Justin Jefferson wasn't at his best on Sunday, but even one of his not-so-great days can leave two good cornerbacks shaking their heads in a losing locker room.
Just ask Jets veteran D.J. Reed and rookie fourth overall draft pick Sauce Gardner, one of the league's best duos and a key to the NFL's fourth-ranked scoring defense.
"Right now, I'm just frustrated because I did my thing," Reed said after the Vikings' 27-22 win, adding that he was in Jefferson's ... um ... let's say, his face the whole game. "But he ran one great route against me."
Reed was talking about Jefferson's only catch of the second half – a 10-yard touchdown on third-and-6 that gave the Vikings a 27-15 lead with 8:33 left in the game. Jefferson finished with seven catches on 11 targets for 45 yards, his third-fewest this season.
The touchdown was the only time the Jets moved their cornerbacks, switching Reed to the left side of the defense across from Jefferson.
"We switched because in the red zone, I go to the boundary [wide side]," Gardner said. "That's where they like to do jump balls. That's usually where the ball goes."
On every other play, Gardner was on the left and Reed on the right side of the defense. When Jefferson moved into the slot, he was covered by Michael Carter II and Brandin Echols. And, of course, the Jets' zone-heavy scheme also called on safety Jordan Whitehead to double some over the top and linebacker C.J. Mosley to do his best to help bracket Jefferson on occasion over the middle.
For the record, Jefferson lined up wide right 21 times, in the right slot seven times, slot left five times and wide left 16 times. He caught two balls for 14 yards and two third-down conversions against Gardner and three balls for 20 yards and the TD against Reed. The other two catches for 11 yards and one third-down conversion came from the slot.