Jets must right their receiver wrongs of drafts past

The past 17 receivers the Jets drafted haven’t scored more than 19 touchdowns in their Jets’ career. That needs to change.

The Jets haven’t drafted well over the past two decades, but they’ve been particularly been bad at picking wide receivers. With the presumption that Gang Green will grab at least one pass-catcher with their first four picks in the next week’s draft, whomever they choose needs to be significantly better than the wideouts the Jets have drafted in recent years.

Only one of the 18 receivers the Jets drafted since 2000 has tallied more than 20 touchdowns for New York. Laveranues Coles caught 459 receptions for 5,941 yards and 37 touchdowns in two separate three-year stints with the Jets after he went in the third round of the 2000 draft. No other drafted receiver has produced as well as Coles did for the Jets since. Santana Moss and Jerricho Cotchery were close but only caught 19 and 18 touchdowns, respectively.

The Jets picked wideouts poorly on an amazingly consistent basis. Though the Jets only drafted five of their 18 receivers in the first three rounds, three of those picks were duds: Stephen Hill, Devin Smith and ArDarius Stewart. For reference, players like Alshon Jeffery, T.Y. Hilton, Tyler Lockett, Stefon Diggs and Chris Godwin all went after Hill, Smith and Stewart in their respective drafts.

Of the 18 receivers New York has drafted since 2000, ten didn’t catch a touchdown. Four never even played a down for the team.

Bad drafting forced the Jets to overpay wide receivers in free agency in the past – including Eric Decker, Santonio Holmes and, to a lesser extent, Jamison Crowder. Such spending left other positions woefully without depth throughout the years. But with a competent general manager, solid draft capital and a young quarterback, the Jets finally have a chance to change course this year.

New York hasn’t picked a receiver since 2017 when it took Stewart in the third round and Chad Hansen and the fourth round, but that streak should snap in 2020.

The Jets had pre-draft conversations with Jerry Jeudy, CeeDee Lamb and Denzel Mims and also said heavily linked to Henry Ruggs III. But, with a heavy need at offensive tackle, it’s more likely the Jets will wait to grab a wideout until the second or third rounds in one of the deepest receiver classes in recent memory. Prospects like Laviska Shenault Jr., Michael Pittman, Van Jefferson, Donovan Peoples-Jones and Tyler Johnson all have the makings of solid offensive contributors and could be targets with the Jets’ 48th, 68th and/or 79th picks.

If the Jets use one of their early picks on a receiver, he’ll need to be a playmaker. The Jets’ receiver depth at the moment leaves much to be desired between Jamison Crowder, Breshad Perriman, Quincy Enunwa (if he’s healthy), Josh Doctson, Vyncint Smith and Braxton Berrios. Burning another pick on a receiver who can’t catch, stay on the field or run the right routes will be detrimental to the development of Sam Darnold and the rest of the offense.

Joe Douglas has a chance to turn this trend around for the Jets, but he doesn’t have a great track record with receivers in the draft. He drafted three receivers for the Eagles between 2016-19 when he was their vice president of player personnel, and none of them have panned out so far. The Bears drafted Kevin White seventh overall in 2015 when Douglas was Chicago’s director of college scouting. White never caught a touchdown in only 14 games of action in three seasons.

Douglas and the Jets both need to be better at finding young, talented receiver prospects in this draft. If they don’t, the Jets will continue to wallow in mediocrity at one of the most important offensive positions in the game.

Can Joe Douglas buck Jets’ second-round curse?

The Jets have drafted two future Pro Bowlers out of 37 second-round picks since 1979. Joe Douglas can’t repeat history in his first draft.

The second round hasn’t been kind to the Jets in the past 40 years.

Only two of the team’s 37 second-round picks in the past 41 years have made a Pro Bowl. Defensive end Mark Gastineau, who was drafted in 1979, did it, as did return specialist Justin Miller, who was drafted in 2005.

Joe Douglas already has the 11th overall pick to work with, but he’ll make or break his first draft as the Jets’ general manager in the later rounds. 

The second-round bar is low for Douglas after a plethora of failures since the Jets drafted Gastineau. A brief glance at the recent second-rounders includes 18 players who started fewer than 20 games for the Jets, nine of which started fewer than five games. Meanwhile, only seven started more than 60 games in their career.

Not a great group.

The Jets’ success stories from the second round are few and far between.

Linebacker David Harris is probably the Jets’ best second-round pick after Gastineau. He played 10 seasons with the Jets and wracked up over 1,000 tackles in New York.

The jury is still out on safety Marcus Maye, who’s started all 38 games he’s played in since the Jets took him 39th overall in 2017. He’s been a complement to Jamal Adams in the deep secondary but is also injury prone.

The busts, meanwhile, are plentiful. 

Quarterbacks Geno Smith and Christian Hackenberg, as well as receivers Devin Smith and Stephen Hill, are the most recent notable mistakes. Hackenberg never even saw the field in the regular season despite his high selection, while Smith and Hill combined for 60 receptions, 842 yards and six touchdowns in 43 games.

The Jets have drafted mostly wide receivers, offensive lineman and defensive backs in the second round. Ironically, all are still positions of need. Douglas will have his pick of a deep receiver and lineman class and many mocks predict the Jets will take one of those two positions with the 48th overall pick. The other position will be the first-round pick. Players like tackle Isaiah Wilson and receivers Laviska Shenault and Michael Pittman Jr. should be among the Jets’ second-round targets.

Douglas himself has had mixed results in identifying and drafting talented players in the second round.

Tight end Dallas Goedert and running back Miles Sanders were great pick-ups for the Eagles during Douglas’ time as vice president of player personnel with the Eagles, but defensive back Sidney Jones and receiver J.J. Arcega-Whiteside haven’t panned out yet. As a scout with the Ravens for 14 years, he helped Ozzie Newsome grab players like Torrey Smith and Ray Rice in the second round. The Bears also drafted defensive tackle Eddie Goldman – who only has 12.5 sacks in five years – when Douglas was the director of college scouting for Chicago in 2015.

The best use of a Jets’ second-round pick in the past five years was actually the trade that landed New York the No. 3 overall pick in 2018 that resulted in Sam Darnold. The Jets moved up from No. 6 to No. 3 by giving the Colts their second-round pick in 2018 and their two second-rounders in 2019. Darnold still has a ways to go before becoming the franchise quarterback the Jets hope he can be, but he’s still better than what the Jets probably would have used with those three second-round picks.

With so many holes on the roster, the second round will be crucial for Douglas and the Jets. They can’t whiff again if they want to see Darnold progress. Douglas’  background in scouting and experience with successful franchises gives him a leg up on the Jets’ past general managers, but it’s impossible to predict how the draft board will fall and how the players will fit on Adam Gase’s team.

Cowboys cupboard not bare at WR behind Cooper, Gallup

Randall Cobb is gone and wasn’t replaced, but does that mean the Cowboys must use a Top-60 pick on a wideout?

When the 2020 regular season gets underway, the Dallas Cowboys are going to sport one of the league’s most formidable pairs of wideouts. With Amari Cooper and Michael Gallup, quarterback Dak Prescott has a pair of players with elite skillsets who win in different ways, complimenting each other on opposite sides of the field.

The position group did lose a major free agent asset in Randall Cobb, who followed the money down the highway to Houston, but even with his defection after one season, rumors of the group’s demise have been greatly exaggerated. No, the club didn’t make a big or even mid-level signing to replace Cobb’s 55 receptions for 828 yards, but they didn’t have to. And even if it could take things to an ultimate level, the team doesn’t have to invest high-pedigree picks in the NFL draft to compensate for his loss. They could wait until Day 3 and grab one of the guys who would normally be late-Round 2 or Round 3 options because there are solutions to be had, in house.

Make no mistake about it, Cobb would’ve been a great returning player, finishing as Pro Football Focus’ 47th-ranked WR who saw at least 35% of his team’s offensive snaps, but for $9 million a year the club can certainly invest that in better ways than a player who dropped just under 10% of all of his targets. At 30 years old, Cobb is now about to be paid as a low-end No. 1 receiver, ranking 28th in the league in average salary.

That’s… too much.

Dallas didn’t sign a single wideout to replace him though, leading many to assume that the club will heavily consider drafting a wide receiver in the first two days of the draft. They may just do that, the draft is chock full of dynamic receiving options in all shapes, speeds and fashions in one of the deepest classes in recent memory. If one of the elite-level players such as Ceedee Lamb, Jerry Jeudy or Henry Ruggs  III falls to them at 17, things may be too tempting to pass up; but they likely will.

Barring a trade back in the first, or a trade up in the second, the bevy of wide receivers selected before Dallas returns to the clock at No. 51 will mean they probably won’t get a guy who’s an absolute lock to be a heavy Day-1 contributor. 10 or more receivers could conceivably go in the Top  50 this year.

If that happens, and Dallas ends up with a prospect with a normal learning curve, they will have to rely on players who they already have. Some may think that’s not a winning proposition, but that isn’t necessarily the case.

The club does have some interesting options.

Continue…

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Ohio State football’s ten most memorable plays of the decade

There are a ton of memorable plays over the last decade of Ohio State football, but we’ve picked out the ten we believe stand out.

There’s a slew of big-time games over the last decade for a program like Ohio State. With all the high-stakes on the line seemingly every year for one of the best programs of all time, that means there’s plenty of memorable plays that define every year.

Take that out further, and you can rewind on the entire decade that just passed and remember where you were when certain moments took place that defined the period from 2000-2019. From the tail-end of the Jim Tressel era, to the year in purgatory under Luke Fickell, through the dominant run of Urban Meyer at the helm, to the ushering in of the Ryan Day tenure, there’s plays that will live on in the hearts of Buckeye fans, coaches, and players during this time.

Here’s our stab at the ten most memorable plays of the decade that just flashed by us as we now embark on a new ten-year period.

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Next … No. 10

Ohio State football All-Decade Team, Offense

We reflect on the last decade of Ohio State football, and who would be on an all-offensive team from 2010 through 2019.

The sun already set on college football down in New Orleans just a couple of weeks ago. The Super Bowl just gave us our last hurrah as well Sunday night. So, we’ve got a question for you: Are you missing the good ‘ole American game yet? Yeah, yeah, there’s the whole reboot of the XFL, but for all intents and purposes, the game we know and love is now on a hiatus until the fall really.

But that’s okay. We’re going to fill that time with some reflections on the decade that just passed us by for Ohio State. It was one that was filled with several Big Ten Championships, a national title, and a slew of wins over That Team Up North.

But who are the best of the best from the 2010s? There’s a ton of really good players to choose from, and we’re doing our best to identify them in a series of posts dealing with the best of the decade of Ohio State football.

We’re starting with our All-Decade Offensive Team, with the All-Decade Defensive Team up next. So, here it goes. If you were to put a team together on the side of the ball responsible for scoring points, what OSU players would you choose from 2010 through 2019? Here’s our stab at it.

Next … The skill positions at Ohio State

Ohio State football’s top ten players of the decade

As we embark on a new decade of Ohio State football, here’s a look at the ten best Buckeye players from the last one.

It was quite the decade for Ohio State football. One that saw the end of the Jim Tressel and the beginning and end of the Urban Meyer tenure in Columbus. The last year was one that saw a new man perhaps joining the coaching superstar ranks with Ryan Day now wearing the headset.

The ten years saw a total of four Big Ten Championships, a national title, and three College Football Playoffs. Oh, and there’s the dominance of That Team Up North as well — with OSU winning nine of ten games.

At a place like Ohio State, there are so many great players that walk through the tunnel, and it was no different from 2010-2019. As the decade has now come to a close, we look back on the top ten players of a memorable decade.

Of course opinions vary on this, so feel free to get in on the action by visiting our Facebook Page, Twitter, or our fan forum that recently launched.

Next … No. 10