Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Star DE Jones has first-round potential

- JOHN MCGONIGAL

Patrick Jones’ decision to leave Pitt was a no-brainer. The star defensive end almost left after the 2019 season, opting to return and improve his Day 2 draft stock. Now, this year’s ACC sacks leader will be a potential first-rounder come April.

Still, Jones drove away from Pittsburgh Saturday morning with a “bitterswee­t” taste in his mouth.

“It’s a great feeling to move on to the next part of my life. But I’m also going to miss everyone from Pitt every day,” Jones told the Post-Gazette on the road home to Chesapeake, Va. “It is a great feeling, though, starting this new chapter of my life. My next step is getting to work.”

Jones has a lot for which to prepare. The Bednarik Award

semifinali­st declared for the 2021 NFL draft this past Friday, and now he will have to get ready for the NFL Scouting Combine in late February in Indianapol­is.

As of now, Jones still is in the process of identifyin­g an agent. He’s also unsure if he’ll go away to train for the combine. For the time being, he’ll be home in the Virginia Beach area working out with trainer Anthony Stringfiel­d, who prepared former first-round Florida State quarterbac­k EJ Manuel, among others, for the NFL.

Regardless of where he trains and with whom he signs, Jones’ body of work ought to be enough to garner considerat­ion from teams in the top 32 picks.

Jones was a second-team All-ACC honoree in 2019, contributi­ng 43 tackles, 12 tackles for a loss, 8½ sacks and a conference- high 4 forced fumbles. And this year, he was one-half of the best defensive end duo in Football Bowl Subdivisio­n. Rushing opposite Rashad Weaver, maybe a firstround­er himself, Jones finished Pitt’s 11-game season with 9 sacks and 13 tackles for a loss, ranking second and 16th in FBS, respective­ly.

Jones’ production and tape have attracted interest from NFL draft analysts. The 6-foot-5, 260-pound passrusher is CBS Sports’ No. 25 overall prospect. He’s ranked No. 46 overall by ESPN’s Todd McShay. Meanwhile, Mel Kiper Jr. has Jones pegged as the fourth-best defensive end in this stacked class.

“And I think I’m more versatile than a lot of people may give me credit for,” Jones said. “If you turn on the 2018 film, I played inside and played nose guard on third down in [Pitt’s passing down] delta package. I can stand up and play linebacker. I can play D-end with my hand in the dirt. I can do a lot more than what people already know.”

Jones, who deserves a lot of credit for his own developmen­t, also recognized the role played by Charlie Partridge, “the best D-line coach in the country.”

Partridge oversaw Jones’ growth from two-star recruit to NFL prospect. The man who mentored J.J. Watt at Wisconsin passed along everything he knew to Jones, who’s known as one of the program’s more insatiable film junkies. Jones’ father, Patrick, said his son’s work ethic is “out of control,” a personalit­y trait that clicked with Partridge from the jump. And when Jones started receiving pats on the back by way of ACC and national honors, it was Partridge who kept him grounded.

Learning more from Partridge is one of many reasons why Jones doesn’t regret returning to Pitt for the 2020 season. The team’s disappoint­ing 6-5 record is far from what Jones, Weaver, Damar Hamlin and the rest of Pitt’s NFL talent envisioned in the summer. But Jones takes a lot of pride in not only improving his stock, but also perseverin­g through the pandemic, both individual­ly and as a program.

“I don’t think people realize how much of a sacrifice it is being away from your family during a time like this,” Jones said. “You don’t know what’s going on. You don’t get to see them. And at the same time, you’ve got to wake up at 5 or 6 o’clock in the morning to practice and be 100%.”

“This season was abnormal,” Jones continued. “The hardest part of the season was knowing you were practicing all week with the chance that the game would be taken away from you on the last day, kind of like what happened with Georgia Tech. There was a lot of mental stress on people. It really taught you to stay where your feet are.”

For the past five years, both of Jones’ feet were in Pittsburgh.

It stayed that way until the end, as Jones chose to play in Pitt’s regular-season finale at Georgia Tech. He understand­s why Weaver and Hamlin didn’t play in the reschedule­d game, sticking to their previously planned predraft process. He supported them after Pitt’s 34-20 win and did so again over the weekend. But finishing the year with teammates was important to him and his family.

Jones wore the Pitt uniform one final time — racking up a team-high seven tackles — with his sister and cousin in the stands. His parents previously saw him on senior day, a 33-point victory Nov. 21 against ACC Coastal Division rival Virginia Tech.

Jones said the memory that sticks with him from that day was Pitt’s postgame locker room. For his parents, it was seeing Jones jog out of the Heinz Field tunnel once more — an emotional moment as their son closed one chapter and opened another.

“Nobody saw him getting up in high school at 5 o’clock in the morning, riding his bike to the gym to get a workout in before he went to school. Nobody saw him do the extra training after football practice at night. No one saw the hard work he put in,” his mother, Angela, said. “He kept pushing, and we saw it pay off. We’re just extremely proud of him. And we know he’s going to keep working hard because it doesn’t stop here.”

“It’s exciting and refreshing just to know I have a new start coming in life,” Jones added. “Everything I worked for in my life, I have the opportunit­y to go get it.”

 ?? Matt Freed/Post-Gazette ?? Pitt defensive lineman Patrick Jones II (91) celebrates after sacking Louisville quarterbac­k Malik Cunningham on Sept. 26 at Heinz Field.
Matt Freed/Post-Gazette Pitt defensive lineman Patrick Jones II (91) celebrates after sacking Louisville quarterbac­k Malik Cunningham on Sept. 26 at Heinz Field.
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