The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Jets’ disruptive D-line using ‘superpower­s’ to sack QBs

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FLORHAM PARK, N.J. — Sheldon Rankins considers himself the Batman of the New York Jets’ disruptive defensive line.

The crafty defensive tackle is low-key off the field and a relentless brawler on it.

“I’m the vet in the room,” the 27-year-old Rankins said with a grin. “I feel like I walk around, you know, it looks like, man, I’m not moving real fast. But the moment I put the pads on, I’m twitched up. I’m powerful, I’m explosive. I’ve got all the moves.”

Like that comic book hero from Gotham City.

“Batman’s just a regular guy,” Rankins said. “He’s Bruce Wayne until he puts the suit on and now he’s fighting crime.”

Rankins is a major part of a D-line that is an unquestion­able strength of a young Jets squad. It’s a mix of ultra-talented players with complement­ary skill sets, presenting offensive lines with problems. There’s Rankins, Quinnen Williams, John Franklin-Myers, Folorunso Fatukasi, Nathan Shepherd, Bryce Huff, Shaq Lawson, Tim Ward and rookie Jonathan Marshall. A Sack Pack, if you will. “I think each and every week, everybody’s getting more comfortabl­e with being able to allow their superpower, I like to say, to shine,” Rankins said, “but not let it overshadow what the group is trying to conquer as a whole.”

Shepherd compared the D-line to The Avengers during training camp, using The Hulk for himself. Rankins said he and Fatukasi joke all the time about the group’s “superpower­s” and have fun designatin­g their superhero alter egos.

“Oh, yeah, there’s a list,” Rankins said. “We’ll unveil the list of guys to you in due time, but for now, just bits and pieces.”

Captain America might have been Carl Lawson, but the sack-happy defensive end was lost for the season in training camp. So, the rest of the squad has had to fight on without its fallen leader.

“The veteran leadership in that group and the mindset and the drive and all that has been up there, they’re just about as good as anybody in football in terms of how cool that room is built,” said coach Robert Saleh, who also credited D-line coach Aaron Whitecotto­n. “But we talk about it all the time with rush and coverage. We’ve got a young secondary back there who is doing everything they can to buy the D-line a hitch on the quarterbac­k, and if that quarterbac­k hitches our D-line is taking a lot of pride in making sure that he gets hit.”

Just as it did last week against Tennessee.

New York had seven sacks and hit Ryan Tannehill

a whopping 14 times. Williams led the way1with two sacks, Huff had 1 ⁄2 and Franklin-Myers had one. But the pressure the D-line put on a banged-up Titans O-line helped others get into the backfield, too.

Linebacker­s C.J. Mosley and Quincy Williams each had a sack, and cornerback Bryce Hall had a half-sack. Bam! Pow!

“Those dudes, they get after it and they make our jobs in the secondary nice because when they’re doing their thing, it allows us to play really, really good defense,” Hall said of the defensive line. “We appreciate them. We love them for everything that they’re doing.”

It was just the fifth time in the last 10 seasons the Jets had seven or more sacks, and first since also getting that many against Buffalo in 2017.

New York has 13 sacks this season, tying Minnesota for fourth place in the NFL — just two behind league-leading Chicago.

“I think last week showed, obviously, what we can do when we can really pin our ears back and really get after a guy,” Rankins said. “But I think that’s only scratching the surface.”

 ?? Nell Redmond / Associated Press ?? Jets DE John Franklin-Myers is part of deep defensive line for the Jets.
Nell Redmond / Associated Press Jets DE John Franklin-Myers is part of deep defensive line for the Jets.

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