New York Post

INDYCENT PROPOSAL

- By ZACH BRAZILLER Zbraziller@nypost.com

The opposition’s colors will be different, and so will its players. The Jets aren’t facing the Colts on Sunday at MetLife Stadium.

But defensive coordinato­r Jeff Ulbrich wants his unit to treat this game as if it is. To remember the embarrassm­ent it felt that night, and bring the anger and emotion it would have if this were a rematch.

In some ways, it is. Sunday’s opponent, the Eagles, play a similar style, and their coaching staff has ties to the Colts (Eagles coach Nick Sirianni spent 2018-20 as the Colts offensive coordinato­r under Frank Reich). It was the message Ulbrich sent to the Jets’ defense when game-planning began this week.

“‘Fellas, this coaching family comes from Indianapol­is,’ ” he told them. “‘They’re sharing gameplan ideas, they’re sharing what was successful, and then ultimately, they’re going to go back and watch the tape and see what worked.’ ”

Everything worked for the Colts on Nov. 4 against the Jets. They rolled up 532 yards of offense in a 45-30 thrashing that wasn’t nearly as close as the final score indicated. They ran for 260 yards, picked up 8.7 yards per carry and scored 42 points in the first three quarters.

“Ever since that Indy game, just a pit in my stomach, and a pit in our guys’ stomachs,” Ulbrich said Thursday. “Collective­ly, we know that’s not who we are. But we put it on tape, so until we prove otherwise, that is who we are. So I look forward to these guys getting an opportunit­y to go out there and really show themselves who they can be.” The Jets’ defense has started to play better of late and is coming off its best performanc­e of the season. It held the Texans to 202 yards of offense in a 21-14 victory Sunday and notched five sacks. That came after a solid effort in a loss to the Dolphins. That is progress, after the Jets gave up an average of 43.7 points over the four games beforehand and looked primed to set franchise records for futility. They still are last in points allowed per game (30.4) and 27th in rushing defense (128.7).

The Eagles’ offense will present a stiff test. Prior to Sunday’s 13-7 loss to the Giants, their offense had been rolling, scoring 70 points in wins over the Saints and Broncos. They average a league-best 157.9 yards rushing per game and 222 over their past three contests. It’s a run-first offense, just like the Colts’ attack, but with an added dimension in mobile quarterbac­k Jalen Hurts.

“We’re definitely going to see some of the plays that we got from the Colts, I’m pretty sure,” linebacker C.J.

Mosley said. “For us, we’re going to have to do a great job of stopping the vertical separation in our defense. That’s what hurt us a lot in the Indy game. I feel like we’ve grown and got a lot better since then, especially in the run game.”

They get to prove how different they are this week. It won’t be the Colts coming to MetLife Stadium, but the Jets will get the opportunit­y against a similar style to atone for that disastrous performanc­e.

“I know it’s haunted our players, so what a great opportunit­y to get that taste out their mouth,” Ulbrich said. “[We want] to prove to the fans, but probably more importantl­y to ourselves, that that was a fluke. That’s not who we are.”

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 ?? Getty Images ?? HORSE PLAY: C.J. Mosley and the Jets were run over by Jonathan Taylor and the Colts on Nov. 4. Since, the defense has been a bit better, but faces a team Sunday in the Eagles that has some similar schemes to the Colts and the unit needs to step up.
Getty Images HORSE PLAY: C.J. Mosley and the Jets were run over by Jonathan Taylor and the Colts on Nov. 4. Since, the defense has been a bit better, but faces a team Sunday in the Eagles that has some similar schemes to the Colts and the unit needs to step up.
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