Make or break: Can Daniel Jones get on track in 2024?

The odds are majorly stacked against Jones as he fights for his NFL future.

The saga of New York Giants quarterback Daniel Jones has been a divisive one after the sixth-year quarterback was given a four-year, $160 million contract extension after the 2022 season. With a history of neck injuries and coming off a torn ACL that ended his 2023 season after just six games, there are a slew of questions when it comes to his value – both in fantasy football leagues and to the Giants organization.

In 2022 – Jones’ fourth season – he finally showed the kind of production the Giants had been looking for. In 16 games, Jones threw for 3,205 yards and 15 touchdowns and, more importantly for fantasy managers, rushed 120 times for 708 yards and seven more TDs. In terms of fantasy points per game, those were top-10 numbers in 2022. However, it didn’t last.

In six games last season prior to his injury, Jones threw for just 909 yards with two TD passes and six interceptions and looked awful as he was sacked 30 times behind a makeshift offensive line. At that rate, had he played the entire season, he would have been sacked 85 times, blowing past the current single-season high of 76 by Houston’s David Carr in 2002.

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The Giants made a lot of moves in the offseason to shore up the offensive line and used the the ninth overall pick to select wide receiver Malik Nabers. Nabers will be the first legitimate top-end receiver Jones has played with during his Giants career. The additions to the offense may merely negate the decision not to keep running back Saquon Barkley, who left for division-rival Philadelphia in free agency. Not only was Barkley the backbone of the Giants running game, he also was critical as a receiver coming out of the backfield.

The Giants didn’t get involved in the quarterback frenzy atop the first round of this year’s draft, but they did hedge their bets by signing quarterback Drew Lock to back up Jones. After placing too much trust in Jones heading into last season, which led to short-lived Tommy DeVito era in New York, the Giants aren’t taking that chance again in the event Jones stinks up the joint this season.

Fantasy football outlook

Jones, who isn’t expected to land on the Physically Unable to Perform list, is currently mired in ADP rankings in the 25-30 range, depending on your source of choice – a ranking that would leave him undrafted in 12-team leagues with two quarterbacks.

He does bring a bit of upside with his running ability, although that’s now in doubt following ACL reconstruction. The reality is Jones has thrown just 62 touchdown passes with 40 interceptions in 60 career games with the Giants. Worse yet, he’s coming off the poorest season of career, posting a passer rating of just 70.5 – the lowest of his career by almost 10 points.

The biggest issue with Jones is the onerous hit the Giants take on the salary cap for his contract extension. Last year, he counted just $15.44 million against the salary cap. This year, that number jumps to $47.86, and the Giants can’t release him because he would count for $47.11 million as a post-June 1 dead-cap hit.

Although he has flashed ability at times to be a decent NFL quarterback, it hasn’t been enough to warrant endorsing him as a player you want on your fantasy roster.

Fantasy football: Where to draft New York Giants QB Daniel Jones

Analyzing New York Giants QB Daniel Jones’ 2023 fantasy football ADP and where to target him in fantasy drafts.

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New York Giants QB Daniel Jones had a breakout season in 2022, as he really took off under new coach Brian Daboll. It also helped that he had a healthy, and a determined, RB Saquon Barkley to take some of the pressure off of him.

Jones set career highs with a 67.2% completion percentage, 317 completions, 472 pass attempts, 3,205 passing yards, a career-low 5 INTs, a 92.5 QB rating and 120 rushing attempts for 708 yards and 7 rush TD. For fantasy purposes, he was posting borderline low-end QB1 stats, or must-start QB2 production, for a good chunk of the season.

Jones ended up getting paid, too. He inked a 4-year, $160 million contact with a $36 million signing bonus, with $9.5 million in base salary for 2023, and $36.5 million for 2024, all guaranteed. There are also plenty of financial incentives baked into his new deal, so don’t expect Jones to rest on his laurels.

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Daniel Jones’ ADP: 100.20

(ADP data courtesy of MyFantasyLeague.com; last updated at time of this publishing – ADPs continually change as more drafts occur)

For whatever reason, Jones just doesn’t get the same type of respect as some other dual-threat QBs in this league. And it’s not exactly like he plays in a market that isn’t big time.

In fact, statisically-speaking, Jones had extremely comparable seasons to players like Dallas Cowboys QB Dak Prescott (76.60) and Minnesota Vikings QB Kirk Cousins (80.97), although both of those players are going a full 2 or 3 rounds ahead of him on draft day.

And a lot of people give Chicago Bears QB Justin Fields (41.30) his flowers, and rightly so, but he had just 1 more rushing TD than Danny Dimes, while throwing for nearly 1,000 fewer yards!

Among quarterbacks, Jones’ ADP is 18th in redraft leagues, which is criminally low, well behind fellow MetLife Stadium resident and New York Jets QB Aaron Rodgers (89.89), Tennessee Titans rookie QB Will Levis (94.28) and Detroit Lions rookie QB Hendon Hooker (98.56).

Jones’ ADP puts him just ahead of Houston Texans rookie QB C.J. Stroud (101.44) and Carolina Panthers rookie QB Bryce Young (103.43), rounding out the Top 20 among redraft QBs.

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Daniel Jones’ 2022 stats

Games: 16

Passing yards: 3,205

Completions | attempts: 317 | 472

Passing touchdowns: 15

Interceptions: 5

Carries | rushing yards: 120 | 708

Rushing touchdowns: 7

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Where should you draft Jones?

Look, I am not saying you should pin your fantasy hopes on Jones as a bona fide QB1. He’s just not that guy. But I also look at the ADP report, and there is no way I am taking any of the rookies over Jones. And some other guys of similar production are getting taken 2 or 3 rounds higher, and it just doesn’t make sense.

It’s like fantasy managers are expecting some sort of a regression from Jones, but it’s uncertain why. He is very similar to Fields, as both play the game with the same style. They’ll each rack up plenty of yards, although Fields is a more polished runner. Jones is a more polished passer, however, and he has a much better running back to take the pressure off. And Barkley can catch the ball better, too.

I just don’t understand why Jones is falling down to Rounds 8 or 9 in redraft leagues. If I’m in a 16-team league, and I can get Jones in the middle rounds, several rounds later than a fellow combatant taking Fields, Cousins, etc. way higher, I am ecstatic.

In dynasty leagues, Jones isn’t as attractive, but that’s OK. In fantasy formats starting 2 signal callers, he is a must-have before Round 10.

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Are fantasy footballers undervaluing Daniel Jones?

Could the masses be overlooking a breakout season by Jones?

Fantasy football is most often the epitome of “what have you done for me lately?” — in the essence that gamers tend to get overly fixed one way or the other on how a player performed last year. We’re all guilty of it in varying ways and to differing extents.

Sometimes, a player is just so awful that it becomes almost impossible to not be blinded by the memory of said putrid results. In 2020, few other players than New York Giants quarterback Daniel Jones fit this description.

But does a fresh year warrant renewed optimism, or have we seen enough already?

Very few quarterbacks are positioned to have a true breakthrough season in 2021, and Jones is the one I continue to wrestle with being on the list. It’s almost too easy to pile on him after such a pathetic 2020 campaign. A quick spin through the pros and cons may help clarify his risk-reward ratio.

Pros

  • Second year in offensive coordinator Jason Garrett’s system
  • This offense has been QB-friendly a number of times in the past.
  • Jones flashed just enough in 2019 action to offer a glimmer of hope.
  • The Giants went out of their way to upgrade the offensive targets, including the signing of WR Kenny Golladay and TE Kyle Rudolph, as well as drafting speedy wideout Kadarius Toney in Round 1.
  • Running back Saquon Barkley (knee) is on track to return from an ACL tear and offers a dual-threat beast out of the backfield.
  • Offensive tackle Nate Solder returns after opting out. While he ultimately may not make the roster, he’s a veteran presence who could compete for the starting right tackle job. If nothing else, it’s not like left tackle Andrew Thomas played lights out in 2020 (heavy on the sarcasm), so Solder may he safe.
  • Jones completed passes at a slightly higher rate in 2020, and he threw six more times per interception than in his rookie season.
  • There was a marked improvement from his first seven games last year vs. the final seven in which Jones started. He averaged 18 more yards per game, completed passes at a higher percentage, averaged fewer attempts and completions per touchdown, and averaged more than double the attempts and completions per interception thrown.
  • The upcoming training camp should have a more traditional structure, and for as little as preseason may matter on the whole, it’s valuable for inexperienced players.

Cons

  • In 2019, Jones averaged more yards per completion and attempt, also throwing a touchdown every 11.8 completions vs. one every 25.5 connections last year.
  • New York’s offensive line was a flaming mess in 2020, ranking 31st by Pro Football Forecast. Without a massive leap forward from Thomas at left tackle, there’s going to be a little chance of Jones progressing. Thomas, a first-round rookie a year ago, gave up 57 pressures and 10 sacks. The next closest tackle yielded 43 pressures and none surrendered more QB-dropping hits. Yikes.
  • Not to pick exclusively on Thomas, both guards allowed pressures on at least 8 percent of their snaps. The Giants allowed sacks at a rate of 8.8 percent, and Jones was tossed on 9.1 percent of his passing attempts. The average of New York’s 2020 opponents was 6.5 percent. In other words: insurmountably awful pass pro.
  • The health of Barkley remains slightly of concern. Golladay is coming off an injury-ravaged season, and Rudolph underwent offseason foot surgery. Wideout Sterling Shepard quite possibly is one more concussion away from an early retirement. Then there’s Evan Engram, a tight end whose well-documented fragility is ever a worry, even after he started a full schedule in ’20.
  • Jones must to prove he has chemistry with his new targets, and unless we see something wild in the preseason, the “unknown” is rightfully held against him after his feeble sophomore showing.

Fantasy football outlook

The fantasy football strength of schedule for New York is moderate, and if Jones can take a step forward with the intangibles, then it really points to this falling on the shoulders of the offensive line under new positional coach Rob Sale.

Jones is going, on average, with the fourth pick of Round 15 in 12-team formats. He has 27 other passers coming off the board ahead of him. In some sense, it is a deserved placement. If one is to be optimistic, Jones’ ADP puts him at a ridiculous value and completely negates any serious risk assumption.

I have yet to fully make up my mind over this situation, and it will take training camp observance before it likely sways strongly in either direction. For now, if you lock up an elite quarterback early on, there is no need to invest much in a backup, which makes Jones a prime target for owners of any of the top fantasy quarterbacks. No one in ADP before Joe Burrow (12th QB) has the same Week 10 bye as Jones, which certainly helps with taking a chance on him.