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As the clock wound down, some fans were silent and many left. Those who stayed booed as players shook hands, an odd way to end the record-setting 23-game streak.
"I'm disappointed," Manning said. "There were some chances, I think, to do some things better out there. The turnover and the kickoff return, those are plays that we haven't given up this year and when you do, it's hard to win. So we've got some things to get corrected and that will be the plan starting tomorrow."
The Colts' downfall began at the start of the second half when Brad Smith fielded Pat McAfee's kick 6 yards into the end zone, ran it out, found a seam along the right side and then raced down the sidelines. He even managed to stay in bounds after getting hit at about the Colts 20, going 106 yards to give the Jets a 10-9 lead.
It was the longest return in Jets history and tied for the second-longest win NFL history with three others. Only Ellis Hobbs' 108-yard kickoff return against the Jets in 2007 was longer.
But the Colts came right back. They moved 81 yards, the last coming when Donald Brown bounced off two Jets defenders and scooted into the end zone to make it 15-10 with 10:13 left in the third quarter. Brown's conversion run failed.
Then the Colts key offensive starters all left and New York pounced.
Painter lost the ball on first-and-10 from his own 20 and when Douglas recovered it for the score, the Jets had the lead. Mark Sanchez then hooked up with Dustin Keller on a 2-point conversion to make it 18-15.
And suddenly, the Colts winning streak was in jeopardy.
"It was the plan, the organizational philosophy that we were going with," Manning said, "and, as players, we support that."
[Associated Press;
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