Did he see NFL future for Jets quarterback?
Ryan Fitzpatrick began running with the outcome already in hand and the ball along for the ride. Then the quarterback was about to meet up with a defensive back, but he wasn’t about to slide. The QB took on the DB and knocked him out of the game.
“The game was in the bag and he’s fighting for every yard,” said Neil Rose, Fitzpatrick’s teammate at the time. “He puts his head down and shoulders down. It was as if he was doing the hitting and not the defensive back. I still remember being on the sideline and everyone kind of looking at each other after that happened.”
That happened when Fitzpatrick was a freshman at Harvard, a backup quarterback in 2001. Even then, he was making an impression.
Rose was the second-year starter at quarterback, a redshirt junior at the time. In fact, he was on his way to leading the program to its first perfect season in 88 years.
He couldn’t tell then or the next season that Fitzpatrick definitely had the ability to make it in the NFL, let alone last into his 12th season. Fitz- patrick’s freshman year with the Jets in 2015 resulted in a franchise-record 31 touchdown tosses, and he threw three more over the first two games of this season.
But Rose, still the owner of more passing records than any quarterback in Harvard history, could tell during their two seasons as teammates in Cambridge, Mass., that he had a lot going for him. Fitz- patrick then took over in 2003. And in Rose’s eyes, he ultimately put Harvard on the college football map in a whole new way.
“I think one of his legacies is he’s changed the way that young recruits look at Harvard,” said Rose, who went into finance instead of football and has lived on Bainbridge Island in the state of Washington for about the last four years after spending much of his life in Hawaii.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der October 2016-Ausgabe von NY Jets Confidential.
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Diese Geschichte stammt aus der October 2016-Ausgabe von NY Jets Confidential.
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FIRST DOWN- A lot of potential, but a lot to learn
There is a lyric in an old song by the rock group Chicago that sums up where Zach Wilson is right now:
IN HIS OWN WORDS WITH DEFENSIVE COORDINATOR JEFF ULBRICH - Ulbrich breaks down Jets' defensive personnel
(Marcus Maye) can do it all. I would feel comfortable with him (at free or strong safety). He’s a guy that, to me, he can play deep, he can play the half field, he can play the middle third, he can do that and you feel comfortable with it. I think he’s got range, speed and athleticism. I think he’s got ball skills and instincts to be a deep safety. But I think he’s got enough size and girth and want-to and courage to play in the box. It’ll be fun to utilize all the things that he does. He can cover tight ends; he can cover some of the wide receivers in this league.
Dan's Minicamp Diary
Becton bombarded with weighty questions
Saleh calls Wilson ‘relentless' as a worker
QUESTION SESSION WITH QB ZACH WILSON
Jets hope initiatives will increase winning edge
Aside from adding as many good players as possible to help the Jets improve, coach Robert Saleh and GM Joe Douglas are trying to turn over every stone to find extra ways to give their team a winning edge, and two examples of this were announced over the course of the offseason, with the additions of a game management coach (Matt Burke) and the installation of an Athletic Care and Performance Department. Let’s take a closer look at these two moves and how they might help the Jets:
Dan's Spring Camp Diary
This time of year for learning, experimenting, not stats
AUDIBLES-Saleh doesn't cave on offseason work
Tom Brady might be wrong about this one.
SAFETIES
Justin Simmons, Broncos 6-2 • 202 pounds • 27 years old
OFFENSIVE TACKLES
Trent Williams, 49ers 6-5 • 320 pounds • 32 years old
LINEBACKERS
Lavonte David, Buccaneers 6-0 • 226 pounds • 26 years old