A "Next Level" analysis of the Jets, courtesy of ESPN Stats and Information:

MARK SANCHEZ PASSING VS. 4 OR FEWER RUSHERS

27-for-42 ... 64.3% ... 270 yards ... 2 TD ... 3 INT ... 68.6 passer rating

Analysis: All three of his INTs have occurred in this situation. Indicates he's having more problems with coverage than pressure.

SANCHEZ: PLAY-ACTION PASSING

13-for-17 ... 76.5% ... 225 yards ... 2 TD ... 1 INT ... 132.6 passer rating

Analysis: Imagine when they get the running game going.

JETS: 2 TE + OFFENSE

40 plays ... 226 total yards ... 13-for-18, 151 passing ... 21 rushes, 80 yards

Analysis: They're using multi-TE packages to aid passing game, not rushing attack. Weird.

SANCHEZ: AIR YARDS

67 attempts ... 573 yards ... 8.4 average

Analysis: Ranks 13th in the league, ahead of several big-name QBs, including Philip Rivers, Jay Cutler and Matt Ryan. Sanchez's dink-and-dunk days are over.

SECOND-DOWN OFFENSE

42 plays ... 18-for-27 passing ... 13 rushes for 34 yards ... 2 sacks ... 69% pass ratio

Analysis: Pass ratio is third-highest in the league. Did someone say predictable?

PASS DEFENSE: 4 OR FEWER RUSHERS

25-for-44 ... 56.8% ... 354 yards ... 2 TD ... 4 INT ... 4 sacks ... 60.2 passer rating

Analysis: This disputes the notion they need to blitz to disrupt an offense. In fact, the Jets are blitzing a lot less than last season. The Jets have sent five or more rushers on only 28% of passing downs.