JetNation Posted August 18, 2019 Share Posted August 18, 2019 After taking the time to watch and re-watch Gang Green’s preseason victory over the Atlanta Falcons the other day, we thought we’d share a few takeaways that may not have been quite so evident at first glance. Some good news here on the defensive side of the ball. The Jets front seven was impressive this week, and for the second game in a row linebacker Frankie Luvu’s effort and production stood out. In two contests, Luvu has looked like a much improved player from last season when he did some good things as a rookie but was more hesitant. Appearing to be more than just a “situational pass rusher” type, Luvu has shown himself to be strong against the run in the early going. Luvu has to be a lock to make this roster. After years of hyping up the Jets D-line, could this be the year they finally break out? The addition of Quinnen Williams is expected to pay immediate dividends and Henry Anderson, Leonard Williams and Steve McLendon are known commodities. In addition to the starters, Bronson Kaufusi and Tarell Basham have also stood out. Both linemen have been consistently disruptive and could offer high quality depth behind a group of high-end starters. A former draft pick of respected GM Ozzie Newsome, Kaufusi finished last season on a high note and looks to have picked up where he left off. #Jets top 5 graded defenders from their preseason victory over the Falcons (min. 14 snaps played): 1. Henry Anderson- 90.32. Neville Hewitt- 90.13. Bronson Kaufusi- 89.94. Tarell Basham- 82.85. Alex Brown- 80.1#TakeFlight — PFF NY Jets (@PFF_Jets) August 18, 2019 Undrafted free agent cornerback Alex Brown saw extended action against the Falcons, playing 39 snaps (25 in coverage) according to pff.com and dispelled the notion that he’s not a physical corner with some jarring hits. Brown graded out as one of Gang Green’s top defenders and with such a depleted cornerbacks group, his progress is worth keeping an eye on. Alex Brown making the best of his opportunity! #Jets pic.twitter.com/QoNZxdMsTc — Code (@TheCodeBreak1) August 16, 2019 Avery Williamson was knocked out for the year after colliding with a teammate and tearing his ACL. The assumption seems to be that it’s Blake Cashman’s job to lose. Don’t write off Neville Hewitt who is an underrated player. Wouldn’t be surprised to see Hewitt start at ILB this season with Cashman taking over at some point. Deontay Burnett was impressive yet again and scored a late TD to help his chances. If it were up to us (and we know it’s not) Burnett would be WR4 right now. We said immediately following the game that 3rd string center Jon Toth appeared to have a solid night and we felt even more so after a second go around. Nice job in pass protection. Would it be all that crazy to say that the Jets current backup interior linemen (Alex Lewis, Jonotthan Harrison, Tom Compton) are a better trio than the Jets starters have been over the past three years due to injuries and ineffectiveness? We’d hoped Jordan Morgan would be a player who could be developed as a quality backup lineman but he didn’t look the part at all against the Falcons. It’s going to be a battle for Morgan to stick. Trenton Cannon has speed to burn but looked too hesitant as a return man and wasn’t used to his strengths as a runner. The Jets ran the 180 lb Cannon up the gut like a power back several times without much of a chance to play to his strengths and run to the outside and he was bottled up by the defense. Odd approach. The post Luvu Ready to Make the Leap? Notes on Defensive Dominance and More appeared first on JetNation.com (NY Jets Blog & Forum). Click here to read the full story... 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
T0mShane Posted August 18, 2019 Share Posted August 18, 2019 Not to beat a dead, fat horse with a bad hamstring, but here's what's frustrating: Luvu has position versatility because he can play ILB and OLB, and Tarell Basham can play OLB and 4-3 end pretty respectably. Kaufusi has been one of the best Jets defensive players this offseason. But one of those guys has to get cut to keep Polite, which is lame. 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Larz Posted August 18, 2019 Share Posted August 18, 2019 Hank was beasting Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
UnknownJetFan Posted August 18, 2019 Share Posted August 18, 2019 1 hour ago, T0mShane said: Not to beat a dead, fat horse with a bad hamstring, but here's what's frustrating: Luvu has position versatility because he can play ILB and OLB, and Tarell Basham can play OLB and 4-3 end pretty respectably. Kaufusi has been one of the best Jets defensive players this offseason. But one of those guys has to get cut to keep Polite, which is lame. Hopefully we keep them all your mentioned, but you ellude to a good point. They should make 1 practice squad spot protected that gets to keep their current contract, and can't be poached by another team. At least for one season per a player this should be the case since like you said why should we lose a better player than Polite, and what if Polite needs 1 year to develop. Both situations can be the case and it puts draft picks by teams in bad positions like this. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
flgreen Posted August 19, 2019 Share Posted August 19, 2019 Thought the same thing about Cannon. Couldn't figure out why they kept on blasting him between the tackles like a FB. This guy was built to run out side, and to catch short passes in space. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jetster Posted August 19, 2019 Share Posted August 19, 2019 12 hours ago, T0mShane said: Not to beat a dead, fat horse with a bad hamstring, but here's what's frustrating: Luvu has position versatility because he can play ILB and OLB, and Tarell Basham can play OLB and 4-3 end pretty respectably. Kaufusi has been one of the best Jets defensive players this offseason. But one of those guys has to get cut to keep Polite, which is lame. They are keeping all of them. Guys at the backend of the WR group need to be nervous. Bell & TY make it so you don't have to carry so many wideouts. Additional special teams guys will come from the defensive side of the ball. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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