The college quarterbacks class is shaping up nicely, just in time to perhaps rescue some NFL teams from themselves.
Right at the top are Clemson's Trevor Lawrence, Ohio State's Justin Fields and Florida's Kyle Trask, depending on who (likely all) become eligible for the 2021 draft. BYU's Zach Wilson and North Dakota State's Trey Lance are highly rated, too.
Those guys salivating about such prospects work in the personnel departments of the Jets, Jaguars and Bears. Maybe also for the Lions, Patriots, Falcons, Saints and 49ers.
Each of those clubs is in a quarterback quandary, though Atlanta with Matt Ryan need not be in any hurry. Same for the 49ers if Jimmy Garoppolo could stay healthy. And who knows, maybe Taysom Hill has the goods to step in full time when Drew Brees almost certainly heads to the broadcast booth.
"It is not just whether you need a quarterback," says Rich Gannon, the 2002 league MVP, current CBS Sports analyst, and one of the best QB talent evaluators around. "Is the quarterback ready? A team may say, 'We think the kid at Clemson will come in and be our Week 1 starter, we will get him all the reps and get him ready.' But is the team ready for a kid quarterback? You never really know."
What we do know, as do Gannon and former NFL signal caller Jim Miller, now with SiriusXM NFL Radio and Westwood One, is that the quarterback marketplace will be heavily populated with shoppers in the offseason.
NEW YORK JETS
This winless bunch has the biggest dilemma. It selected Sam Darnold third overall in the 2018 draft. When he has been healthy and had some help around him, he has looked decent — though decent is hardly what you want from supposedly the franchise's future. The Jets really need to see more of Darnold, but they seem to have a better shot at winning a game with current starter Joe Flacco while Darnold heals from a right shoulder issue.