Giants/Jets NFL Draft: First-Round Recap

Well I managed to completely whiff on both first-round picks for the Giants and Jets. The Giants’ miss was actually defensible — I don’t know anyone who predicted a running back in the first round for the G-Men, much less David Wilson (who?? I know, right?!). But I kicked myself when I saw that the Jets had drafted North Carolina defensive end Quinton Coples, who could give the Jets the outside pass rusher they’ve been looking for since Vernon Gholston (the Jets’ 2008 first-round selection) turned out to be a colossal bust.

I actually saw a piece about Coples in Sunday’s New York Post — the Jets had worked him out prior to the draft and raved about his speed off the edge. But I discounted the story in favor of Dontari Poe and Michael Floyd, both of whom were picked before the Jets made their selection. It would have helped to know that coach Rex Ryan apparently promised Coples that the Jets would pick him after he worked out for the team (I would have taken it with a grain of salt because it’s Rex, but still).

As for Wilson, I’m as surprised as you undoubtedly were. Yes, the Giants had the worst rushing offense in the NFL last season, lost Brandon Jacobs to free agency and needed a running back as insurance for injury-prone starter Ahmad Bradshaw. But the consensus was that when it came to the first round, this draft class went one-deep at running back: Alabama’s Trent Richardson, selected by the Browns with the third overall pick.

The selection is vintage Giants, though — draft a super-athletic but raw player in the first or second round and mold him into a Pro Bowler. The strategy worked with Osi Umenyiora and Jason Pierre-Paul, and the jury’s still out on last year’s athletic-but-undisciplined pick, cornerback Prince Amukamara. Wilson is the most athletic runner in the draft, even more than Richardson, because of his Dave Meggett-like lateral quickness. Can he be an effective second back behind Bradshaw? If he can cut down on his fumbles and improve his pass blocking, then yes. The kid had 1,709 yards rushing and nine touchdowns in 13 games last season for Virginia Tech — the talent is obviously there.

More to come next week, when I break down and grade the draft class of both New York teams.

Giants/Jets NFL Draft Preview

Lights? Check. Cameras filling Radio City Music Hall? Check. Massive over-coverage on ESPN? Big check.

That’s right folks, it’s the NFL Draft! The now-three-day extravaganza kicks off Thursday at 8PM Eastern with the first round, headline by purported can’t-miss quarterback prospects Andrew Luck (going with the No. 1 pick to the Colts) and Robert Griffin III (going second to the Redskins). I say ‘purported’ because for every Peyton Manning, there’s a Ryan Leaf.

As for New York’s two teams, the Jets own the 16th overall pick. The Giants, meanwhile, have the coveted final pick in the first round that is awarded to the defending Super Bowl champion. Speaking as a diehard Giants fan, please this let be the start of a slew of 32nd overall picks, if you know what I mean.

So who will the Jets and Giants pick with their first-round selections? Here are three possibilities for each team:

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Tebow’s Press Conference: Running Diary

Now it is done. Now the story ends. And there is no way to tell it. The art of fiction is dead. Reality has strangled invention. Only the utterly impossible, the inexpressibly fantastic, can ever be plausible again. –Red Smith, New York Herald Tribune, Oct. 4, 1951

Red Smith wrote what Deadspin called the greatest lede ever after Bobby Thomson hit the Shot Heard ‘Round The World. But viewed in a farcical light, the sentiment is perfect for the Masterpiece Theater that is the Jets and their new most famous player, backup quarterback Tim Tebow.

TebowMania kicked off Monday with a noon press conference introducing the polarizing QB to the New York media horde. A quick primer from a football standpoint: The Jets effectively traded backup QB Drew Stanton for Brad Smith 2.0, and while Rex Ryan said he may use Tebow in the Wildcat formation up to 20 times a game, the reality is that Tebow and Mark Sanchez can’t both live up to their potential (or ever feel comfortable) on the same team. It’s simply too much to ask of two aggressively mediocre signal-callers.

Alright, enough foreplay. Here’s how Tebow’s introduction went down.

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