he New York Jets rookie quarterback still wouldn't change a thing about it."I think it was important for the guys to see that," Sanchez said Wednesday. "To let them know what kind of player I am and how important it is to me and how much I care."
On the Jets' opening drive Sunday against Tennessee, Sanchez dropped back and looked for an open receiver. Not seeing a viable option, he took off. A few yards from the end zone, he lowered his head like a fullback, took a hard shot from Titans safety Michael Griffin and spun his way over the goal line for a 14-yard touchdown.
"He had his head buried like an ostrich or something like that," right tackle Damien Woody said with a laugh. "I haven't seen anything to that extent before."
It might have also been a moment the Jets point to as the day Sanchez truly became their leader.
"That play epitomizes what we want to be all about with this football team," Woody said. "We want to be tough, smart and have that desire to do whatever it takes. That's what it was."
Sanchez celebrated the scoring scramble with high-fives and hugs from his fired-up teammates. He also got a few warnings, including from coach Rex Ryan and offensive coordinator Brian Schottenheimer.
"I think Schotty came over to him on the sideline and said, 'Great play,'" backup quarterback Kellen Clemens said. "Then he said,
'Don't do it again.'"
That's not to say Sanchez won't shy away from running.
"They just said, 'Be careful,'" Sanchez said. "Coach Ryan knows that is the way I am, the way I play. ... At the same time, you need to care enough to take care of your body and be a starter for a long period of time. I have to be smart."
The last thing the Jets want to see, of course, is their franchise player
-- The Sanchize -- injured after taking an unnecessary chance.
"As quarterbacks, we don't get a lot of contact where we actually get to see it coming," Clemens said. "So, anytime one of us makes a big block or lowers their shoulder on somebody and actually wins, it's a pretty exciting thing for us. You'd just rather he not take too many of those head-on collisions."
Running back Thomas Jones, who has 50 career touchdown runs, enjoyed watching his quarterback show some grit.
"I'd like to see him keep his head up, though," Jones said of Sanchez's technique. "You don't want to see him get hurt. Anytime you lower your head like that, you take a chance of getting your neck hurt, but he's a tough guy."
That's the reputation Sanchez has carved for himself in just three NFL games.