The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Davis out to prove he’s a No. 1 WR

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FLORHAM PARK, N.J. — Corey Davis understand­s why he’s with the New York Jets. And he’s ready to show everyone the reason. One big catch at a time. “I believe … I know that I’m a No. 1 receiver in this league,“Davis said this week. “It’s great that (the Jets) saw that during free agency.”

Davis spent his first four

NFL seasons in Tennessee after being the fifth overall pick in the 2017 draft out of Western Michigan. He had some impressive games and flashed playmaking ability, but he wasn’t necessaril­y viewed in league circles as

an elite, bona fide top wide receiver — especially after the Titans drafted A.J. Brown in 2019.

Davis wasn’t re-signed during the offseason and hit free agency. The Jets pounced, giving him a three-year, $37.5 million contract.

And just like that, Davis was second-fiddle no more.

“I’m ready for it,“he said. “I’ve always thought of myself as a No. 1 receiver. I have to go out there and prove it to the league.”

The 26-year-old Davis has 207 career catches for 2,851 yards and 11 touchdowns in 56 games. Those are hardly numbers to brush aside, but he wants more. And he believes he’ll have the type of production that leaves no doubts as to how good he is.

Davis has already endeared himself to his new teammates, who voted him one of the squad’s captains on offense.

“It’s amazing,” Davis said, clearing his throat. “It’s a great feeling, man, just coming here for the first year and having these players vote me to be a captain, it speaks volumes. They have a lot of trust in me and a lot of confidence in me, and it feels good, man.

“I’ve got to lead these boys, and I’m ready for it.”

Taking more of a leadership role was something Davis focused on when he joined the Jets.

“I wanted to evolve as a person and as a player as well,” he said. “And being a leader is part of that. We have a young team and a young wideout corps and a lot of these guys lean on me, and that’s something I want. I want that pressure.“

Last season was tough for Davis off the field. He missed two games after testing positive for COVID-19.

A few weeks later, he opted to play just one day after his older brother Titus — his idol and a former NFL receiver who spent time with the Jets — died from a rare form of kidney cancer.

“My brother was everything to me,” Davis said shortly after signing with the Jets in March. “I tried to walk like him, I tried to talk like him, I tried to do everything like him. I looked up to him tremendous­ly. Without him, I’m not who I am.“

Davis leaned on his faith, as well as his wife and their infant daughter, to help lift him from a dark place.

“He’s at such a good point in his life personally, off the field, just with his family and all that,” offensive coordinato­r Mike LaFleur said. “It carries over to the building. He’s the same person every single day.”

On the field, Davis has establishe­d a nice rapport with rookie quarterbac­k Zach Wilson. They increasing­ly showed a good connection during training camp and in preseason.

Wilson, who was also voted a captain, was even more impressed by what he learned about Davis off the field.

“He’s not a vocal leader and I don’t think you need him to be, at all,” Wilson said. “I think you see his leadership day in and day out and just the way that he approaches the game and the way that he just does everything right. And, you know, he never complains about anything. You’re never calling on him in meetings for not giving enough effort on a play or something like that.

“Guys see that and everyone is just like, ‘Geez, look at Corey, this guy’s always doing the right thing.’ And I think that he’s bringing guys along with him. And what makes him the No. 1 receiver is literally just that.”

 ?? Mike Roemer / Associated Press ?? WR Corey Davis was named one of the Jets captains for this season by his teammates.
Mike Roemer / Associated Press WR Corey Davis was named one of the Jets captains for this season by his teammates.

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