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Jets suspend Alosi indefinitely for telling players to form wall

Sal Alosi tripped up when he told the New York Jets his side of the story.

Now the embattled assistant coach could be looking to save his job.

Alosi, the Jets' strength and conditioning coach, was suspended indefinitely by the team Wednesday after he acknowledged that he told five inactive players to stand next to each other for a punt return, during which he tripped Miami Dolphins rookie cornerback Nolan Carroll.

"As we continued our investigation, we discovered some new information," Jets general manager Mike Tannenbaum said in a conference call from the NFL owners meetings in Dallas, "and the players at the Miami game were instructed by Sal to stand where they were to force the gunner in the game to run around them."

That was information Alosi didn't initially volunteer Monday, according to Tannenbaum. The Jets suspended Alosi for the season without pay and fined him an additional $25,000 after he stuck out a knee and tripped Carroll, who was covering the punt during the third quarter of the Dolphins' 10-6 victory Sunday.

"Over the course of the next couple of days, more information came out that really doesn't sit well with us," Tannenbaum said.

During a news conference Monday, Alosi fought back tears as he called his actions -- tripping Carroll -- "inexcusable and irresponsible." Alosi also said no one was instructed to stay up on the sideline to prevent Dolphins players from running out of bounds on kicks. Miami's Reshad Jones was penalized for doing that earlier in the game.

However, Jets tight end Jeff Cumberland, who was inactive Sunday, said it was nothing new for the players to line up next to each other as they did against the Dolphins.

"Since the beginning of the year, we've been instructed to line up behind the (white) line," Cumberland said, adding that it was only Alosi who has told them to do so.

Jets coach Rex Ryan and special-teams coordinator Mike Westhoff both denied that they ordered anyone to do what Alosi told the players.

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"It caught me off guard," Ryan said.

Westhoff said he doesn't teach the technique and reviewed every return by the Jets this season with assistant special teams coordinator Ben Kotwica.

"For the most part," Westhoff said, "we didn't see it."

Westhoff said he didn't believe it when he first heard that players might have been ordered to stand together along the sideline.

"I was like, 'Please, give me a break. The whole thing is ridiculous,'" Westhoff said. "Then, when I saw it, I was like, 'Whoa.' You didn't have to be Sherlock Holmes to see they were lined up."

Westhoff added that other teams might use the wall, and he singled out the AFC East rival New England Patriots as one that has.

"I'm not accusing the Patriots of doing something wrong," Westhoff said. "Maybe they're doing something smart. Watch the tape, you tell me."

Tannenbaum said he met with Ray Anderson, the NFL's executive vice president of football operations, on Wednesday morning, and the league supported the Jets' decision. Tannenbaum added that the NFL also was looking into the incident.

"Once we get all the information, we'll make a final determination," Tannenbaum said. "But, based on this information, Sal's been suspended indefinitely."

Tannenbaum didn't rule out the possibility that Alosi will be fired. A decision will be made once he and Jets owner Woody Johnson return from Texas.

"All options are on the table," Tannenbaum said.

League spokesman Greg Aiello said that "Ray Anderson and his staff are reviewing and clarifying sideline protocols with the teams at today's league meeting in Fort Worth and will follow up with a memo to the clubs this week."

When asked at the meetings if what the Jets did was improper, Anderson said: "Yes."

Anderson also told NFL Network insider Jason La Canfora that there are "protocols where players and coaches are supposed to be," and the Jets' alignment was "improper."

Westhoff said he didn't know if such a technique was within the rules, but it doesn't matter to him regardless.

"Does it help you on the sideline? I think it's ridiculous," he said. "I don't do it, nor do I care if anyone else does it."

Tannenbaum said the team looked at the game film of the play, and "it looked to me like it was unusual for them to be standing that way." The Jets interviewed the players who were standing near Alosi, but they will not take any action against them.

"This is just about Sal," Tannenbaum said.

Tannenbaum said the latest decision by the team regarding Alosi comes "for the totality of the situation."

Alosi was first with the Jets from 2001 to 2005, then worked for the Atlanta Falcons for one season before he was hired by then-New York coach Eric Mangini in 2007 to be the head strength and conditioning coach.

A former linebacker at Hofstra, Alosi earned an award for sportsmanship and fair play both on and off the field during his college career.

"I'm really disappointed," Tannenbaum said. "Sal's done a lot of good things as the strength and conditioning coach and done a lot of good things for the organization, but, yeah, I'm very disappointed with what's happened."

Carroll left the game Sunday with a muscle spasm, but he returned during the fourth quarter. Alosi later apologized to him and Dolphins coach Tony Sparano.

"I'm glad he called me," Carroll said Wednesday. "He admitted it to me, like a man. He was sorry."

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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