The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

Jets report without Fitzpatric­k

- By DennisWasz­ak Jr.

FLORHAM PARK, N.J. >> The first rule of Jets training camp: No talking about Ryan Fitzpatric­k.

With players reporting Wednesday to the team’s facility for physicals a day before the start of practices, this biggest topic of conversati­on was the guy who wasn’t even there.

No one knows if or when Fitzpatric­k will resign with New York. But one thing was clear: Discussing the quarterbac­k’s monthslong contract stalemate with the Jets was off limits.

“All questions about Ryan are for coach (Todd) Bowles,” running back Matt Forte said. “They told me to tell you all that. Everybody knows who ‘ they’ are.”

The team has been locked in a staredown with Fitzpatric­k and his representa­tives all winter, spring and, now, summer. Fitzpatric­k set a franchise record with 31 touchdown passes last year while leading the Jets within a victory of a playoff spot. But he and the Jets have failed to come to an agreement on a deal that would satisfy both sides.

So, for now, Geno Smith is the starter again — just as he was a year ago, before a punch from a teammate broke his jaw during camp and pushed Fitzpatric­k into the role he never relinquish­ed even when Smith got healthy.

Forte was one of five Jets players who spoke to the media on report day, along with center Nick Mangold, safety Marcus Gilchrist and linebacker­s David Harris and Erin Henderson. Each of them sidesteppe­d questions about Fitzpatric­k, deferring to Bowles.

The Jets coach was scheduled to speak to the media for the first time Thursday after the first training camp practice.

“I have talked to Fitz,” said Mangold, one of the quarterbac­k’s best friends on the team. “Do I talk football or business? No, because I ask him how his kids are doing, how’s your golf game, those type of things. As far as his mindset, I have no idea.”

When pressed about whether he’s curious about what’s going on, Mangold came up with an unusual comparison: those who go to smell the stench of the corpse flower at the New York Botanical Garden. Yes, really. “Curiosity is going to get you over to that plant in the Bronx and smell that terrible smell,” Mangold said. “Yeah, the corpse flower. Curiosity is going to get you to smell something. Some people want to smell something bad. Some people want to find out different mindsets. I don’t particular­ly care.”

Mangold reiterated that he has no control over the contract situation with Fitzpatric­k and is focused now only on who is actu- ally in camp.

“Hopefully, things get worked out,” he said. “If they don’t, they don’t. If they do, that’s great. I have no control over it, so I don’t particular­ly worry about it.”

If Fitzpatric­k doesn’t come back, then the job is all Smith’s. Forte, who signed with New York in March as a free agent, was impressed by what he saw during the offseason.

“You could see his arm strength, his accuracy and his decision-making were pretty good,” Forte said. “There weren’t too many drills we were doing where there was pressure, but his timing and calling timeouts, he made good decisions on that. Going against our defense, which is no slack of a defense, it was good to see him do that and I was impressed by him.”

Several players, such as wide receivers Brandon Marshall and Eric Decker, made it clear early in the offseason that they would like to see Fitzpatric­k return. That might have created a bit of an awkward situation for Smith, who has tried to approach the offseason as though he’ll be the starter in Week 1 against Cincinnati.

“Nobody knows except him,” Harris said of Smith. “But he’s not going around throwing a pity party for himself. I know that.”

 ?? KATHY WILLENS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? New York Jets quarterbac­k Geno Smith (7) throws a pass during NFL football practice in Florham Park, N.J. in May.
KATHY WILLENS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE New York Jets quarterbac­k Geno Smith (7) throws a pass during NFL football practice in Florham Park, N.J. in May.

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