The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Jets are focused on fixing their fourth-quarter woes

- By Dennis Waszak Jr.

FLORHAM PARK » Four is the magic number for the Jets.

Offensive coordinato­r John Morton holds up four fingers during practice and shouts it out at his players. So do his assistants, as well as quarterbac­k Josh McCown.

The fourth quarter has been a huge problem for the Jets, and they are doing anything they can to turn things around with the game on the line.

“I’m doing it, coaches are yelling it,” Morton said Thursday. “We’ve been yelling ‘FOUR!’ I don’t know if it’s going to happen in the game, but I’m going to yell it. Josh has been doing it, communicat­ing it to the huddle and everybody that comes in there: finish. Every play, let’s go, let’s finish the game. It’s just a mindset. You call certain plays, goal-line, short-yard situations, it’s a mindset.

“So now it’s the fourth quarter, it’s a mindset, let’s finish the game.”

For the Jets, that has been easier said than done.

New York has blown fourthquar­ter leads in three of its past four losses, and ugly stat that is the difference between the Jets being right in the playoff mix instead of sitting at 4-7 and seeing their postseason chances fading fast.

“We have to continue to carry out that voice and go out and get it done,” McCown said. “It starts with also how you prepare. If you prepare throughout the week the right way, then when stress hits you and you’re tired in the fourth quarter and all of those things, if your preparatio­n is good, then you will fall back on those things.”

The Jets have five losses in their past six games, but the blown leads in the final 15 minutes of three of those defeats have been frustratin­g.

The latest came in a 35-27 loss to Carolina on Sunday, when the Panthers got touchdowns on a fumble recovery and a punt return in a span of just over two minutes. New York also held leads in the fourth quarter of losses to Miami and Atlanta.

“It’s on us as we study and prepare and put the time in to be ready to go,” McCown said. “It’s one play here or there that’s making the difference. We’re making plays. We’re proud of how we responded after some bad things happened the other day, we went down and got another touchdown. We’ve shown the capability to bounce back from things and do things like that.

“For us, it’s sustaining, playing at a high level the whole time and finishing those games.”

The Jets have focused on twominute periods at the end of practice where the offense and defense are put into high-stress competitiv­e situations.

“The results have been great,” defensive end Leonard Williams said. “What I’ve been liking so far that I’ve seen is that guys are really getting competitiv­e. They get angry if they don’t make the play and they get really excited when they do make the play.

“Even though it’s practice, they’re showing that edge that we need in fourth quarters and situations where we need to finish.”

Penalties and turnovers have been the biggest culprits for the Jets late in games.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Jets wide receivers Robby Anderson (11) and Jermaine Kearse (10) celebrate Anderson’s touchdown catch against the Carolina Panthers during Sunday’s game at MetLife Stadium.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Jets wide receivers Robby Anderson (11) and Jermaine Kearse (10) celebrate Anderson’s touchdown catch against the Carolina Panthers during Sunday’s game at MetLife Stadium.

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