Robert Saleh of the Jets looks on against the Denver...

Robert Saleh of the Jets looks on against the Denver Broncos in the second half at MetLife Stadium on Sunday, Sept. 29, 2024. Credit: Jim McIsaac

OFFENSE: F

The players the Jets are supposed to rely on were complete no-shows. Breece Hall managed just 4 rushing yards on 10 carries, including two runs for no gain on goal-to-go from the 1 late in the first quarter. Garrett Wilson caught five passes on eight targets for 41 yards. Aaron Rodgers did some promising things and seemed to move well, at one point he even pulled the ball away from a handoff and ran himself for 14 yards. But even he had a few errant passes and poor reads. The Jets were 0-for-2 in the red zone, an area where they have been otherwise successful this season.

DEFENSE: C

The numbers looked great. They flustered rookie Bo Nix and held him to 60 passing yards even though they did not record a sack. They allowed 126 rushing yards, which isn’t awful. The Broncos had just 186 net yards in the game, but 87 of those came on an 11-play, third-quarter drive that accounted for the only touchdown of the game. It was aided by a pass-interference penalty against Michael Carter II and a neutral-zone infraction against Will McDonald. The Jets also allowed a 29-yard completion from Nix to Courtland Sutton on third-and-11 from the Broncos’ 24 on the drive.

SPECIAL TEAMS: D

Greg Zuerlein had a look at the winning field goal from 50 yards and had plenty of leg on it but the ball drifted wide right for a miss. Zuerlein had connected earlier in the game from 23, 35 and 40 yards to account for the only Jets points. One of the nastiest penalties of the day came when Irvin Charles leveled Broncos punt returner Marvin Mims Jr. while he was waving for a fair catch. Xavier Gipson had a few shifty punt returns but the Jets haven’t been able to figure out how to use his skills on kickoff returns.

COACHING: F

Thirteen penalties for 90 yards — not to mention the two others that were declined — is yet another scar for this staff to wear. Instead of scarlet A’s, the Jets coaches should have to wear yellow P’s to demonstrate their shame. Offensively, Nathaniel Hackett looked more like the coach the Broncos fired after less than one full season as head coach, than the one who seemed to have recalibrated his career with the help of Rodgers.

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