The News-Times

Wilson returning as Jets’ starting quarterbac­k

-

NEW YORK — After missing the last four games, Zach Wilson will be back under center for the Jets against the Texans, per sources. Quarterbac­ks Joe Flacco and Mike White went on the COVID-19 list Tuesday.

Wilson suffered a sprained PCL against the Patriots and missed four games. He was replaced by White, who did a decent job.

White played well enough to give pause on who would start once Wilson was healthy. White threw five touchdowns in his first eight quarters with a 405-yard performanc­e against the Bengals in an upset win.

But White struggled tremendous­ly against the Bills, as he tossed four intercepti­ons and the Jets got flatlined, 45-17.

Then the Jets started Flacco, who they traded for on Oct. 25, against the Miami Dolphins in Week 11. Saleh believed Flacco would be better equipped to handle the Dolphins’ high blitzing scheme.

Flacco proved Saleh right, as he went 12 for 19 for 168 yards and two touchdowns against the blitz.

Wilson could have returned against the Bills. But Saleh didn’t want to rush Wilson back when he started practicing two weeks ago.

“We’re going to do everything to make sure we protect this young man,” Saleh said on Monday. “So, when he is fully healthy and he feels like there’s no limitation­s in his ability to play football and he’s not thinking about that knee, we’ll get him out there. But he’s got to be 100 percent healthy before we get him out on the football field.”

Now Wilson is healthy and starting again.

Talent was never the issue with the former BYU star. But Gang Green believes that sitting on the sidelines had a positive effect on the No. 2 overall pick, improving his mental acumen as he watched.

They hope he learned how to run the offense better and cut down on the mistakes that popped up often in his five starts. He had 1,168 yards with four touchdowns and nine intercepti­ons with a passer rating of 63.5, all ranked towards the bottom of the league.

But no need to panic. Those are typical rookie struggles.

Some of Wilson’s struggles stem from adjusting to the speed of NFL defenses and altering his play style. He is a gunslinger who was learning when to take shots and that got him into trouble at times. He held the ball the longest among quarterbac­ks at 3.10 seconds on average.

When Wilson held the ball longer than 2.5 seconds, he had three touchdowns and nine intercepti­ons with a passer rating of 50. Some of that was to push the ball down the field, which is why his intended air yards per attempt was 8.8, seventh most according to Next Gen Stats. There were times when he could have thrown to the checkdown, but instead looked for the big play.

That’s where White and Wilson differed. White played within the offensive structure on a more consistent basis.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States