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Patriots finally close out tight game, hold off Jets

FOXBOROUGH, Mass. - Another game was slipping away from the Patriots down the stretch. This time, their opponent made the biggest mistakes.

The New York Jets' final failure came when Rob Ninkovich knocked the ball out of Mark Sanchez's hand in overtime and recovered the fumble, ending a 29-26 victory Sunday that gave New England sole possession of first place in the AFC East.

For the fourth time this season, a Patriots game was decided in the final two minutes. And for the first time, they won.

"The whole time I'm thinking, 'Hey, this can't happen again. We've just got to fight all four quarters, hold them to a field goal at the end,' " Ninkovich said. "In overtime we said, 'Hey, it's overtime. We know we're going to get a chance, so let's go out there and finish this game.' "

The Patriots (4-3) moved into sole possession of first place in the division. The day started with all four teams tied at 3-3, but the Jets (3-4) and the Buffalo Bills lost, while Miami was idle.

"There's a lot of football left to be played," New England coach Bill Belichick said. "I don't think anybody clinched anything today."

Stephen Gostkowski's 48-yard field goal put the Patriots ahead on the first possession of overtime. But each team gets the ball unless the first team with possession scores a touchdown. So the Jets weren't done.

The game might not have reached overtime had the Jets capitalized on their chances late in regulation.

"We made too many mistakes, but we had our opportunities," New York coach Rex Ryan said. "It just stinks being on this end of it."

Trailing 23-20, Sanchez threw a good pass to a wide-open Stephen Hill that would have given the Jets a first down inside the Patriots 20-yard line with just over two minutes left. But Hill dropped it, and New York settled for a tying 43-yard field goal by Nick Folk.

"I think (Hill) was trying to make a big play," Ryan said. "You've got to catch the ball first, then worry about making the run."

Then, Devin McCourty fumbled the kickoff and Antonio Allen recovered for the Jets.

"Our emotions were high and everyone was full of energy," Allen said, "but they took it right back."

Sanchez was sacked for a 10-yard loss on third down and Folk kicked another 43-yarder for a 26-23 lead with 1:37 to go in the fourth quarter.

So all the Patriots needed to force overtime was a field goal, not a touchdown, and Gostkowski kicked a 43-yarder on the final play of regulation.

After Gostkowski's overtime field goal, the Jets moved to their 40 before Ninkovich got around right tackle Austin Howard and hit Sanchez high while Jermaine Cunningham got him low for a sack. The ball came loose, Ninkovich pounced on it, and Belichick went out and patted Ninkovich on the helmet.

"In overtime, Bill came to us and said we're going to need the rush," defensive tackle Vince Wilfork said. "We all understood that we had to get after it."

Sanchez said: "We got pressure inside, and I didn't feel Ninkovich on the outside."

After a required replay, the ruling was upheld and the Patriots escaped with a win after blowing a 10-point lead in the last six minutes of the fourth quarter.

In their other losses, Gostkowski missed a 42-yard field-goal attempt on the next-to-last play of a 20-18 loss to Arizona, Justin Tucker kicked a 27-yarder on the last play of a 31-30 Baltimore win, and Sidney Rice caught a 46-yard TD pass with 1:18 left in Seattle's 24-23 win.

On Sunday, the Jets rallied from a 23-13 deficit in the last six minutes of the fourth quarter on a 7-yard touchdown pass from Sanchez to Dustin Keller and Folk's third and fourth field goals.

But Tom Brady marched the Patriots downfield after starting at his 21-yard line to put Gostkowski in position to force overtime.

Brady completed 26 of 42 passes for 259 yards and two touchdowns to Rob Gronkowski. Sanchez was 28 of 41 for 328 yards and one touchdown.

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