New York Daily News

Just one series, but Jet QB sharp

- MANISH MEHTA

Sam Darnold showed the special skills that will turn him into a star sooner than later in the Jets’ 31-22 preseason loss to the Giants Thursday night. Gang Green’s secondyear quarterbac­k quickly carved up his crosstown rivals, giving everyone a glimpse of what could be a special season for him.

Adam Gase, who hasn’t seen a proper quarterbac­k since Peyton Manning was on his side, was likely doing cartwheels of joy in his head.

Darnold, who had been solid in camp, engineered a 7-play, 75-yard touchdown drive in his lone series before exiting stage left. He went 4-for-5 for 68 yards in a quick-strike possession that lasted just three minutes, seven seconds, providing further evidence that he is indeed the real deal.

“It was fun out there for that first drive,” Darnold said. “Hopefully gave the Jets fans a little taste of what this season is going to be like.”

The Jets were trailing 7-6 with 1:23 left in the first quarter when the game was delayed for 59 minutes due to severe weather.

Truth be told, Jets fans would have been fine if the game were cancelled. They’d seen what they wanted to see from their franchise quarterbac­k in this new offense.

“I loved the tempo they played with,” Gase said of his first-team offense. “Sam did a good job extending plays on third down. Guys were in the right spot. The communicat­ion was good. I thought the pocket looked good. It was fun calling it.”

Darnold, who worked out of

the shotgun for six of seven snaps, was terrific after his first pass intended for Quincy Enunwa was nearly intercepte­d by Jabril Peppers. He caught fire after nearly getting picked off.

On third and 6, Darnold eluded pressure from a collapsing pocket, stepped up and fired a 32yard completion to Chris Herndon to keep the drive alive. The Jets, playing without Le’Veon Bell (rest), will miss Herndon, who will serve a four-game suspension to start the season.

Darnold was just getting started. On the next play, he hooked up with Jamison Crowder for a 28-yard catch-and-run to get to the Giants 11. Crowder is expected to be a security blanket from the slot in Gase’s offense.

The Giants, looking to repair an anemic defense from a year ago, didn’t stand a chance against Darnold, whose dumpoff to Ty Montgomery, who started for Bell, put Gang Green on the doorstep of a score.

After a short run by Montgomery, Darnold punctuated the drive by sprinting right on a designed rollout and firing a bullet to Crowder for a 3-yard touchdown.

“His sideline demeanor and off-field demeanor are awesome,” Gase said of Darnold. “He is calm…. He played fast. (I was) just getting the calls in as fast as possible so he can go to work.”

One year after the Jets were one of the most inefficien­t offenses on third downs (32.2 percent, ranked 29th), Darnold and Co. converted on both third downs during the opening drive to take an early lead.

“We just continue to make strides,” Darnold said. “That’s what these preseason games are for. Communicat­ion. Continue to be on the same page. It didn’t really change from practice very much. The only thing that changed is that I was able to get hit. My communicat­ion with the o-line and the receivers and the running back, the tight end, I thought, was pretty good”

It was enough for Gang Green faithful, including owner Woody Johnson, to feel downright giddy about what lies ahead for the star-crossed franchise.

It’s no secret that Darnold’s rate of developmen­t will determine whether the Jets have any chance of breaking their eightyear playoff drought. Recent history suggests that a significan­t leap in his second season is possible. (See: Carson Wentz, Patrick Mahomes, Mitch Trubisky, etc.)

Darnold entered camp with a streamline­d body and proper mindset. He’s playing with more confidence and zip on his passes. Gase has attributed the extra juice on his young quarterbac­k’s passes to proper offseason rest after a hectic predraft schedule last year. Darnold believes the extra velocity can be traced to his additional confidence and comfort level with his surroundin­gs.

Whatever the reason, the difference is noticeable.

This is Darnold’s team. It’ll be incumbent upon Gase, who was hired primarily because of the brain trust’s belief that he was best man to maximize the signal caller’s prodigious gifts, to guide the centerpiec­e of the franchise in the right direction.

Darnold gave everyone a taste of Gase’s offense might look like this season. It was an encouragin­g first step for the coach and his young quarterbac­k.

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