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Mr. INT is also Mr. November: Immokalee grad J.C. Jackson named AFC Defensive Player of the Month

FOXBORO — With a ball-hawking defense on the field, Patriots quarterback Mac Jones said it is only a matter of a time before the defensive unit produces a turnover.

It feels that way when it comes to Patriots cornerback and Immokalee graduate J.C. Jackson as well.

More: Immokalee's J.C. Jackson continued impressive start to his NFL career with another interception

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As he has done throughout his four seasons in the NFL, Jackson plays an integral role in New England’s defense as a turnover machine. Jackson was at it once again Sunday, stockpiling more takeaways by recording an interception and a forced fumble in a 36-13 win over the Tennessee Titans at Gillette Stadium.

Patriots cornerback J.C. Jackson celebrates after intercepting a pass in the end zone against the Tennessee Titans in the second half Sunday at Gillette Stadium.
Patriots cornerback J.C. Jackson celebrates after intercepting a pass in the end zone against the Tennessee Titans in the second half Sunday at Gillette Stadium.

“I’m very confident because we’ve been creating turnovers every week,” as Jackson said after as the Patriots' defense registered four turnovers in the win. “Like I said, we talk about it each and every week in practice. We’re prepared for it and, when it’s time to play, we’re executing and we get it done.”

The NFL awarded Jackson for his defensive execution in November, naming him the AFC Defensive Player of the Month Thursday morning.

Jackson, who changed his social media handle to @MR_INT earlier this season, leads the league with 16 passes defensed and has an AFC-best seven interceptions this season. Four of those interceptions came over the team’s last four games in November, including returning one of his two interceptions against the Carolina Panthers in Week 9 for his first career touchdown. He also recorded six tackles and six passes defensed in the month.

While Jackson has made it a habit of intercepting quarterbacks — he’s recorded 24 interceptions since entering the league in 2018, more than anyone else in the NFL in that time frame — it was his first career forced fumble that got the ball back into the Patriots' hands early in the third quarter Sunday.

D’Onta Foreman broke off a 30-yard run on just the second play from scrimmage for the Titans in the second half, but Jackson caught up to Foreman and punched the ball out of the running back’s grasp, allowing Jalen Mills to recover the football along the sideline at New England’s 37-yard line.

“See ball, get ball,” Jackson said. “He didn’t have good ball security and, as a defense, we talk about creating turnovers every day. … What you do in practice is going to carry over into games.”

For Patriots safety and captain Devin McCourty, Jackson’s strip of Foreman illustrated the type of hustle regularly shown out of the secondary to turn an initial negative play into a positive outcome.

“That’s huge,” McCourty said. “That’s kind of like the play we had in ‘19 when Nick Chubb ran it out and [Jonathan] Jones chasing him down and punching that ball out. It’s just hustle. If you see us practice all throughout the week, all our corners do that. They finish to the ball. They’re the last man, they’re running to the ball, they’re stripping at the ball. … That’s what it’s about. It’s everybody hustling. It’s everybody trying to get to the ball so when a play like that is made, J.C. punches it out, but it doesn’t matter unless Mills is hustling and gets on the ball.”

Jackson wasn’t done, coming through with one more game-altering play before the Patriots ultimately pulled away from the Titans.

With Tennessee closing in on making it a one-possession contest early in the fourth quarter, Jackson punctuated a terrific goal-line stand when he picked off a pass by Ryan Tannehill (11-for-21, 93 yards) pass in the back of the end zone on fourth-and-goal.

It was Jackson’s seventh interception of the season and he had some help from McCourty to register the pick as McCourty deflected the pass before Jackson came down with it.

“Dev, he was in the right position,” said Jackson, who has recorded the most of the Patriots' NFL-leading 19 interceptions. “It was a great call by our defensive coach. He tipped the ball up and I made a play.”

Patriots cornerback J.C. Jackson celebrates his interception in the end zone during the fourth quarter Sunday at Gillette Stadium.
Patriots cornerback J.C. Jackson celebrates his interception in the end zone during the fourth quarter Sunday at Gillette Stadium.

Jackson, who went undrafted out of Maryland, certainly has had no issues cementing himself as the Patriots' top corner after former NFL Defensive MVP Stephon Gilmore was didn’t play for the Patriots this season and was subsequently traded to the Carolina Panthers in early October.

Jackson’s penchant for creating turnovers hasn’t gone unnoticed by his teammates, either. Patriots linebacker Matt Judon referred to Jackson as “Mr. Picks” — a suitable nickname for a player who seems to consistently come up with them.and it sure is a suitable nickname for a player who that always seems to come up with them.

“Whatever he’s doing, it's working for him,” Judon said. “J.C.’s a great player and all the recognition and whatever he gets he deserves because of the way he’s playing and the way he’s getting the ball back for our defense, our offense, our team is amazing.”

This article originally appeared on Naples Daily News: New England Patriots cornerback d J.C. Jackson named November AFC Defensive Player of the Month