Aaron Rodgers certainly has a knack for these sorts of heroics.
With eight seconds remaining in the first half, Rodgers took a snap from the Jets' 48-yard line and against a two-man rush from the Buffalo Bills and uncorked a high-arcing deep pass toward the end zone.
And despite the three Gang Green receivers waiting for the ball to descend being outnumbered by five in Buffalo blue, it was Jets wide receiver Allen Lazard whose outstretched arms came down with the football for an improbable 52-yard score.
The ball was ripped out of Lazard's hands after his back was firmly planted in the end zone and the back judge ruled the play incomplete. But one official threw his arms up, and upon discussion, the play was ruled a touchdown on the field and quickly confirmed.
"They decided to rush two guys, so we had all day to do it," the 40-year-old quarterback said after the game, adding that he "actually threw it a little bit right of where I wanted it, I was trying to throw it between the hashes. The wind was a little swirly tonight.
"There was a lot of jostling and then I saw Allen come down with it. It's a pretty good feeling."
With the extra point, the Jets entered the half down 20-17, but would go on to lose, 23-20.
The ball traveled 61.4 yards in the air, which is the longest for completion by a Jets’ quarterback in the NextGen Stats era (beginning in 2016). On the play, Lazard had 0.6 yards of separation and a completion probability of 15.5 percent, per NFL NextGen.