The first week of Jets training camp is in the books.
A few takeaways from Florham Park.
The offense is getting there
It wasn’t a sterling start for the offense in camp. It’s not so much that the defense was ahead of them (as is usually the case to begin the summer) as it was the group looking uncomfortable, discombobulated. Robert Saleh, on Friday, said it was no time to panic. On Saturday and Sunday you saw why as things got considerably better.
Procedural penalties, drops and mental mistakes are all usually common when players are thinking more so than doing. That was certainly the case early on. There are so many new pieces on offense (Aaron Rodgers, Allen Lazard, Mecole Hardman just to name a few), but even those returning are learning Nathaniel Hackett’s scheme for the first time.
It was almost as if a switch went on later in the week. The defense still made its plays, but the offense threw a few punches itself especially on Saturday, where Rogers connected with Tyler Conklin, Hardman and Corey Davis for three red-zone touchdowns.
Remember, too, these practices are still scripted. That gives the defense an edge because, after a day or two, they know exactly what is coming and start to cheat a bit. It will be fun to see how things open up once the installation training wheels come off.
Aaron Rodgers
It’s actually remarkable how much of a difference competence makes at the quarterback position. It’s night and day from the last few years with the Jets. Saturday was the first day Rodgers really shined, but there was this calming presence even when the offense went through its learning curve the days prior.
As for anyone doubting if Rodgers was still as physically gifted as he was in Green Bay: Don’t. He stood at the 50-yard line during organized team activities (while dealing with his tweaked calf) and had a long toss with a trainer standing in the end zone. He was throwing them 50, 55 and 60 yards on a rope without a crow hop.
It’s not just the long passes, though. They’re impressive, yes, but just watching him in individual drills is different. Many, many quarterbacks have donned the Jets helmet in recent years — all with varying levels of hype. You see them throw to receivers and, even against air, there’s usually some wide window of where the ball actually goes. Wideouts will have to reach high, behind, a little low — that was normal. Well, not anymore. At least not with Rodgers. Every single pass he throws is in the exact same spot. Receivers don’t have to move at all. It’s a real-life example of the silly hit me in the numbers cliche. Only Rodgers, every single time, hits guys in the numbers.