Jets Need To Part Ways With Turnover-Prone Geno Smith

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Lichtenstein: Jets Need To Part Ways With Turnover-Prone Geno Smith
August 22, 2016 2:03 PM

Filed Under: Bryce Petty, Geno Smith, New York Jets, Steve Lichtenstein


Move on. There’s nothing more to see here.




That’s Jets fans’ plea to coach Todd Bowles regarding what should be done with backup quarterback Geno Smith.

For those few remaining supporters who claim that perhaps there’s more to Smith than meets the eye, I give you the Seinfeld-ian retort, “No, there’s less.”

The 25-year-old Smith has clearly not learned a thing in his three seasons, during which he turned the ball over an astounding 43 times in the 31 games he played.

Late in the second quarter of Friday’s 22-18 loss in Washington, Smith stared into triple coverage and threw anyway. The ball was intercepted by safety Will Blackmon. Washington scored on the next play to take a 14-2 lead into halftime.

It was no different from many of the mind-boggling plays we’ve been accustomed to seeing from Smith during his tenure with Gang Green.

Enough is enough.

The only turnover he should be allowed to make going forward is when he turns over his Jets playbook to Bowles sometime before Labor Day. There’s no justification for keeping Smith on the 53-man roster.

This is not about one meaningless play in a meaningless exhibition, or even Smith’s body of work in the two preseason games as compared to current No. 3 Bryce Petty.

Despite certain athletic attributes, Smith just hasn’t shown that he understands the quarterback position, and it is doubtful that he ever will.

Quarterback play involves as much mental processing as it does physical ability. Smith looks like he has no idea what the defense is doing, he fixates on one receiver, and then he makes poor decisions as to what he should do with the ball.

When Bowles goes over the film of Friday’s game, he should feel sick over the multiple instances when Smith tried to force the ball into coverage despite other outlets where a receiver was open.

Smith, who was the Jets’ second-round selection in the 2013 draft, is not a rookie anymore. The game is supposed to “slow down” for him at some point.

Instead, he still makes gaffes, such as the intentional-grounding penalty for not reaching the line of scrimmage on a third-down throw in the second quarter Friday.

The bigger issue is that these flaws never get corrected. After three years in the league, Smith still hasn’t figured out how to deal with pressure.

So even though Smith is the most experienced backup on the Jets’ depth chart, much of that experience has been negative and nothing has been gained from such negative experience. Would anyone really trust Smith to save the Jets’ season if starter Ryan Fitzpatrick was lost for an extended period?

I wouldn’t count on Petty, either, but at least with him there’s been some development going into his second NFL season.

Petty was 16-of-26 for 242 yards and two touchdowns in the second half Friday. He led three scoring drives, with a fourth stalled when tight end Zach Sudfeld fumbled on the Washington 8-yard line in the fourth quarter.

Though he took three sacks, Petty did not turn the ball over despite a leaky line and no running game. He took a big hit as he released a 19-yard strike to Sudfeld for the Jets’ first touchdown.

A strong second-half performance in a preseason game is only noteworthy for its curiosity pique. It should have told Bowles, “Maybe we should give Petty more,” as in being the first quarterback off the bench for Saturday’s tilt against the Giants.

Unfortunately, though Bowles wouldn’t comment on his quarterback rotation for the Giants, Smith was still receiving second-team reps at Sunday’s practice, per media reports.

My opinion hasn’t changed since last week’s post as it relates to the Jets’ folly if they opt to keep four quarterbacks — a strategy that no NFL team has employed since 2013 — past the final cutdown day. In fact, the recent injury buildup only reinforces my sense of the Jets’ upcoming peril that would come with retaining an extra signal caller (rookie Christian Hackenberg, the Jets’ 2016 second-round pick, sat for a second straight preseason game but is virtually guaranteed a roster slot) at the expense of a player at a position where depth might actually be needed on the field.

Running backs Matt Forte and Khiry Robinson have yet to play in a preseason game, wide receiver (and de-facto tight end) Quincy Enunwa suffered a concussion covering a punt Friday, the offensive line is being held together by duct tape, and reserve cornerbacks Dexter McDougle and Dee Milliner always seem to be sidelined with some ailment or other.

I would expect that it will only get worse on this aging team.

In addition, Rich Cimini of ESPN.com noted in his Sunday column that the Jets will need to create salary cap space before the season starts. Depending on the website you trust, general manager Mike Maccagnan currently has about $1.2 million in space.

However, that’s only because the final two roster slots aren’t counted in the figure. Neither is the allowance for practice squad players. That means Maccagnan will need to move some money around to squeeze everything in.

Smith is slated to earn about $1.6 million in the final year of his rookie deal. His departure would add about $1.1 million to the current season’s cap space, with about $500,000 counting toward the 2017 dead money pool.

Petty, a fourth-round pick last year, has a very manageable $663,000 cap hit this season.

Finances aside, the Jets need to move on from Smith. Petty has two weeks to prove that he has a future in the league, even if it’s as a backup.

If given the opportunity, I can’t imagine how he could be that much worse than Smith.

Follow Steve on Twitter at @SteveLichtenst1

http://newyork.cbslocal.com/2016/08/22/lichtenstein-jets-should-cut-geno-smith/
 
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Guest
Not usually a big fan of Lichtenstein's, but I think he's right on this time
 

DavidO

Pro Bowl Alternate
Jet Fanatics
Yeah. I don't know this reporter at all, but alot of sense being spoken here. Although, surely if Smith goes then Petty is assured to stay - this guy doesn't seem convinced by him!

Sent from my SM-G900F using Tapatalk
 
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flgreen

Guest
Yeah. I don't know this reporter at all, but alot of sense being spoken here. Although, surely if Smith goes then Petty is assured to stay - this guy doesn't seem convinced by him!

Sent from my SM-G900F using Tapatalk

He's WFAN's and CBS's channel 2 news' Jets beat writer.
 

Bigmoe

Happily Confused
The Mod Squad
Jet Fanatics
Jets Global
"Jets Need To Part Ways With Turnover-Prone Geno Smith"

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flgreen

Guest
Jets need to cut Geno Smith — for his sake and theirs
August 23, 2016 4:41pm EDTAugust 23, 2016 4:41pm EDTJets and Geno Smith need to make a clean break.
NFL


By Vinnie Iyer
@vinnieiyer

Updated at 4:41 p.m. ET

It's hard to name an NFL quarterback having a weirder, wilder offseason than Geno Smith.

At one point, he was looking like the Jets' surefire starter for 2016. Now as presaseason game action nears its end, he's sitting firmly on the team's roster bubble. The Jets must do themselves and him a favor by making it burst.

RELATED VIDEO


The team made it clear it wasn't OK trusting Smith as its QB in the short term when it finally re-signed Ryan Fitzpatrick at the beginning of training camp. Smith also is not the preferred passer of the future.

MORE: Ranking NFL's top 25 QBs

That's been evident since his shaky sophomore season in 2014. The new regime of coach Todd Bowles and general manager Mike Maccagnan that took over in 2015 and have been lukewarm at best about Smith's remaining prospects.


Despite naming Smith the No. 1 well before camp last year, they knew that Fitzpatrick could be a threat to Smith's status with his starting experience and encyclopedic knowledge of offensive coordinator Chan Gailey's playbook. Then came the technical knockout from IK Enemkpali, and Smith's sudden, complete fadeout from the job.

The Jets also have lined up more than stopgaps at the position, drafting Bryce Petty (fourth round) and Christian Hackenberg (second round) over the past two years.

While Hackenberg has been treated as a purely developmental rookie in training camp with little practice work and zero preseason playing time, Petty has worked to prove he's no pushover or afterthought in this situation.

Petty has rebounded from his own rookie struggles to look much better in Year 2. He was solid in the first preseason game and gave the Jets a lot more to think about in the second game with a brilliant second half (16-of-26, 242 yards, 2 TDs) against Washington. It came on the heels of Smith's disastrous first-half stint that included an interception.

MORE: 2016 Fantasy Football cheat sheet

Bowles had declared that Smith was in no danger of losing his No. 2 job to Petty before that game, but the coach's tune changed a lot Sunday, three days after the game.

"Right now they're all playing and we're trying to see who sorts out what," Bowles said.

Let's make it easier for the Jets.

There's no upside to keeping Smith around anymore. For starters, as a disappointed, demoted, once franchise passer, he doesn't have a backup's mentality. He's only signed through 2016, and there's no way the Jets will suddenly see something to keep him in '17 and beyond.

Petty also has done all the right things to be a second-stringer. Given the Jets haven't really done enough with Hackenberg to get a read on him, it's reasonable to think the more physically talented Petty will be the better option to vie for a long-term job post-Fitzpatrick.

The Jets need a long look at Hackenberg and Petty in practices during the season, and that won't happen trying to make room for Smith to get reps.

Smith also needs his opportunity to get his second chance elsewhere, a la Blaine Gabbert. It hasn't worked for New York for many reasons, and this is no time to drag it out and keep Smith as a lame duck. The only way he might be able to show his potential is with another team.

Carrying four quarterbacks is illogical in an era when several teams have only two on their active roster. The Jets may think trying to prop up what Smith's worth to them and putting his release on hold can get them something good back in a trade. It won't.

At this point, Petty is a better outside commodity, and if that's the case, the Jets should keep him over Smith, anyway. Knowing how Fitzpatrick struggled at the end of last season and seeing his injury history, there's a fair chance the Jets will be forced into an expedited evaluation of their future.

With Smith out of that picture, the right time for the breakup is now. What they need to be doing is what he wants to be done, so just do it already.
 

lounap23

Legend
Jet Fanatics
Jets need to cut Geno Smith — for his sake and theirs
August 23, 2016 4:41pm EDTAugust 23, 2016 4:41pm EDTJets and Geno Smith need to make a clean break.
NFL


By Vinnie Iyer
@vinnieiyer

Updated at 4:41 p.m. ET

It's hard to name an NFL quarterback having a weirder, wilder offseason than Geno Smith.

At one point, he was looking like the Jets' surefire starter for 2016. Now as presaseason game action nears its end, he's sitting firmly on the team's roster bubble. The Jets must do themselves and him a favor by making it burst.

RELATED VIDEO


The team made it clear it wasn't OK trusting Smith as its QB in the short term when it finally re-signed Ryan Fitzpatrick at the beginning of training camp. Smith also is not the preferred passer of the future.

MORE: Ranking NFL's top 25 QBs

That's been evident since his shaky sophomore season in 2014. The new regime of coach Todd Bowles and general manager Mike Maccagnan that took over in 2015 and have been lukewarm at best about Smith's remaining prospects.


Despite naming Smith the No. 1 well before camp last year, they knew that Fitzpatrick could be a threat to Smith's status with his starting experience and encyclopedic knowledge of offensive coordinator Chan Gailey's playbook. Then came the technical knockout from IK Enemkpali, and Smith's sudden, complete fadeout from the job.

The Jets also have lined up more than stopgaps at the position, drafting Bryce Petty (fourth round) and Christian Hackenberg (second round) over the past two years.

While Hackenberg has been treated as a purely developmental rookie in training camp with little practice work and zero preseason playing time, Petty has worked to prove he's no pushover or afterthought in this situation.

Petty has rebounded from his own rookie struggles to look much better in Year 2. He was solid in the first preseason game and gave the Jets a lot more to think about in the second game with a brilliant second half (16-of-26, 242 yards, 2 TDs) against Washington. It came on the heels of Smith's disastrous first-half stint that included an interception.

MORE: 2016 Fantasy Football cheat sheet

Bowles had declared that Smith was in no danger of losing his No. 2 job to Petty before that game, but the coach's tune changed a lot Sunday, three days after the game.

"Right now they're all playing and we're trying to see who sorts out what," Bowles said.

Let's make it easier for the Jets.

There's no upside to keeping Smith around anymore. For starters, as a disappointed, demoted, once franchise passer, he doesn't have a backup's mentality. He's only signed through 2016, and there's no way the Jets will suddenly see something to keep him in '17 and beyond.

Petty also has done all the right things to be a second-stringer. Given the Jets haven't really done enough with Hackenberg to get a read on him, it's reasonable to think the more physically talented Petty will be the better option to vie for a long-term job post-Fitzpatrick.

The Jets need a long look at Hackenberg and Petty in practices during the season, and that won't happen trying to make room for Smith to get reps.

Smith also needs his opportunity to get his second chance elsewhere, a la Blaine Gabbert. It hasn't worked for New York for many reasons, and this is no time to drag it out and keep Smith as a lame duck. The only way he might be able to show his potential is with another team.

Carrying four quarterbacks is illogical in an era when several teams have only two on their active roster. The Jets may think trying to prop up what Smith's worth to them and putting his release on hold can get them something good back in a trade. It won't.

At this point, Petty is a better outside commodity, and if that's the case, the Jets should keep him over Smith, anyway. Knowing how Fitzpatrick struggled at the end of last season and seeing his injury history, there's a fair chance the Jets will be forced into an expedited evaluation of their future.

With Smith out of that picture, the right time for the breakup is now. What they need to be doing is what he wants to be done, so just do it already.

Best article yet on this situation
 
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