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New York Giants quarterback Tommy DeVito threw for 1,101 yards and eight touchdowns in nine games last season after signing as an undrafted free agent. Vincent Carchietta/USA TODAY Sports

CEDAR GROVE, N.J. — The small, rectangular room on the second floor of the Cedar Grove municipal building was packed with 100 chairs, only half of them filled. It served as the site of a ceremony honoring New York Giants quarterback Tommy DeVito.

Those in attendance, aside from the few there for the public hearing on this comfortable spring evening, were primarily DeVito’s family and friends. They watched the five-minute session in which DeVito was presented a proclamation and a key to the township where he grew up and where his family still lives.

“It means a lot,” DeVito told ESPN afterward. “Everyone has heard me talk about Cedar Grove for a long time, for a while, to have this honor where I was born and raised, played my little league football games, it means a lot.”

The undrafted free agent out of Illinois won three straight starts late last season as a rookie. He captured the attention of the fan base and nation because of his play and pride in his Italian heritage. He still lives with his parents, in Cedar Grove, where he plans to put the plaque with the key to the town on the wall.

The Giants signed quarterback Drew Lock to a one-year deal that guarantees him $5 million this offseason. They also attempted to trade up in the draft to target who most believe was quarterback Drake Maye, according to multiple sources. They even recently claimed quarterback Nathan Rourke off waivers from the New England Patriots.

It has DeVito, 25, back at square one, even if he threw for eight touchdown passes and just three interceptions in nine games.

“Yeah, we’re not having this conversation for sure [if I was a third-round pick]. But at the end of the day, like I said, control what you can control, keep the chip on my shoulder, keep working,” DeVito said. “Everyone has always been overlooked and it’s kind of the same deal I was in last year. I know the offense now and I’ve been in some situations before. Looking forward to doing it again.”

The Giants still seem to view DeVito as a developmental prospect. They were intent on adding a veteran backup this offseason after Tyrod Taylor signed with the New York Jets. They were looking hard at quarterback options at the top of the draft.

DeVito heard what was being discussed.

“I was never worried,” he said. “Everything happens for a reason. I showed what I can do on the field. Obviously, there are highs and lows. But to be a rookie thrown into it, it’s a tough deal. I tried to make the most of it and then control what I can control.”

Clearly, the Giants still need to see more before they can start making plans around DeVito in a major role. There is no denying he made progress, though.

“What Tommy did last year, another year in the system, Tommy has come a long way,” general manager Joe Schoen said this offseason.

DeVito spent his offseason in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, training alongside a group that included last year’s first-round pick, Deonte Banks. DeVito said one of his goals was to add weight and muscle to his lower body.

DeVito has also dived back into his playbook. He believes a second year in the same system will allow him to build on past success. He’s rewatched and dissected every play and snap from last season.

There was plenty to learn.

“Taking what the defense gives me,” he said of his biggest takeaway. “I think I was a little too aggressive sometimes. Got me in trouble a couple games. There were two interceptions like back-to-back. It was the same exact thing back-to-back. But looking back I was like, ‘Why the hell did I do that?'”

Coach Brian Daboll talked during the draft about having honest conversations with players. Not only about their play, but their roles and future.

DeVito’s takeaways from those conversations were positive.

“That I held my composure well. I played well,” he said. “Obviously there is a ton to clean up, whether it’s learning more intricacies of the offense, the deeper meaning of everything versus knowing my job, knowing every person’s job regardless of it’s just a pass or in the run game — helping any way, shape or form between the ears.

“My growth will be through the roof now that I have a whole OTAs and training camp, this whole thing I didn’t have last year. So that is really what it was. All mental.”

And now he has to prove it all again.

Will Drake Maye play in Patriots’ prime-time game in Week 3?

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Jacoby Brissett speaks on his relationship with new Patriots quarterback Drake Maye and what he’s expecting during the quarterback competition this offseason. (0:29)

FOXBOROUGH, Mass. — Quick-hit thoughts and notes around the New England Patriots and NFL:

1. Mayo’s big call: When NFL executive vice president of media distribution Hans Schroeder analyzed the league’s 2024 schedule in a conference call with reporters last week, he noted the top three picks in the NFL draft being showcased.

“Some of the new faces — Caleb Williams, Jayden Daniels, Drake Maye — you’ll see them in the first few weeks of the season as you look at the schedule with appearances for Chicago, Washington and New England all in national windows,” Schroeder said. “It’s one of the benefits of having moved the schedule release to after the draft.”

Schroeder’s remarks highlight how the NFL is always anxious to promote its next generation of hopeful stars. Williams and the Bears visit the Texans on Sunday night in Week 2, Maye and the Patriots travel to face the Jets on Thursday night in Week 3, and Daniels and the Commanders visit the Bengals on Monday night in Week 3.

This assumes, of course, that Maye is playing at all.

First-year Patriots head coach Jerod Mayo has been clear about his quarterback plans: He subscribes to Bill Belichick’s philosophy that not many rookies are ready to play immediately, saying it will be an open competition with veteran Jacoby Brissett (48 career starts), Maye, 2022 fourth-round pick Bailey Zappe and 2024 sixth-rounder Joe Milton III to determine the best signal-caller.

Specific to Maye, he said the night the Patriots drafted him: “They try to put timetables on it, but you just never know when that time is going to be.”

The Bears already determined that the time is now for Williams, having named him the Day 1 starter. Many project the Commanders will ultimately do the same with the 23-year-old Daniels, in part because he is well-seasoned entering the NFL with 55 career starts in college. Meanwhile, the 21-year-old Maye started 26 games at North Carolina and thus some believe he will benefit from watching behind Brissett, while others — such as ESPN analyst and former NFL quarterback Tim Hasselbeck — subscribe to the philosophy that the best way for a quarterback to learn is to play.

Mayo’s decision of when to insert Maye into the lineup, which is the primary intrigue surrounding a team that otherwise had no prime-time appeal to the league, will be among the most important of his young coaching career.

The hope that Maye provides the Patriots has similarities to 1993 when quarterback Drew Bledsoe — who like Maye was among the youngest prospects at the position that year — was selected No. 1 overall in the NFL draft. Then coach Bill Parcells notably said at the time: “I promise you I will not throw him to the wolves.”

Bledsoe, of course, was thrown to the wolves. The team went 5-11, but in winning the final four games showed an arc of improvement to indicate better days were ahead for the franchise. The Patriots went 10-6 the following year and played in the Super Bowl in the 1996 season.

Bledsoe, in an interview with ESPN.com, was asked if he sees a link between those days and the current Patriots setup.

“It’s different in that the Patriots never really had a ton of success [when I got there]. They went to the one Super Bowl [in 1985], but other than that had not been consistently relevant. Whereas it wasn’t that long ago that they were running the world, so there still is a lingering level of expectation that exists from all that success. That part is a little bit different. But shoot, they earned the right to pick where they picked; it wasn’t much to look at last year, that’s for sure,” he said.

“You have the new coaching staff and new rookie quarterback coming in, so there are also some obvious parallels for sure. I don’t think it’s crazy at all. Now it will be super interesting to see where it goes from here, whether they can rebuild that championship culture and start to rise again.”

Bledsoe said offensive coordinator Alex Van Pelt, who was his backup with the Bills in 2002 and 2003, will be a key asset for Maye because of his “football knowledge and demeanor.”

As for his advice for Maye, Bledsoe said: “He’s going to have to have thick skin and be patient. It’s not going to happen immediately. He’s going to have to be very mentally and emotionally tough to get through some of the hard times — if they even start him right away. You have Jacoby there; they’re not in a situation where they have to throw him on the field right away. So I’ll be curious to see what they do.”

2. Brady calling NE: The Patriots currently have six of their games scheduled to air on Fox, which sparks a question: Could Tom Brady, in his debut season as the network’s No. 1 analyst, be calling any of them?

The Fox games are Sept. 15 vs. the Seahawks (1 p.m. ET), Sept. 29 at the 49ers (4:05 p.m. ET), Oct. 6 vs. the Dolphins (1 p.m. ET), Nov. 3 at the Titans (1 p.m. ET), Nov. 10 at the Bears (1 p.m. ET) and Nov. 17 vs. the Rams (1 p.m. ET).

Brady will always be assigned to Fox’s top game in the national window, which given the Patriots’ lower-profile status makes it less likely he’ll have a heavy slate of New England games (if any at all).

At an initial glance, the Patriots-Bears game (possibly Williams vs. Maye) might have the best chance to land, as CBS has the doubleheader that week with Eagles-Cowboys at 4:25 p.m. ET.

3. Judon next? Newly appointed Patriots executive vice president of player personnel Eliot Wolf has been checking off items on his contractual “to-do” list, most recently extending starting center and team leader David Andrews’ deal.

So perhaps the most significant item remaining is with veteran outside linebacker Matthew Judon, who is scheduled to earn a base salary of $6.5 million in the final year of his contract. That is well under the market for a player of his caliber, and it’s hard to imagine Judon agreeing to play under those terms. At the same time, Judon’s return from a torn biceps that limited him to four games last season, coupled with his age (32 in August), add layers of note in any negotiation.

4. New phase: The Patriots are set to hold three voluntary organized team activities this week, which marks their move into Phase 3 of the offseason program. Media members are scheduled to be present for the first OTA on Monday. Brissett, who was complimentary of Maye, is expected to get the initial repetitions at quarterback.

Of the QB dynamic, Brissett said: “The good part about our room is that everyone wants to be the guy, and everyone is competing to be the guy. That’s what you want. If none of us wanted to play, that would be messed up; we’d be in bad hands in this organization.”

5. Maye’s business trip: Maye was one of 40 rookies who attended the NFL Players Association’s rookie premiere in Los Angeles from May 15-19, joining receiver Ja’Lynn Polk (second round) and Milton (sixth round). The purpose of the annual event is to educate players on the business side of the game and help them expand on their existing endorsements. Pro Football Hall of Famer Kurt Warner addressed the rookies, who also donned their game jerseys for the first time.

6. Mayo’s approach: Mayo is the seventh head coach that Brissett has played under, joining Belichick, Chuck Pagano, Frank Reich, Brian Flores, Kevin Stefanski and Ron Rivera. Brissett’s initial impression of Mayo’s coaching approach has been favorable.

“He brings a lot of good energy,” he said. “The cool thing is you can tell he’s trying to make the players on the team run the team. Obviously, he’s the head coach and he sets the standard, but he definitely puts a lot of responsibility on us players. I like it.”

7. Late bye: NFL vice president of broadcast planning Mike North explained last week how more NFL teams aren’t requesting a bye the week after playing international games, which explains, in part, why the Patriots’ bye week comes Dec. 8 instead of Oct. 27. It’s the latest bye possible for New England, which plays Jacksonville at London’s Wembley Stadium on Oct. 20.

Of the seven decisions when factoring in that the Jaguars play back-to-back international games, four teams (Vikings, Bears, Giants, Panthers) requested their bye the week upon their return to the United States, while three didn’t (Jets, Jaguars, Patriots).

8. They said it: “I feel like I put on a lot of muscle in a lot of areas that needed [it]; just so I could take more impact. I feel like all my injuries came from me hitting the ground, so I’ll be able to bounce back up when I do hit the ground.” — third year Patriots receiver Tyquan Thornton, who has opened his first two seasons on injured reserve (fractured clavicle and shoulder).

9. Bill Walsh fellows: The Bill Walsh Diversity Coaching Fellowship has helped college coaches gain exposure to NFL training camp and offseason workout programs for more than 30 years, and the Patriots are welcoming Purdue’s T.J. McCollum and former Browns running back/South Carolina assistant Montario Hardesty this offseason as part of the program. McCollum already has a connection with one member of the organization, as he played alongside linebacker Ja’Whaun Bentley at Purdue in 2017.

10. Did You Know: The Patriots are one of 12 teams this season who aren’t scheduled to face an opponent that is coming off its bye week. They are the only team in the NFL to have no weeks on the schedule in which they have less rest than the opposing team.

Can Jets rookie Olu Fashanu become another ‘Brick’ in the wall?

FLORHAM PARK, N.J. — A look at what’s happening around the New York Jets:

Looking for Mr. Right

From 2006 to 2015, the Jets never had to worry about left tackle. D’Brickashaw Ferguson was there every season, every game, every snap. Remarkably, he never missed a snap in his career due to injury; the only time he left the field was on a gadget play at the end of the 2008 season.

Since Ferguson’s retirement, the Jets have used 10 different starters at left tackle — a revolving door of players ranging in age from 21 (Mekhi Becton, 2020) to 37 (Duane Brown, 2023). The Jets long for stability at the critical position, and their hope is that first-round pick Olu Fashanu can match Ferguson’s longevity once he succeeds Tyron Smith.

It’s unusual for a high draft pick to start his career on the bench, but the Jets chose Fashanu after signing Smith, an eight-time Pro Bowl selection with the Dallas Cowboys. Ferguson, for one, believes there’s upside to easing the rookie into the lineup.

“The NFL has gotten to the place where they want immediate impact, but I think for people to learn what that transition is like to the league, it just benefits you,” Ferguson told ESPN.

“I’m excited for a player like him,” he added. “This is a ripe opportunity to grow in. Had the Jets not made so many moves, I think the expectation would’ve been even harder because now if he doesn’t perform, they’re going to look for other ways to make fixes. But I think they put him in a position to have success. I’m happy and excited to see where this goes.”

Ferguson, 40, a member of the Jets’ Ring of Honor, said he was rooting for New York to draft a tackle. When the team took Fashanu with the No. 11 pick, it brought back memories of the day he was selected fourth overall in 2006. He was a Day 1 starter and learned on the fly.

When he came out of Virginia, Ferguson was 6-foot-6, 310 pounds. Fashanu, from Penn State, is 6-foot-6, 312 pounds. Speaking from experience, Ferguson said Fashanu can rely on skill and technique early in his career, building strength and savvy over time.

Ferguson likes the new-look offensive line, noting the blend of youth and experience and calling Smith “an amazing player. I’ve always respected his game.” Ferguson hopes Fashanu will have the same opportunity that was afforded him — a chance to develop long-term chemistry with his linemates. Ferguson credited longtime teammates Nick Mangold and Brandon Moore with helping him succeed.

It’s unfair to expect Fashanu to duplicate Ferguson’s Iron Man streak. The league may never see something like that again. Asked about the team’s long struggle to replace him, Ferguson said humbly, “I thought Kelvin Beachum did an amazing job (from 2017 to 2019). I think there have been a lot of guys when they played, they did what they could.

“I think the game continues to evolve and it puts a lot of pressure on these players to perform at a high level. We don’t always know why things turn out the way they do. It wasn’t until the end of my career where I realized, ‘Hey, I’ve been playing this long and this consistently.’ To me, that’s what we were supposed to do.”

Taxing start

The Jets can’t be thrilled with the early part of their schedule. They open with three games in 10 days: road dates against the San Francisco 49ers (Sept. 9) and Tennessee Titans (Sept. 15), followed by the New England Patriots (Sept. 19) in a Thursday night home opener.

It’s a legitimate concern, especially with a 40-year-old quarterback coming off a major injury. Aaron Rodgers hasn’t played a full game since Jan. 8, 2023. By opening day, it’ll be a 20-month layoff.

Mike North, the NFL’s vice president for broadcast planning, said the Jets are among six teams with a three-game/10-day stretch during the season. He said the league tinkered with other scenarios, ultimately justifying the Jets’ start because the level of competition isn’t outrageous.

“Obviously, the three games in 10 days is a challenge,” he said, “but it didn’t feel like a gauntlet of three teams that made deep playoff runs last year.” He was including their Week 4 opponent, the Denver Broncos, in that sentiment.

 

Quirks in the schedule

The Jets have the ninth-best rest differential at +5 days, meaning they have five more rest days than their opponents. They also have no games against teams coming off a bye week. On the downside, they have four short weeks, tied for the second-most.

Familiar faces

Though not likely, it’s conceivable that the Jets could face five of their former quarterbacks in 2024 — Sam Darnold (Minnesota Vikings), Geno Smith (Seattle Seahawks), Zach Wilson (Broncos), Joe Flacco (Indianapolis Colts) and Mike White (Miami Dolphins). Darnold and Smith are the only current starters.

For a team that has struggled so much with quarterback play, the Jets have a lot of former ones still in the league.

Rare finale

The Jets close the season at MetLife Stadium for the first time since 2016. That was so long ago that only eight of the 91 players on the current roster were in the NFL at that time.

Rodgers & Co.

Phase three of the offseason begins Monday, which means the start of OTA practices (Tuesday is the first open practice). Naturally, the top storyline is the return of Rodgers, who is eight months removed from Achilles surgery and has “no restrictions,” coach Robert Saleh said.

While Rodgers and his new, high-profile teammates will grab the headlines, there are a handful of young veterans that will garner the attention of the coaching staff. We’re talking about developing players expected to take big steps in 2024, most notably center Joe Tippmann, tight end Jeremy Ruckert, running back Israel Abanikanda, defensive end Will McDonald IV and safety Tony Adams.

It’s an important spring for them.

Keep an eye on

One player who has impressed is wide receiver Jason Brownlee, who was featured in “Hard Knocks” last summer and made the team as an undrafted rookie. He could be a surprise in the receiving corps.

Fine-tuning

One of the biggest college-to-pro transitions for any wide receiver is learning how to become a precise route runner. This is a particularly important area for third-round pick Malachi Corley.

At Western Kentucky last season, Corley made 43 of his 79 receptions on screen passes, according to ESPN Stats & Information data. In other words, he got the ball a lot on “manufactured touches.” On other routes, he sometimes relied on instinct, not precision, to get open.

“Malachi is one of those guys like, ‘Yeah, I hear you, but I see the void in the coverage and I’m going to go there right now and y’all are going to throw me the football,'” Western Kentucky head coach Tyson Helton told ESPN.

It worked brilliantly on the college level. In the NFL, he will have to drill down on “the finer details of route running,” according to Helton.

Smaller staff

The Jets streamlined their coaching staff. In 2023, Saleh had 24 assistants. Now he’s down to 20. The biggest changes:

They no longer have a quarterbacks coach after moving on from Rob Calabrese; those duties will be inherited by passing-game coordinator Todd Downing. Special teams assistant Mike Ghobrial wasn’t replaced after leaving to become the Giants’ special teams coordinator. Leon Washington, the No. 2 special teams assistant, didn’t have his contract renewed. Dan Shamash, the game-management coordinator in 2023, now has the added responsibility of special teams assistant.

Cap update

Six of the seven draft picks are under contract (Corley is the only unsigned pick) and the Jets still have $6.4 million in cap room, per Over the Cap.

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