Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Jets land explosive safety with 6th pick

- By Dennis Waszak Jr.

Jamal Adams unexpected­ly slid a few spots down the draft board — and the New York Jets couldn’t believe their fortunes.

So, with the LSU safety still available, there was little doubt as to whom the Jets would take with the No. 6 overall pick.

“In a lot of our projection­s,” general manager Mike Maccagnan said Thursday night, “we really never had him getting to us.”

He was the best player remaining on the Jets’ board, Maccagnan acknowledg­ed, and the son of former Giants running back George Adams will immediatel­y help a secondary that struggled mightily last season. In three years at LSU, Adams had five intercepti­ons and 127 tackles and establishe­d himself as a terrific defender in both man and zone coverage with solid skills in the run defense.

“He checked all the boxes for us,” coach Todd Bowles said.

This was the sixth time in franchise history that the Jets picked sixth, and second in three years after New York took defensive lineman Leonard Williams in 2015. That year, Williams unexpected­ly dropped to New York — and the same thing happened with Adams, who was largely projected to go within the top three selections.

“He’s one of the guys we had targeted very high,” Bowles said.

Adams had largely been linked to Chicago at No. 3 in the weeks leading to the draft, but the Bears moved up one spot as the result of a trade with San Francisco and took North Carolina quarterbac­k Mitchell Trubisky.

Adams then slipped out of the top five picks, something that caught him off guard.

“I was definitely surprised I slipped, but at the same time, everything happens for a reason,” Adams said during a conference call.

In his predraft meeting with the team, Adams said the Jets told him that if he was still available when they picked, they would “come to get me” — no questions asked.

“They kept their word,” Adams said. “They delivered.”

Adams was widely praised for his leadership abilities, something the Jets coaches and scouts found when they first talked to him.

“We knew he was an Alpha dog coming in,” Bowles said. “The culture we’re trying to create, I think he’s perfect for our building.”

The Jets’ starting safeties last season were Calvin Pryor, a first-rounder in 2014 who has been a bit of a disappoint­ment, and veteran Marcus Gilchrist, who is coming off a serious knee injury. The Jets have still not picked up the fifth-year option on Pryor, and the selection of Adams makes his future with the franchise a bit unclear.

Still, Bowles said he doesn’t limit his safeties to solely playing in the box or in coverage, so Adams’ versatilit­y made him attractive — no matter who is currently on their roster.

“We feel we can play him anywhere,” Bowles said.

Maccagnan acknowledg­ed that there were “a lot of conversati­ons” leading up to the pick as to whether teams might be interested in trading with the Jets, but nothing materializ­ed. So, New York stayed put at No. 6 and opted to not take a quarterbac­k, even with Deshaun Watson and Patrick Mahomes still on the board.

The Jets have veteran Josh McCown and the inexperien­ced Bryce Petty, a fourth-rounder two years ago, and Christian Hackenberg, a second-rounder last year, on the roster. But there’s uncertaint­y as to whether the youngsters will be cornerston­es for the future at the position.

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