New York Post

Hack to the future

Now is time for young QB to start showing his worth

- Steve Serby steve.serby@ nypost.com

CHRISTIAN Hackenberg was on the faraway field out of sight and much too out of mind, still a mystery to his team, to Jets fans, and unfortunat­ely, probably to himself as the Jets’ OTAs began Tuesday with Josh McCown working with the starters.

Hackenberg threw one out against air to the left sidelines that maybe only Kristaps Porzingis might have jumped up to catch on a day when the second-year quarterbac­k also managed to effortless­ly whip one intermedia­te bullet that undoubtedl­y would have had general manager Mike Maccagnan doing cartwheels. From a distance, in 11-on-11 drills, you could see Hackenberg whistling shorter completion­s, but also a deeper shot that was intercepte­d.

If you consider hitting the broad side of a barn progress, then Hackenberg has made progress from a rookie season, when coach Todd Bowles and former offensive coordinato­r Chan Gailey were petrified to throw him to the wolves.

Hackenberg will be part of an open competitio­n with McCown and Bryce Petty, but at this early juncture, he has as good a chance to beat out McCown and win the starting job as Joe Namath does. Everybody loves a charade. But to paraphrase Buccaneers backup quarterbac­k Ryan Fitzpatric­k: If you don’t play well, it will be a game of musical chairs. And the Jets will be looking for an excuse to pull the rug out from under McCown — but only if and when Hackenberg is deemed ready.

Hackenberg’s best chancen to close the gap and learn new offen-offensive coordinato­r John Morton’s system will come to a large degree from how quickly he allows the ultra-profession­al McCown, entering his 15th season with his eighth team, to mentor him.

Hackenberg should doo himself a huge favor and seize the moment knowing McCown, 38 in July, has been bitten by the injury bug. Knowing that Maccagnan next season will be drafting a new franchise quarterbac­k if Hackenberg fails to make an emphatic statement that his days as a project are behind him. He would have no one to blame but himself if he failed to adopt the-future-is-now urgency.

“As far as I think how you draw a quarterbac­k up — big, strong arm, athletic ... he fits that mold, for sure,” McCown said on a day when Hackenberg was off limits to the media. “And then his mindset, it’s right in line. He works very hard. I think he’s a sharp kid, and I think he’s got a lot in front of him.”

If the McCown Jets lose as much as everyone is virtually certain they will, the “We want Hack” chants will arrive as early as late September, if not sooner. So he has these next four months to dispel fears that he is doomed to be a bust.

“It’s just about learning this game,” McCown said. “What it takes for one guy to have a career is different than next, because you and I may learn different. You have to develop your process, and whatever it takes for you to be ready to go and practice every day.”

McCown threw 18 passes as a rookie in 2002 backing up Jake Plummer in Arizona.

“I don’t feel like my first few years I really understood what it took to develop my process,” McCown said.

Kurt Warner and Jon Kitna became invaluable mentors for him in his fourth and fifth seasons.

“I feel like when I’m talking with Christian and I’m talking with Bryce, I feel like I’m speaking to myself back then, like, ‘ Oh man, I wish I would have known this, I wish I would have known that.’ So that’s what I want to share with them, hopefully make their journeys better,” McCown said.

McCown’s leadership was on full display when he clapped his hands and implored the Jets’ defense to raises its play, before stepping into the huddle.

“As we grow as an offense, it’s about us pushing them so that the defense can grow too,” McCown said.

Hackenberg can observe a lot by watching while he waits his turn to work with the starters.

“The quarterbac­ks will be rotating, getting the same amount of reps throughout thethe week,” Morton said. “We’re giving everybody a great opportunit­y to show themselves anand see if they can be the starter.”

Bowles’ future ultimately could hinge on Hackenberg’s developmen­t. “We’re gonna get to see him come out of his shell a little bit. "Bowles said Enough of the tortoise. It is time for Hackenberg to be the hare.

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Christian Hackenberg
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