New York Post

Geno sure he's the one ... or two

- By ZACH BRAZILLER zbraziller@nypost.com

It has been nearly two years since Geno Smith’s world was turned upside down and he lost his starting job with the Jets after that locker room sucker punch by then teammate IK Enemkpali that shattered his jaw.

Much has changed for Smith — he has switched from the Jets to the Giants, where he is battling to be a backup quarterbac­k, and he is coming back from a torn ACL — and yet one thing remains the same. His swagger. “I just have to be myself,” he said after practice on Wednesday, when asked what he has to show his new coaches. “I have the utmost confidence in myself and my ability. I don’t think I have to change one bit.”

Yet there’s no guarantee Smith will even be a Giant when the preseason ends. The fifth-year pro is sharing second-team reps with journeyman Josh Johnson, a player who lacks Smith’s résumé, but has the edge in terms of having a grasp of coach Ben McAdoo’s offense.

Johnson, 31, was with the Giants last year, active for two games and spent the rest of the season as a member of the practice squad. While Smith was mostly a bystander in the spring as he rehabbed his injury, Johnson was receiving key reps. But Smith said it doesn’t feel any different for him to actually be fighting for a roster spot for the first time in his career. He has described that merely as “outside noise,” preferring to talk about the opportunit­y he does have.

“Whenever I get a chance to go out there and prove my worth, or what I can do, that’s what I try to do,” the 26-year-old former second-round pick out of West Virginia said. “In this league, every rep counts. On game day, every single play counts. You never know when you can make that play that’ll either make or break the game, so when you take that approach to the practice field, I think it just makes for a better player.”

Smith, of course, has the edge in experience, with 29 NFL starts under his belt. But he spent the past two years on the sideline and then missed the final nine games last year after tearing his ACL.

Smith, however, said his surgically repaired right knee feels “great” and he’s “confident” in it, not thinking about the knee when he’s on the field. Smith showed it by taking off down the field on Wednesday. He’s not wearing a knee brace.

He also is feeling more comfortabl­e in the offense with each practice, comparing it to the one he ran with the Jets in his first two years in the league under offensive coordinato­r Marty Mornhinweg. So while on paper Johnson may seem to have an edge, Smith doesn’t agree.

“I don’t think I’m playing catch-up. We’ll see how things go, but to me, it’s to go out there and do what you have to do,” he said. “Make the right checks, make the right reads and then just let your athleticis­m take over.

“It is a competitio­n, that’s exactly what it is, and the best competitor­s, they always rise to the occasion.”

 ?? N.Y. Post: Charles Wenzelberg ?? BACK & BLUE: After nearly two full years on the sidelines, Geno Smith is confident he can make a positive contributi­on to the Giants, even as a backup quarterbac­k.
N.Y. Post: Charles Wenzelberg BACK & BLUE: After nearly two full years on the sidelines, Geno Smith is confident he can make a positive contributi­on to the Giants, even as a backup quarterbac­k.

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