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Giants - Round 1, 6th Pick Overall - Daniel Jones, QB
5 years ago  ::  Apr 25, 2019 - 9:04PM #1
JonahFalcon
Posts: 25,531



  • Daniel Jones, 6-5/220



  • Quarterback



  • Duke




Daniel Jones Scouting Report
By Charlie Campbell

Strengths:
  • Above-average accuracy
  • Can throw a fastball into tight windows
  • Good height
  • Able to loft in touch passes
  • Throws a very catchable ball
  • Stands tall in the pocket despite the rush
  • Good field vision at times
  • Moves his eyes
  • Works through his progression
  • Can throw receivers open
  • Can push the ball downfield
  • Throws a good deep ball
  • Has more mobility than many realize
  • Can buy time or pick up yards on the ground
  • Good size for a NFL starting quarterback
  • Intelligent
  • Shows the ability to read defenses
  • Knows where his receivers are on each play
  • Upside





Weaknesses:
  • Will throw into coverage that he shouldn't
  • Needs to improve timing
  • Holds the ball too long
  • Could shorten his delivery
  • Broken collarbone in 2018



Summary: Duke's head coach, David Cutcliffe, is one of the most valued and respected quarterback gurus in football. He was the coaching mentor to both Peyton and Eli Manning, and at Duke, Cutcliffe provided Jones very good preparation for the NFL over his three years as the Blue Devils' starting quarterback.

As a freshman, Jones connected on 63 percent of his passes for 2,836 yards with 16 touchdowns and nine interceptions. In 2017, he completed 56 percent of his passes for 2,439 yards with 12 touchdowns and 11 interceptions. Jones had his best season in 2018, despite dealing with some injuries. He completed 61 percent of his passes on the year for 2,674 yards with 22 touchdowns and nine interceptions. Many around the league thought Jones would return for his redshirt senior year, but he decided to jump to the next level and declared for the 2019 NFL Draft.

There is a lot to like about Jones, and he has the potential to be a franchise quarterback with his ability to be a pro-style pocket passer. Jones has a strong arm and can really spin the ball. That was clearly seen by area scouts and the rest of the league at the Senior Bowl. Jones has the ability to make all the throws needed for the NFL. He can loft in touch passes downfield and throw some fastballs into tight windows. Jones is very good at putting air underneath his touch passes to drop them in the bucket and throws a very catchable ball.

Jones has been well prepared for the NFL, as he is an intelligent signal-caller. In speaking to one NFC general manager, they really liked how Jones knew where all of his receivers would be and was able to move to them when he had to throw under duress. Jones has quality field vision and works beyond his primary read. He does a decent job of dissecting the coverage the defense is employing, and is able to manipulate coverage with his eyes.

In the face of a rush, Jones stands tall and keeps his eyes downfield while the rush closes in on him. While Jones is not a dynamic runner for the NFL, he does move around pretty well and can pick up some yards on the ground while also being able to buy time through scrambling. Additionally, Jones can make some nice throws on the run. Given the speed of pro defenders, Jones is not a true rushing threat, but he can be functional enough to dodge some sacks and pick up some yards on the ground when nothing is open downfield.

As a passer, Jones does have things to work on for the NFL. He can hold the ball too long and not pull the trigger fast enough. With the speed of pro defenses, Jones has to be more decisive and get the ball out faster when he has an open receiver. Jones' timing should improve with more experience and coaching. There were also too many times when Jones would force some throws into coverage. He can trust his arm too much and sometimes throws passes that he shouldn't. It also wouldn't hurt Jones to shorten his delivery, which will help him to be effective for the faster pro game with its smaller windows of time to complete passes. It would also help him by reducing the time for pass-rushers to get to him.

For the 2019 NFL Draft, Jones looks like a consensus first-round pick from speaking with team sources. He could become a franchise quarterback and be a good pro starter. Three general managers told me they thought that Jones would rise in the leadup to the draft and be the first quarterback taken. Regardless of if he is the initial signal-caller to go off the board, Jones should be a top-20 pick.



Player Comparison: Eli Manning. Jones has the look of a Manning with his strong arm, pocket presence, field vision, and passing polish. In terms of his flaws, Jones is more similar to Eli Manning than Peyton Manning.

NFL Matches: New York Giants, Jacksonville, Denver, Cincinnati, Miami, Washington, Pittsburgh, Los Angeles Chargers, New England

Obviously, free agency will have a big impact on the quarterback market because some teams will acquire veterans and won't consider taking a signal-caller with a first-round pick. The first quarterback-needy team selecting in Round 1 is the New York Giants. They have an aging and declining Eli Manning, but passed on a potential franchise quarterback last year. They can't continue doing that. Jones could be their quarterback of the future.

The Jaguars could move on from the inept Blake Bortles and get a new franchise quarterback this offseason. With the seventh-overall pick, they could take a trigger man if they don't add a veteran starter in free agency.

Denver needs a quarterback of the future due to Case Keenum just being a stop-gap veteran. Jones' arm and pocket passing could intrigue John Elway.

Cincinnati could decide to move on from Andy Dalton with its new head coach. Ditto for Miami with Ryan Tannehill. Thus, Jones could go in the early teens to the Bengals or the Dolphins.

The Redskins could consider taking a quarterback in the first round because Alex Smith may miss the 2019 season due to his leg injury. Even if he comes back, he is aging and limited, so Washington could select a quarterback on the opening night of the 2019 NFL Draft.

The Steelers, Chargers and Patriots are all teams that could consider a quarterback as their aging signal-callers have a limited number of years left.
5 years ago  ::  Apr 25, 2019 - 9:07PM #2
JonahFalcon
Posts: 25,531












Daniel Jones





Daniel Jones



Duke

QB














Prospect Info



College

Duke



Hometown



Class





Charlotte , NC



r-Junior





Height



Weight



Arms





6' 5"



221 lbs



32 1/2”



Hands

9 3/4”












Prospect Grade



5.81

Chance to Become NFL Starter


How We Grade





















2019 Draft Results



Drafted by

New York Giants

Giants


Round 1 ‧ Pick 6



Go to Pick












40 Yard Dash

4.81u

Seconds


 




Bench Press

--

Reps


 




Vertical Jump

33.5

INCHES


 




Broad Jump

120.0

INCHES


 




3 Cone Drill

7.0

Seconds


 




20 Yd Shuttle

4.41

Seconds


 




60 Yd Shuttle

--

Seconds


 



.




Coach David Cutcliffe has done an excellent job bringing Duke football back to relevance, but NFL scouts are most interested in the work he's done with Jones, helping the Charlotte native reach his potential as he did Peyton and Eli Manning while coaching at Tennessee and Ole Miss, respectively. Jones has a similar build to the Mannings but his superior athleticism was evident at Charlotte Latin High School, where he was a record-setting two-time all-state pick in football and a three-year basketball player. In fact, that athleticism runs in the family, as his brother plays basketball at Davidson and his sister played field hockey at that school, as well. Jones stepped into the spotlight at Duke as a redshirt freshman in 2016, starting all 12 games. The team's Most Valuable Player completed 63.8 percent of his throws for 2,836 yards, 16 touchdowns, and nine interceptions while also producing with his feet (141-486-3.5, seven TD). His numbers dipped a bit in his sophomore campaign (257-453-56.7, 2,691 yards, 14 TD, 11 INT, 161-518-3.2, seven TD), but he finished on a strong note by earning Quick Lane Bowl MVP honors (27-40, 252 yards, two TD) in his team's win over Northern Illinois. Jones started 11 games in 2018, missing two with a broken clavicle. He completed 60.5 percent of his passes (237-392) for 2,674 yards, 22 touchdowns, and nine interceptions on the year while rushing for 319 yards and three scores. He again starred in the team's bowl game, throwing for 423 yards and five touchdowns (with two interceptions) in their win over Temple.







By Lance Zierlein

NFL Analyst



Draft Projection

Rounds 1-2



NFL Comparison

Ryan Tannehill






Overview

Three-year starter who operates with a rare level of quality mechanics coming from the college game. Jones doesn't have special arm talent, but he can make pro throws and has the ability to attack deep with accuracy. He completed just 59.9 percent of his career passes, but his receivers -- who dropped 38 passes this year alone -- really struggled to get open at times. Jones has good football IQ and is relatively mobile, but he appears to be more of a game manager than "franchise" talent. He's more of a Day 2 draft pick than Day 1.




Strengths
  • Benefitted working under QB guru David Cutcliffe at Duke
  • Did more with less at skill positions
  • Quick worker through progressions
  • Early recognition of deep ball opportunities and feathers throws into the target
  • Adjusts pre-snap plan to blitz and exploits hot-read opportunities
  • Consistent footwork from pocket with feet following eyes
  • Outstanding accuracy on intermediate throws
  • Uses fastball when he needs it, but generally throws with touch
  • Drives field-side throws with velocity
  • Courage to hang in the pocket and throw despite impending blow
  • Completion percentage hurt by high drop rate
  • Displays feel for pressure off the edge
  • Good athlete with scrambling ability to move the chains
  • Slick pocket slider with ability to keep searching for target or flee for yardage





Weaknesses
  • Thin in his lower body
  • Had 12 passes batted down at line of scrimmage in 2018
  • Benefitted from heavy play-action/RPO scheme
  • Incessant patting of the ball through progressions
  • Waits an extra step before cutting it loose too often
  • Average release speed slowed by small windup
  • Attempts throws into some impossible windows
  • Needs to work ahead of schedule more often on next level
  • Succumbs to off-platform tosses rather than working into better positioning
  • Showed willingness to throw it up for grabs rather than take sack
  • Loose ball handling in face of pressure leads to fumbles
  • Too much bravado as a runner
  • Took licks when slides or dashes out of bounds were options




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