Saturday, April 27, 2013

Target for Jets' Geno Smith: to be 'a team QB'

FLORHAM PARK, N.J. (AP) a Geno Smith has set that agonizingly long wait in the green room at the NFL draft far behind him. He's got better items to think about today. And, the Newest York Jets' second-round pick sure has his sights set pretty high. "My goal will be a business quarterback," the former West Virginia quarterback reported Saturday. "But as of this moment, there is a lot of work to be done." The Jets certainly want to see that happen soon, particularly because it appears the last person they drafted expecting to assume that name a Mark Sanchez a has struggled mightily the last two periods and could possibly be on his solution. Ny selected its quarterback for the future Friday evening, stunning many who thought the Jets might opt for Sanchez and David Garrard in training camp and play out the summer season. With Smith suddenly in the mix, the long run could possibly be now. "My job is to compete," Smith said at his introductory news conference at the team's training facility. Johnson might be in line already to start, even though the Jets have six quarterbacks on the roster with Smith, Sanchez, Garrard, Tim Tebow, Greg McElroy and Matt Simms. But soon, Tebow and/or Sanchez might be gone. "We mentioned that just a little bit as far as reps," offensive coordinator Marty Mornhinweg said. "I know you may do it with three, now there is surely got to come an occasion where you need certainly to bother making a choice, the moment is very important as well. Therefore everything we do is essential. It is got to be very well planned and very well planned." Mornhinweg said he's spoken to Sanchez about the team's decision to draft Smith a and, in effect, getting his work and position on the Jets' roster in peril. "He knows this can be a competition now, therefore let us steel and roll," Mornhinweg said. "Here, we've four, even more, probably six, and I hope they are all thinking, 'Hey, I have an opportunity to go get a job.'" Jones, who had perhaps not heard from some of the team's other quarterbacks however, satisfied Mornhinweg at dinner the night before his professional morning a few weeks ago a' and then again on the field throwing the ball around. He talked to coach Rex Ryan and general supervisor John Idzik about his time with Smith, and it seemed there would be a chance the Jets would go after him in the very first round. As an alternative, Ny went with cornerback Dee Milliner at No. 9 and then defensive lineman Sheldon Richardson at No. 13. "I got word that it was between Sheldon and myself," Smith said. "But they decided Sheldon, and he's actually an excellent friend of mine, so I was happy for him." After falling at night Jets, Smith continued to drop through the opening round and wasn't happy about any of it. TELEVISION cameras caught him scowling, showing annoyed and embarrassed as you name after still another was called a' and perhaps not his. "It was kind of difficult to stomach," he acknowledged. He considered the next day going home, but decided to return to Radio City Music Hall and wait until he was finally drafted. It is seen by "i as a benefit in disguise," Smith said. "The primary reason for coming back was, I arrived on the scene the first day to represent my school and my children, and I did not want the understanding to be produced that I'm bitter I wasn't selected in the first round and let dozens of people down who help me. "So, I ensured I went back and went across that stage." Jones leaned on his family along with his belief to obtain through these annoying early times, saying that when he was supposed to go in the first round, he'd have gone then. "The emphasis is not where you start," Smith said, "but where you finish." Smith, who owns almost all of West Virginia's passing documents, gets rid of the ball quickly, will make completions on the function and is effective at producing huge plays a' some thing the Jets sorely lacked last season. He used for 11,662 meters a including back-to-back 4,000-yard seasons a 98 touchdowns and only 21 interceptions in four years at West Virginia. But there have been still some concerns about Smith being a franchise could be carryed by an elite-type quarterback who. Jones had some reliability issues and also fumbled the ball a scary 32 times. Contributing to those questions was a efficiency at the Pinstripe Bowl in the snow at Yankee Stadium, a loss to Syracuse in which Smith took two safeties and was rarely the dominant presence he'd been through the entire year when he threw 42 touchdown passes and just six interceptions. His overall skills were also questioned by scouts in certain predraft studies. "We do not care about anybody else's evaluations," explained Mornhinweg, who believes Smith is likely to be great in his West Coast-style crime. "We only care about ours." Smith was similarly resolute: "You know what," he said, "critics do not have a pick." Smith will require the playbook he received from the instructors and examine it within the next two weeks before he returns in two weeks for rookie camp. Then, he will escape on the area and the Jets will go from there. "Our goal," Mornhinweg said, "is, 'Hey, let us observe how quickly we can do this thing and get you ready to go, so you can perform at a top level.'" Smith doesn't have trouble with the expectations, and he thinks his ability to learn crimes and change plays at the type of scrimmage in college helped him develop his confidence and ability. "I was handed a significant level of freedom," he explained. "The coaches and the rest of the staff actually trusted me with the offense. Week in and week out, I was a part of piecing together the game ideas. I do believe it helped me develop on the span of the past two years."

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