The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

Jets set to draft QB at No. 3

- By Dennis Waszak Jr.

FLORHAM PARK, N.J. » The Jets called an aggressive audible by trading up to the No. 3 pick last month to assure themselves of getting one of the top quarterbac­ks available in the NFL draft.

Now comes the toughest play call of all.

Sam Darnold? Baker Mayfield? Josh Rosen? Josh Allen?

“You just want to get it right,” general manager Mike Maccagnan said.

And, the pressure is certainly on.

After all, this is a team that has been starving for a franchise quarterbac­k since the days of Broadway Joe. The likes of Richard Todd, Ken O’Brien, Chad Pennington and Mark Sanchez had some good moments as homegrown QBs, but none had the type of impact or sustained success of Joe Namath.

Since Namath’s last game with the Jets in 1976, the team has had 30 players make at least one start under center. On Thursday night, New York has the opportunit­y to add a quarterbac­k who might stop the revolving door.

That’s why the Jets were willing to deal the No. 6 overall pick to Indianapol­is along with two second-round selections this year and a second-rounder next year to move up three spots.

“It’s all about opportunit­y,” Maccagnan said. “We felt good about where we were originally picking and then we made the trade and moved ourselves to position ourselves, in our mind, to be in a position to have a good option and a good choice with that spot.”

New York’s ultimate decision, however, will be contingent upon what Cleveland — which also needs a quarterbac­k — does at No. 1 overall, and if the Giants stay put at No. 2 and pick a successor to Eli Manning or target another position.

That dynamic at the top of the draft, along with the lack of a consensus order among the top QBs, has created lots of intrigue and made mock drafts an always-changing mix-andmatch mess.

“When they made that move (the trade), that was before the owners’ meeting, which is very unusual,” said former Dallas VP of player personnel Gil Brandt, currently a draft analyst for NFL.com and SiriusXM NFL Radio.

“That led me to believe that he and his staff were ready to roll in terms of these quarterbac­ks in the middle of March, regardless of which one winds up at No. 3.”

Maccagnan wouldn’t tip his hand on how the Jets are leaning — and wouldn’t even acknowledg­e that quarterbac­k will be the way they’ll go with their first pick.

But it seems clear that either USC’s Darnold, Oklahoma’s Mayfield, UCLA’s Rosen or Wyoming’s Allen will be wearing green and white sometime Thursday night.

“I know everybody seems to be locked in on that, I don’t know why,” a smiling Maccagnan said of the QB-to-Jets speculatio­n. “We actually may take a safety this year . ... I think like everything else, the quarterbac­k is such an important position that it’s always going to be a focal point of that this may be a position of interest, especially for us.

“But, yeah, we’ll see how it plays itself out.”

 ?? SETH WENIG - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? FILE - In this Jan. 1, 2017, file photo, New York Jets general manager Mike Maccagnan looks on prior to an NFL football game against the Buffalo Bills, in East Rutherford, N.J. The Jets called an aggressive audible by trading up to the No. 3 pick last...
SETH WENIG - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE - In this Jan. 1, 2017, file photo, New York Jets general manager Mike Maccagnan looks on prior to an NFL football game against the Buffalo Bills, in East Rutherford, N.J. The Jets called an aggressive audible by trading up to the No. 3 pick last...

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