Connecticut Post

Jones is no Jackson, but Judge commits to Jones

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The Giants needed a quarterbac­k entering the 2018 NFL Draft. Dave Gettleman took running back Saquon Barkley No. 2 overall and stuck with Eli Manning.

The Baltimore Ravens’ Lamar Jackson, the No. 32 overall pick in that draft, won the NFL’s MVP award last season. The Buffalo Bills’ Josh Allen, the No. 7 overall pick in that draft, is an MVP contender this season.

The Giants’ Daniel Jones, selected No. 6 overall the following spring of 2019, on the other hand is one giant question mark as his second pro season winds to a close.

First-year Giants head coach Joe Judge, interestin­gly enough, made the strongest commitment yet to Jones on Wednesday anyway as this organizati­on’s franchise quarterbac­k into 2021.

“Daniel Jones is our quarterbac­k,” Judge said when asked about next season’s plans.

Jones is also “on track” to return as

the Giants’ starting QB on Sunday in Baltimore, Judge said, after looking good running on the field again on Christmas Eve.

Asked if he’d experience­d an “ah ha moment” on Jones, Judge said: “I don’t know if there is an ah ha moment. To me, it’s a string of moments. Watching Daniel work, watching the respect he has in the locker room, watching him improve throughout this season. I think he’s demonstrat­ed a level of toughness and leadership and knowledge on the field that gives us confidence to put him out there and build with Daniel.

“I’m not going to point to one moment, but I can talk about (how) this entire season of this guy has definitely earned my respect,” Judge added. “I made it very hard on him from the beginning in a lot of ways, and he hasn’t blinked.”

There are certainly pros and cons to Jones as a developing young quarterbac­k: his teammates respect his ability and leadership, and he shows flashes of impressive play. On the other hand, he turns the ball over, lacks pocket awareness, doesn’t win consistent­ly, and has only eight TD passes in 12 games this season.

So the fact is Jones’ longterm viability is still a question, whether or not Judge believes in him.

Look at Sunday’s opponent in Baltimore, on the other hand. Ravens coach John Harbaugh said he did indeed have an “ah ha” moment with Jackson and it happened very early.

“I mean, I’d say we’re pretty much past that with Lamar,” Harbaugh said Wednesday. “I probably felt that after the first couple of games two years ago, the first year in 2018. But there is that moment, and then you go to work and try to get to where he and the rest of the team is kind of functionin­g at the level that teams function at that meet the standard that we’re talking about. We’re not there yet, but we’re certainly on our way there, I hope. That’s the plan.”

Harbaugh is talking about contending for a Super Bowl, which would be his team’s next step. But he has his quarterbac­k, who is one of the most difficult players to defend at any position in the league.

Judge actually raved about Jackson’s talents on Wednesday more than the Giants coach has gushed about any opposing player this season.

He even said: “If we had a guy like this on our team, I’m sure we’d find a way to put the ball in his hands, too.”

The Giants had their chance in 2018. They took a running back instead.

Unfortunat­ely, the Giants’ traditiona­l approach to the quarterbac­k position meant they never would have seriously considered Jackson, either, despite his Heisman Trophy and a second year as a Heisman finalist at Louisville.

The Ravens, if we’re being honest, didn’t fully understand what Jackson was at first, either. They actually drafted tight end Hayden Hurst No. 25 overall before trading back into the first round for Jackson at 32.

The Giants’ Judge has a deep appreciati­on for Jackson’s many talents, too.

“I think this guy is a unicorn in terms of how he can play and how he really makes explosive plays with his legs, along with the arm strength and the plays down the field he’s capable of making,” Judge said. “When he gets going, you can tell ‘score’ is the only thing on his mind.”

Judge still believes in Jones’ ability to lead the Giants’ franchise back to respectabi­lity, but Jones still has a long way to go to validate his coach’s belief — and to instill anything close to the fear in opposing defensive coordinato­rs that Jackson does for the Ravens.

 ?? Al Bello / TNS ?? Giants QB Daniel Jones drops back to pass in the first quarter against the Cardinals at MetLife Stadium on Dec. 13.
Al Bello / TNS Giants QB Daniel Jones drops back to pass in the first quarter against the Cardinals at MetLife Stadium on Dec. 13.

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