New York Jets: Brandon Marshall discusses chemistry

Wide receiver Brandon Marshall had a solid game in his regular season debut with the New York Jets. Against the Cleveland Browns, Marshall led the team in receiving yards at 62 yards and a touchdown. He was definitely an x-factor in this matchup as he did very well against one of the top cornerbacks playing today in Joe Haden.

What did Marshall think about his performance against the Browns and the overall chemistry that was found on offense? Thanks to the Media Relations Department of the Jets, here is a full transcript of what he had to say in its entirety. Enjoy!

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On whether he has had any takeaways before and whether he feels that his takeaway changed the course of the game…

Yeah, I mean, I’ve had a few. I wouldn’t say that’s the play that turned the game around. You never know. That’s why you have to give it your all every single play.

On whether it was nice to start the season with a win…

Absolutely. It’s confirmation that there was confidence that we were feeling. Confidence is everything, not only in sports, but in life and when you can take confidence and turn it into momentum, successful things happen.

On how the team found confidence in the second quarter when things started to turn around…

It’s not that we found it. We just stuck to what we wanted to do coming in and it started to pop. It’s just like a fight. It’s a lot of rounds, every game is a round, a 16-round fight and every play is a round. You just have to do your best to stay in and stay focused and eventually you’ll get your opportunity.

On how critical his strip was after Ryan Fitzpatrick’s interception…

I think it was a big play for us. Whenever you can make a play like that, and the offense can punch it in, it’s a good thing. We got some momentum that we built off of it.

On whether his first thought after the interception was to strip the ball…

Yes, that was the first thing I thought about. That’s the first thing I always think about when there’s a turnover, to try to turn into a defender and get the ball back.

On whether he was surprised how smooth the offense was during the first regular game together…

No, I wasn’t surprised, but I want to say this, there was a lot of energy out there, something that I didn’t think we had in preseason and that was Fireman Ed getting us started. I know he’s been gone for a little bit and we need him so I hope he’s listening to this because there’s a lot of talk that he’s trying to pass the torch to someone else, but you can’t duplicate that. We need him to get us going. It’s not just offense, defense, and special teams, we need the 12th man and it starts with Fireman Ed. So, Fireman Ed, don’t pass the torch.

On whether he was looking for Fireman Ed after he scored…

Yeah, I was looking for Fireman Ed. We ended up connecting.

On his controversial week…

No controversial week.

On whether his play was everything he need to do to overcome the controversial week…

I don’t know what was controversial.

Sep 13, 2015; East Rutherford, NJ, USA; New York Jets wide receiver Brandon Marshall (15) runs after recovering a fumble against the Cleveland Browns during the first half at MetLife Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Danny Wild-USA TODAY Sports

On his comments on “Inside the NFL”…

That’s, like, opinion.

On whether this game meant more to him so he could silence his critics…

I mean everyone has critics. I just play football.

On whether he thinks his strip was the play of the game…

I don’t know if it was the play of the game, there was a lot of plays of the game, that was just one of them. It was a play we’ve been working on for a couple of weeks and had a lot of success on. Fitz (Fitzpatrick) didn’t see the underneath coverage and the guy made an awesome play. He had his back to it and he turned around at the last second and when he caught it, the first thing I thought of was getting the ball back.

On what it’s like to have a running back like Chris Ivory to help control the clock…

Chris is a monster. It starts with the offensive line and Chris Ivory. He makes our offense go. He’s the tone setter.

On what Fitzpatrick does right at quarterback that helps the offense…

He does everything right. It would take us ten minutes to sit down and talk about everything he does right. I just think it starts with the way he takes control of not only the huddle, but the entire building. He’s a great guy for all of us to follow and we’re fortunate to have him.

On whether Fitzpatrick proves that accuracy is more important than arm strength…

It has nothing to do with accuracy or arm strength. It has everything to do with being able to process the game and playing chess out there. We all know he’s a Harvard guy and he’s good at that.

On whether he knew Fitzpatrick was going to throw to him on his touchdown…

I was kind of screaming at the coaches a little bit because they took me off the field the play before. It was a good feeling when they called me back in there. Once we saw one on one I knew he was coming.

On whether it was the perfect pass…

Yeah, it was all Fitz. (Joe) Haden jumped inside, Fitz put it only where I could catch it. It was routine.

Sep 13, 2015; East Rutherford, NJ, USA; New York Jets quarterback Ryan Fitzpatrick (14) throws a pass during the first half of their game against the Cleveland Browns at MetLife Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Ed Mulholland-USA TODAY Sports

On how as an athlete you get in the right mindset after witnessing serious injuries…

I have to tell you, man, after the second one, our youngster, our rookie, that was tough. It was tough and we just tried to rally around that moment and press forward, but it’s tough. Some guys bounce back, some guys don’t. I know it was tough for me to bounce back.

On how scared he was in that moment…

I was really scared. I saw him get up and try to take a couple steps and he just collapsed right in front of me and it was scary.

On whether he has seen Antonio Cromartie since his injury…

I can’t talk about that.

On whether it was easy to get chemistry going with Fitzpatrick today…

I think we’re past that now and we’re just trying to get better in the running game and the passing game. We’ll continue to build off of what happened today.

Next: Browns vs Jets: Top 5 key takeaways

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