Geno Smith, the 39th overall pick in the 2013 NFL Draft, is coming home. The New York Jets traded for their former quarterback with the Las Vegas Raiders, swapping Day 3 picks for the rights to the journeyman veteran.
Jets fans and Smith are hoping his second stint with the team is more successful than the first. In his first four seasons in New York, Smith was 12-18 as a starter, threw for 5,962 yards, completed 57.9% of his passes, and threw 28 touchdowns and 36 interceptions.
There were several factors that contributed to his early struggles, but chief among them was his maturity. Smith was never supposed to be thrown to the wolves in Week 1 of his rookie season. It was still supposed to be Mark Sanchez's team, but a head-scratching preseason injury (a game he had no business being in that late) changed that.
Instead, Smith was trotted out in 2013 as the full-time starter, and it went just about as you'd expect for a 23-year-old rookie.
Willie Colon reveals what went wrong with Geno Smith's early Jets tenure
Former Jets offensive lineman Willie Colon, and a teammate of Smith's, revealed on WFAN what the problems were in 2013 and 2014 that led to the young quarterback's early struggles.
"I think people forget Geno wasn’t supposed to start. But nevertheless, man, there wasn’t a lot to kind of help Geno Smith develop, right? There wasn’t a quarterback consultant, right? It was just Geno coming out of West Virginia being a gunslinger saying, ‘Hey, I’m here to save New York.’ And New York chewed him up and spit him up."Willie Colon
Colon added that Smith did have "some character flaws" early in his career, and it's difficult to deny that.
Everyone remembers the IK Enemkpali incident, where Smith allegedly owed him some money for a plane ticket. The confrontation led to a broken jaw, which cost Smith the starting job in 2015, allowing Ryan Fitzpatrick to step in and lead the Jets to a 10-6 record.
By the time 2016 rolled around, and Fitzpatrick had turned back into a pumpkin, Smith was ready for one last shot at the starting gig in the final year of his rookie contract.
Unfortunately, Smith would end up tearing his ACL in a game against the Baltimore Ravens, where he was actually playing well, completing four of eight passes for 95 yards and a touchdown.
From there, the veteran bounced around from team to team, spending time with the New York Giants and the Los Angeles Chargers before finally getting another starting shot with the Seattle Seahawks.
Smith's experience around the league has certainly made him a better quarterback, and the Jets are hoping his second stint in New York will lead to more wins and success than his first go-around.
