Dolphins Beat Jets After Historic 96-Yard Kickoff Return | Miami New Times
Navigation

Dolphins Beat the Jets Thanks to a Monster Play That Hadn't Happened in 47 Years

The Dolphins and the Jets basically played a playoff game this past Sunday. The losers would find themselves with a nearly impossible path to a playoff birth. The winners would still get to claim they were in the hunt for another week or two.
Share this:
The Miami Dolphins and the New York Jets basically played a playoff game this past Sunday. The losers would find themselves with a nearly impossible path to a playoff birth. The winners would still get to claim they were in the hunt for another week or two. Only one of these deeply flawed teams was leaving Hard Rock Stadium feeling good.

Then this happened with just a little more than five minutes left in the game:
Rookie Kenyan Drake ran untouched for a 96-yard kickoff return, giving the Dolphins a 27-23 lead they wouldn't relinquish. If you thought it had been a while since the Dolphins did anything that resembled the Drake return, you'd be right.

After a 1-4 start, the Dolphins have strung together three straight wins to crawl back to .500 and into serious conversations about a wildcard playoff birth. Really, it's not a joke anymore: The Dolphins actually are back in contention. For a Super Bowl. Technically. Thanks to a huge play by a player most Dolphins fans had forgotten existed over the past two weeks as they watched Jay Ajayi set NFL records for rushing.

A month ago, everyone was writing off the Dolphins and looking to next year, but their offensive line got healthy, Adam Gase found some things that have worked on offense, and the defensive line has constantly covered up other defensive weaknesses. This past Sunday, the Dolphins weren't perfect, but instead of sitting idly by as their opponent made a huge play when they needed it most, the Dolphins were the team that delivered the fatal blow.

Kenyan Drake, a rarely used rookie running back out of Alabama, came to the rescue, and fans on Twitter couldn't believe their eyes.

KEEP NEW TIMES FREE... Since we started New Times, it has been defined as the free, independent voice of Miami, and we'd like to keep it that way. Your membership allows us to continue offering readers access to our incisive coverage of local news, food, and culture with no paywalls. You can support us by joining as a member for as little as $1.