Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Jones fills need for speed

N.C. State safety is fast, versatile

- RYAN WOOD USA TODAY NETWORK-WISCONSIN

GREEN BAY – He sounded like someone who just won the lottery. Voice was highpitche­d. Slightly out of breath. Words falling one over the next.

Think Josh Jones was excited Friday night? Inside his brother’s Atlanta home, he watched the NFL draft’s second round. The Dallas Cowboys’ 60th overall pick was in. That’s when Jones’ cell phone rang with a northeast Wisconsin area code.

“I just jumped out of my seat so fast,” Jones said, those words spilling over. “I just knew. I knew it. I knew this was my opportunit­y.”

Jones said he didn’t want to get his hopes up. His agent warned him, like most prospects, of the draft’s unpredicta­ble nature. In the back of his mind, Jones remembered a formal meeting with the Green Bay Packers “that went great” at the NFL scouting combine in March. He remembered two scouts attending his pro day.

He knew they were interested, but until that cell phone rings, you never know.

What the Packers got with their original second-round pick Friday, the draft’s 61st selection overall, wasn’t an obvious positional need. The Packers have Pro Bowler Ha Ha Clinton-Dix and veteran Morgan Burnett, one of the league’s better safety combos. Behind them, Kentrell Brice flashed potential as an undrafted rookie last season.

But a roster bio won’t tell you exactly what the Packers expect Jones to give their defense. It isn’t just the 109 tackles he had as a junior at North Carolina State last fall. It isn’t the eight career intercepti­ons he had in three seasons, the most among underclass­men safeties drafted in the first two rounds.

It’s where Jones lined up: all over the field.

“I’m very versatile,” Jones said. “I have great size to play in the box, great speed to go back deep. So I’m just excited to get to work as soon as possible.”

It’s fitting Jones watched Friday’s second round from Atlanta, site of the Packers’ last game.

Memories of their NFC Championsh­ip Game implosion clearly lingered into late April, directly affecting how the Packers used their first two draft picks. Their pass defense was a problem all season, never more glaring than the game that kept them out of Super Bowl LI.

Edge defenders help a pass defense, and Friday ended without the Packers addressing their pass rush. Know what else helps? Big players who can run fast and cover. With their first pick, No. 33 overall, the Packers drafted Washington cornerback Kevin King — all 6-foot-3, 200 pounds of him.

They doubled down on their secondary with Jones, a 6-foot-11⁄2, 221-pound defensive back whose 4.40-second dash at the combine became the fastest on the Packers defense. It’s what Jones does with his measurable­s that impressed the Packers.

“That’s impressive in its own right,” director of player personnel Brian Gutekunst said. “But then you watch the tape, and he backs it up. He’s not one of those guys that tested well and then you don’t see the athletic traits on the tape. You see it.

“This guy in particular was just, he jumps off the tape.”

Gutekunst said the Packers can use Jones similar to Burnett, who before Friday they planned to move inside more as a nickel linebacker in 2017. Maybe the Packers will still play Burnett more in the box with Jones deeper, but now they have another option. Jones said “without a doubt” he can play linebacker in the Packers’ favored subpackage defenses.

It would address a significan­t weakness in the Packers pass defense. It isn’t just their perimeter coverage that suffered last season. For years, they’ve struggled covering linebacker­s, slot receivers and tight ends in the short and intermedia­te middle of the field.

Clinton-Dix gives the Packers a deep centerfiel­der, a player whose five intercepti­ons last season tied for second among NFL safeties.

“His coverage ability,” Gutekunst said. “Not necessaril­y at corner, but his ability to cover wide receivers, backs, tight ends.”

In that combine meeting, the Packers were short on specifics where Jones will line up in their defense. There’s a reason for that. What they drafted here was a wild card, a safety who can play linebacker and has experience lining up at cornerback. The Packers don’t see Jones playing the field’s perimeter, but he’ll see snaps in the box, he’ll see snaps deep. He’ll play all over.

If things work out, they’ll be the ones who feel they hit the second-round lottery.

 ?? BRIAN SPURLOCK / USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Josh Jones ran a 4.40 40-yard dash at the NFL combine. The Packers like his speed and coverage ability.
BRIAN SPURLOCK / USA TODAY SPORTS Josh Jones ran a 4.40 40-yard dash at the NFL combine. The Packers like his speed and coverage ability.

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