a lot of things I could have done better today.”

Same for the Jets defence — linebacker Jordan Jenkins dropped a potential intercepti­on with nothing but 85 yards of grass in front of him.

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