

Seahawks vs New York Jets Match Player Stats (Dec 01, 2024)
Seahawks vs New York Jets match player stats from the December 1st, 2024 clash at MetLife Stadium showcase a complete momentum reversal that defined both teams’ seasons. Seattle overcame a 21-7 deficit to win 26-21, scoring 19 unanswered points while the Jets failed to find the end zone after the second quarter.
The victory pushed Seattle to 7-5 and sole possession of first place in the NFC West. New York dropped to 3-9, extending their playoff drought to 14 consecutive seasons. The statistical breakdown exposes how Seattle capitalised on New York’s second half collapse.
Table of Contents
Leonard Williams Dominates Against Former Team
Leonard Williams delivered a historic performance against the franchise that drafted him in 2015. The 310-pound defensive end’s impact stretched across multiple phases, producing statistics rarely seen from a defensive lineman.
Table: Leonard Williams’ Game Statistics
Stat | Total | Context |
---|---|---|
Sacks | 2.0 | Both on Jets’ final drive |
Tackles | 4 | 3 solo, 1 assist |
Interception Return | 92 yards TD | Longest by DL in NFL history |
Blocked Kicks | 1 | PAT in first quarter |
Top Speed | 17.84 mph | Fastest DT since 2019 |
Williams joined exclusive company as the first NFL player since 1982 to record multiple sacks, an interception touchdown, and a blocked kick in one game. His 92-yard interception return established a new NFL record for defensive linemen, while his 17.84 mph sprint speed exceeded typical expectations for a 310-pound player.
The timing of Williams’ contributions proved equally significant. His two sacks on New York’s final possession eliminated any comeback possibility, while his earlier blocked PAT and pick-six directly resulted in a 7-point swing.
Quarterback Statistical Comparison
Geno Smith faced his former team for the second time as a starter, while Aaron Rodgers attempted to guide the Jets to their first three-game winning streak of the season. Their contrasting performances reflected each team’s offensive trajectory.
Table: Quarterback Performance Metrics
Quarterback | Comp/Att | Yards | TD | INT | Rating | Sacks |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Geno Smith (SEA) | 20/31 | 206 | 1 | 0 | 94.3 | 3-31 |
Aaron Rodgers (NYJ) | 21/39 | 185 | 2 | 1 | 73.1 | 2-16 |
Smith maintained efficiency despite windy conditions that affected both quarterbacks throughout the afternoon. His 64.5% completion percentage and zero turnovers contrasted with Rodgers’ 53.8% accuracy and the costly interception to Williams.
Rodgers’ two touchdown passes came in the first quarter, finding Davante Adams for 8 yards and Isaiah Davis for 4 yards. However, his production ceased after the opening period, managing just 76 passing yards over the final three quarters.
Special Teams Creates Early Chaos
Seattle’s typically reliable special teams unit experienced multiple breakdowns in the first half, gifting the Jets prime field position and momentum. New York capitalised on these errors to build their early advantage.
Table: First Half Special Teams Plays
Time | Play | Team | Player | Result |
---|---|---|---|---|
Q1 | Fumble on KO | SEA | Dee Williams | Jets recover, score TD |
Q2 | KO Return TD | NYJ | Kene Nwangwu | 99 yards |
Q2 | Fumble on KO | SEA | Laviska Shenault Jr. | Jets recover |
Q1 | Blocked PAT | SEA | Leonard Williams | Saved point |
Nwangwu’s 99-yard return marked his fourth career kickoff return touchdown, showcasing the speed that made him a valuable special teams weapon. Seattle’s return unit struggled throughout, averaging just 12.0 yards on three returns while losing two fumbles.
Kicking Game Analysis
Both teams’ kickers faced challenging conditions with swirling winds affecting ball flight throughout the game.
Table: Kicking Statistics
Kicker | Team | FG | Long | XP | Points |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Jason Myers | SEA | 2/2 | 54 | 2/3 | 8 |
Anders Carlson | NYJ | 0/0 | – | 1/2 | 1 |
Myers connected on field goals from 54 and 43 yards, with his 54-yarder representing his seventh successful attempt from beyond 50 yards this season. The veteran’s consistency in difficult conditions provided crucial points for Seattle’s comeback.
Complete Kickoff Return Statistics
The disparity in return game production significantly influenced field position throughout the contest.
Table: Kickoff Return Breakdown
Team | Returns | Yards | Average | Long | TD | Fumbles |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
SEA | 3 | 36 | 12.0 | 26 | 0 | 2 |
NYJ | 3 | 157 | 52.3 | 99 | 1 | 0 |
New York’s return unit, led by Nwangwu, averaged over 40 yards more per return than Seattle. The combination of explosive returns and recovered fumbles provided the Jets with multiple short fields in the first half.
Receiving Production Analysis
Both teams distributed targets across multiple receivers, though efficiency rates varied significantly between the squads.
Table: Seattle Receiving Statistics
Player | Rec/Tgt | Yards | Avg | Long | TD |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Jaxon Smith-Njigba | 4/4 | 74 | 18.5 | 25 | 0 |
DK Metcalf | 4/9 | 66 | 16.5 | 30 | 0 |
Noah Fant | 3/4 | 26 | 8.7 | 11 | 0 |
AJ Barner | 2/2 | 14 | 7.0 | 12 | 1 |
Smith-Njigba’s perfect catch rate included a crucial 24-yard reception on fourth-and-6 during Seattle’s game-winning drive. His emergence as a reliable target in critical situations has bolstered Seattle’s passing attack.
Table: New York Receiving Statistics
Player | Rec/Tgt | Yards | Avg | TD | Key Play |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Davante Adams | 5/12 | 66 | 13.2 | 1 | 8-yd TD |
Garrett Wilson | 5/10 | 41 | 8.2 | 0 | Dropped TD |
Tyler Conklin | 4/5 | 32 | 8.0 | 0 | – |
Isaiah Davis | 3/3 | 28 | 9.3 | 1 | First NFL TD |
Wilson’s dropped pass in the end zone loomed large as the game progressed. The potential 28-7 lead disappeared when he couldn’t secure a well-placed throw from Rodgers, followed immediately by Williams’ interception on the next play.
Ground Game Statistical Breakdown
Neither team established consistent rushing success, though individual performances varied within each backfield.
Table: Rushing Statistics
Player | Team | Att | Yards | Avg | Long | TD |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Kenneth Walker III | SEA | 16 | 49 | 3.1 | 11 | 0 |
Zach Charbonnet | SEA | 4 | 28 | 7.0 | 11 | 1 |
Breece Hall | NYJ | 12 | 60 | 5.0 | 12 | 0 |
Braelon Allen | NYJ | 5 | 11 | 2.2 | 4 | 0 |
Charbonnet maximised his limited opportunities, converting his fourth carry into the game-winning 8-yard touchdown run. Hall’s 5.0 yards per carry represented efficiency, but his third-quarter fumble at Seattle’s 40-yard line halted a promising Jets drive.
Penalty Analysis Exposes Jets’ Discipline Issues
New York’s penalty problems intensified as the game progressed, particularly during crucial fourth-quarter moments.
Table: Jets Penalties by Quarter
Quarter | Count | Yards | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1st | 2 | 15 | – |
2nd | 0 | 0 | Clean |
3rd | 4 | 28 | Momentum gone |
4th | 6 | 40 | 4 on SEA winning drive |
Total | 12 | 83 | – |
The fourth quarter penalties proved catastrophic. Four infractions during Seattle’s game-winning possession converted potential punts into automatic first downs:
- Too many men on the field (4th down situation)
- Pass interference by Qwan’tez Stiggers (extended drive)
- Horse collar tackle by Solomon Thomas (negated 4th down stop)
- Neutral zone infraction by Will McDonald (3rd down gift)
Jets’ Second Half Offensive Collapse
New York’s inability to sustain offensive production after halftime stands as the primary factor in their defeat.
Jets Second Half Production:
- Points scored: 0
- Minutes since last score: 37:48
- Total first downs: 6 (4 on final possession)
- Longest single drive: 38 yards
- Consecutive three-and-outs: 3 (third quarter)
The Jets managed just 91 total yards over their first seven second-half possessions before their desperate final drive. This offensive disappearance wasted their defence’s solid performance and special teams’ early contributions.
Defensive Statistical Leaders
Both defences produced impactful performances beyond Williams’ historic day.
Table: Defensive Statistics
Player | Team | Total | Solo | Sacks | FF | FR |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ernest Jones | SEA | 8 | 6 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Julian Love | SEA | 6 | 6 | 0 | 1 | 0 |
Tyrice Knight | SEA | 4 | 3 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
Leonard Williams | SEA | 4 | 3 | 2.0 | 0 | 0 |
Quinnen Williams | NYJ | 7 | 4 | 1.0 | 0 | 0 |
Will McDonald IV | NYJ | 2 | 2 | 2.0 | 0 | 0 |
D.J. Reed | NYJ | 7 | 4 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Love’s forced fumble on Hall occurred at a critical juncture, preventing the Jets from potentially extending their lead in the third quarter. Knight’s recovery maintained Seattle’s momentum during their comeback push.
Pass Protection Comparison
The offensive line statistics reveal contrasting protection schemes and their effectiveness.
Table: Pass Protection Metrics
Team | Dropbacks | Sacks | Rate | Yards Lost |
---|---|---|---|---|
SEA | 31 | 3 | 9.7% | -31 |
NYJ | 39 | 2 | 5.1% | -16 |
Despite superior protection metrics, the Jets’ passing game stalled after the first quarter. Seattle’s offensive line allowed more pressure but Smith’s quick decision-making minimised negative plays during crucial drives.
Situational Football Statistics
Third and fourth down execution often determines close games, and this contest followed that pattern.
Table: Situational Conversions
Stat | Seahawks | Jets |
---|---|---|
3rd Downs | 4/13 (30.8%) | 5/13 (38.5%) |
4th Downs | 1/2 (50.0%) | 1/3 (33.3%) |
Red Zone | 2/3 (66.7%) | 2/3 (66.7%) |
Time of Possession | 28:45 | 31:15 |
The Jets’ advantages in third-down conversions and time of possession failed to translate into points. Seattle’s ability to convert in the red zone and capitalise on extended drives via penalties proved more valuable than raw possession time.
Turnover Impact Analysis
Four turnovers significantly influenced game flow and scoring opportunities.
Table: Game Turnovers
Quarter | Team | Player | Type | What Happened |
---|---|---|---|---|
Q1 | SEA | Dee Williams | KO fumble | Jets TD |
Q2 | SEA | Laviska Shenault | KO fumble | No score |
Q2 | NYJ | Aaron Rodgers | INT | 92-yd TD |
Q3 | NYJ | Breece Hall | Fumble | Drive dead |
Williams’ interception return represented a 14-point swing when considering the Jets’ scoring position before the turnover. Hall’s fumble ended New York’s best second-half scoring opportunity.
Punting Statistics
Both punters performed consistently before Seattle lost their specialist to injury.
Table: Punting Performance
Punter | Team | Punts | Average | Long | Inside 20 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Michael Dickson *injured Q3 | SEA | 3 | 47.0 | 52 | 1 |
Thomas Morstead | NYJ | 4 | 40.5 | 51 | 1 |
Dickson averaged nearly seven yards more per punt before back spasms forced him from the game. His absence eliminated Seattle’s punting option, forcing aggressive fourth-down decisions late.
Key Injuries Affect Game Strategy
Three significant injuries altered both teams’ approaches during the contest.
Table: In-Game Injuries
Player | Team | Position | Injury | Quarter | Impact |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Michael Dickson | SEA | P | Back spasms | Q3 | No punts |
Morgan Moses | NYJ | RT | Shoulder | Q1 | Backup struggled |
Sauce Gardner | NYJ | CB | Hamstring | Q4 | Missed final drive |
Dickson’s injury ironically benefited Seattle, as their forced fourth-down attempts succeeded largely due to Jets penalties. Gardner’s absence during Seattle’s game-winning drive removed New York’s best coverage defender at the worst possible moment.
Quarter-by-Quarter Scoring Summary
The scoring pattern illustrates each team’s drastically different halves.
Table: Scoring by Quarter
Quarter | Jets | Seahawks | Score |
---|---|---|---|
1st | 14 | 0 | NYJ 14-0 |
2nd | 7 | 16 | NYJ 21-16 |
3rd | 0 | 0 | NYJ 21-16 |
4th | 0 | 10 | SEA 26-21 |
Final | 21 | 26 | SEA 26-21 |
New York scored all 21 points within the game’s first 22 minutes and 12 seconds. Seattle’s 19 consecutive points came over the final 37 minutes and 48 seconds, completing one of Week 13’s most dramatic comebacks.
Game-Winning Drive Analysis
Seattle’s final scoring drive exemplified how penalties can extend possessions and alter outcomes.
71-Yard Touchdown Drive Breakdown:
- Total plays: 9
- Time consumed: 6:03
- Starting position: Seattle 29-yard line
- Jets penalties: 4 (all resulting in first downs)
- Capped by: Charbonnet 8-yard TD run
Without New York’s penalties, Seattle faced two fourth-down situations that likely would have ended their possession. Instead, automatic first downs kept their drive alive until Charbonnet found the end zone.
Environmental Factors and Betting Results
Game conditions and pregame betting lines provide additional context for the afternoon’s events.
Game Day Information:
- Attendance: 81,084
- Weather: Windy conditions throughout
- Playing surface: Natural grass
- Kickoff time: 1:00 PM EST
Betting Line Movement:
- Opening spread: Jets -1.5
- Total points O/U: 41.5
- Final score: 26-21 (47 total points)
- Result: Seahawks cover (+4.5), Over hits
The betting public favoured the Jets at home coming off their bye week. Seattle’s comeback victory rewarded contrarian bettors who backed the road team.
Historical Context
This result added to several notable statistical trends and records.
Historical Notes:
- Seattle improved to 6-0 all-time at MetLife Stadium
- Seahawks’ MetLife record: 4-0 vs Giants, 2-0 vs Jets
- Super Bowl XLVIII victory over Denver at same venue
- Previous Jets meeting: January 1, 2023 (SEA 23-6)
- Geno Smith: 2-0 as starter versus Jets
- Jets playoff drought: 14 seasons (NFL’s longest active)
Seattle’s dominance at MetLife Stadium spans over a decade, including their Super Bowl championship following the 2013 season.
Updated Division Standings
The Week 13 results significantly impacted both division races.
NFC West Standings:
- Seattle Seahawks (7-5)
- Arizona Cardinals (6-6)
- Los Angeles Rams (6-6)
- San Francisco 49ers (5-6)
AFC East Standings:
- Buffalo Bills (10-2)
- Miami Dolphins (5-7)
- New England Patriots (3-9)
- New York Jets (3-9)
Seattle claimed sole possession of first place, while the Jets remained tied for last despite entering their bye week with modest momentum.
Coaching Records Update
Both head coaches faced different pressures entering this contest.
Mike Macdonald (Seattle):
- First season as NFL head coach
- Current record: 7-5
- December record: 3-0
- Road record: 3-3
Jeff Ulbrich (New York):
- Interim head coach since Week 6
- Current interim record: 1-6
- Post-bye record: 0-3
- Home record as interim: 0-3
Macdonald’s ability to guide his team through adversity contrasts with Ulbrich’s continued struggles since taking over for the fired Robert Saleh.
Notable Postgame Comments
Key figures offered revealing perspectives on the game’s turning points.
Aaron Rodgers acknowledged the second quarter’s impact: “Plays at the end of the second quarter cost us this game. Then comes the fourth quarter. It’s execution, it’s strain, it’s the little things.”
Mike Macdonald praised his defensive star: “Leonard Williams is playing at an all-time elite level. His preparation and professionalism set the standard.”
Jets cornerback D.J. Reed expressed frustration on social media regarding the officiating, particularly the fourth-quarter penalty calls during Seattle’s winning drive.
Officiating Crew:
- Referee: Carl Cheffers
- Known tendency: Typically allows physical play
- Game penalties: 16 total (12 on NYJ, 4 on SEA)
Week 14 Matchup Preview
Both teams face division opponents with contrasting stakes.
Seattle Seahawks: Travel to Arizona for crucial NFC West showdown
- Cardinals also 6-6 entering Week 14
- Winner takes division lead
- Playoff implications significant
New York Jets: Visit Miami for AFC East matchup
- Dolphins fighting for wild card position
- Jets eliminated from playoff contention
- Pride and evaluation focus for New York
Frequently Asked Questions
What was the final score of Seahawks vs Jets?
Seattle defeated New York 26-21 at MetLife Stadium on December 1, 2024. The Seahawks overcame a 21-7 deficit by scoring 19 unanswered points.
Who scored the game-winning touchdown?
Seahawks running back Zach Charbonnet scored on an 8-yard run with 5:31 remaining in the fourth quarter. His touchdown capped a 71-yard drive that included four Jets penalties.
How many interceptions did Aaron Rodgers throw?
Rodgers threw one interception, which Leonard Williams returned 92 yards for a touchdown. The play occurred in the second quarter and represented the longest interception return by a defensive lineman in NFL history.
What was the Jets’ biggest problem in the game?
Lack of discipline proved costly for New York. They committed 12 penalties for 83 yards, including four crucial infractions on Seattle’s game-winning drive. The Jets also failed to score after the 7:48 mark of the second quarter.
How did Geno Smith perform against his former team?
Smith completed 20 of 31 passes for 206 yards and one touchdown without an interception. He posted a 94.3 passer rating and improved to 2-0 as a starter against the franchise that drafted him in 2013.
Which team now leads their division?
Seattle took sole possession of first place in the NFC West with their victory, improving to 7-5. The Jets fell to 3-9 and remained in last place in the AFC East.
Comprehensive Summary
The Seahawks vs New York Jets match player stats document a game defined by momentum shifts, individual brilliance, and costly mistakes. Seattle’s 26-21 victory showcased their resilience in overcoming early special teams disasters and a 14-point deficit.
Leonard Williams’ historic performance against his former team included achievements rarely seen from any defender, much less a 310-pound defensive lineman. His 92-yard interception return changed the game’s trajectory, while his two late sacks sealed New York’s fate.
For additional NFL statistical analysis, visit our breakdowns of Buffalo Bills vs Miami Dolphins match player stats and Steelers vs Baltimore Ravens match player stats.
The Jets’ second-half collapse extended beyond their scoreless final 37 minutes. Twelve penalties, particularly four on Seattle’s winning drive, reflected a team unable to execute under pressure. Their playoff drought reaches 14 seasons while Seattle controls their postseason destiny.
Statistical analysis confirms what viewers witnessed: a tale of two teams heading in opposite directions. The Seahawks vs New York Jets match player stats provide clear evidence of Seattle’s championship potential and New York’s continued organisational struggles.
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