J.J. McCarthy, whoâs unexpectedly elbowed into the top quarterback conversation, is in Foxboro on Monday to visit the Patriots.
Drake Maye and Jayden Daniels âtwo kids whoâve been projected top-three picks since November â have already been to Gillette.
So J.J. -- a Michigan Man in town on Patriots' Day -- gets to leave the most recent in-person impression.
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Which means J.J. and the entourage get to say, âShop us last, youâll love us!!!!â
Which is what people are afraid of/warning against. Locally and nationally, myriad experts and regular Joes are not fired up about J.J. The Interloper.
The simple fact his stock rose so much late in the process when no games are being played makes him suspect.
The criticisms are that he (in no particular order):
- Was simply the chauffeur for a loaded Michigan offense.
- Has a fraction of the production and reps that Daniels and Maye had.
- Has benefited from the tireless work of his bespectacled hype man, Jim Harbaugh.
- Is too short.
- Has too long a windup.
- Struggles in a muddy pocket.
- Is inaccurate downfield.
- Is benefiting from Maye/Daniels fatigue that emerged after months of having their tape examined and critiqued.
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Some of the McCarthy slams are well-researched and objective. Like this from Diante Lee at The 33rd Team, which simply lays out the misgivings and laments the lack of evidence:
"McCarthyâs passing profile is reminiscent of eras long left in the past when it comes to quarterback scouting â against top competition the last two years, youâd be lucky to cobble together more than a dozen throws that directly translate to the next level.
"The lack of pure volume makes him a tricky evaluation. The system he played in manufactured and restricted so much of the quarterbackâs decision-making process that youâre left to evaluate McCarthyâs tools more so than you would the other consensus first-round guys in this class."
Others feel a little kneejerk. Like this from Tiki Barber:
âThe J.J. McCarthy thing, Iâm tired of hearing it. Stop with the J.J. McCarthy thing. His film doesnât say heâs a first-round quarterback. His film doesnât say, âI need to get rid of all my assets and go draft this guy,â because a lot of what he does doesnât translate.
"The scheme that he ran at Michigan â and maybe this is an indictment on the scheme and not necessarily on him â but it didnât highlight the things that you need to do, second-, third-level reads, multiple combo routes that you have to get correct. He didnât do any of that stuff. They were run-based and he thrived in it because he was good at â thatâs what Jim Harbaugh wanted him to do.â
And then thereâs the reasoned from the seasoned, like this from Mel Kiper Jr.:
âHe to me is kind of a wild card. Iâm waiting for him to have that game where you say heâs a top-five pick, heâs a top-10 pick, heâs a mid-first-rounder. He was the toughest player at any position to really evaluate because they didnât ask him to carry the team.
âHe wasnât asked to do that. They had Blake Corum, they had Donovan Edwards. They had eight men, nine men deep on the o-line. They had multiple tight ends, they had receivers. âŠBut he wasnât asked at Michigan to carry that team.
âTo say âI know what J.J. McCarthy is going to beâ you gotta have a leap of faith there as heâs a great competitor. Heâs a Josh Allen type of a competitor. Heâs super smart. He just turned 21 years of age. He had two really good years. He didnât throw picks, but the picks that he did throw were kind of memorable.â
We could find all the counterpoints to those critiques, like this from Thor Nystrom a month ago on the Patriots Talk pod, but whatâs the point of that? They are all just outside opinions on projections. Informed opinions, perhaps. But opinions.
The only opinion that matters is the one collectively held in Foxboro. And the only concrete report so far about what the Patriots and de facto GM Eliot Wolf are going to do came from Sportskeeda's Tony Pauline, a guy whose life has been the NFL Draft for about three decades.
đ Patriots Talk Podcast: Is J.J. McCarthy now the object of Patriots' desire? | Listen & Subscribe | Watch on YouTube
âWhat I heard from other general managers -- not from the Patriots but other general managers -- is that Eliot Wolf, the de facto general manager for the Patriots, is in love with J.J. McCarthy,â Pauline said two weeks ago.
âAnd right now, the feeling is that J.J. McCarthy -- or at least Eliot Wolf is pushing for J.J. McCarthy, and that seems like itâs going to be the pick. I could understand the love for J.J. McCarthy. I donât agree with it, but I understand it because whether itâs J.J. McCarthy or any of these Michigan kids, they have acquitted themselves well during the interview process.â
You can dismiss it âsmokescreen seasonâ or scoff and say, âeverybody liesâŠâ but in my experience, that itself is a lie. Thereâs plenty of truth out there from scouts, GMs and coaches every year.
If Pauline is hearing from other âgeneral managersâ (as in, multiple) that Wolf is pushing for McCarthy, thatâs persuasive. Unless the GMs decided to get together and make up what Wolfâs disposition was. And whatâs the benefit of making up a lie that another team is on the verge of overdrafting (in the opinion of some) McCarthy?
To justify the anonymous GMsâ own interest in McCarthy? To justify a potential trade up? I mean, I guess. More likely, though, itâs the truth. Wolf loves McCarthy.
So, why? Aside from the simple fact that McCarthy is actually pretty frigginâ talented -- as this video showing every throw and every run from 2023 demonstrates -- why would Wolf pass on the sirenâs song of Mayeâs arm strength and build or the breathtaking dual-threat ability of Daniels if either is there at No. 3 alongside McCarthy?
Letâs make some sense of it.
Phil Perry and others have pointed out that Wolf led the charge in 2018 for the Browns to take Baker Mayfield with the No. 1 overall pick. There are plenty of stylistic and personality similarities between McCarthy and Mayfield. And there are similarities between the run-based offense Michigan ran and the one offensive coordinator Alex Van Pelt ran at Cleveland.
Further, the Patriots arenât talented enough at the skill positions to run a wide-open offense anyway. So, for the offense theyâll run, McCarthy is the safest, most prudent pick rather than Daniels or Maye.
Plus, he won a national championship, played at a big program and has a high floor. Heâs a safe and stable pick. Whatâs not to like?
To which many Patriots loyalists will say, âI JUST WATCHED THE âACCURATE QUARTERBACK WITH BIG-PROGRAM PEDIGREE AND A HIGH FLOORâ MOVIE FOR THE PAST THREE SEASONS!!!!â ITâS GOT A SADDER ENDING THAN OLD YELLER! NO F------ THANK YOU!!!â
There is trauma. Wolf, if he chooses McCarthy, had better understand heâs putting the kid in a position where heâll need to earn the regionâs embrace.
And McCarthy had better understand that â like Mac Jones â heâll be joining an NFL offense that is literally less talented than the one he left in college.
The protection will not be nearly as good. The receivers wonât be as good. The offensive system â in Year One under a brand-new staff â will not be as polished and efficient as Harbaughâs was at Michigan.
When you draft a âhigh floorâ player who is a âwin with, not because ofâ type player â basically, Mac â you make sure the situation around said player is stable and organized.
If he doesnât have the physical tools to run or throw himself out of problems, isnât physically built to withstand great punishment and doesn't have the right people around him, start scouting high school seniors and the Class of 2028 right now. Youâll be right back at the top of the draft in four years.
Macâs flaws were apparent. In 2021, they were hidden and covered up. He was the best of the first-round quarterbacks because he had the best situation. By 2023, after two seasons in the worst situation, he was arguably the worst of the five.
McCarthy, Daniels and Maye are all much more physically gifted than Jones (who, it should be pointed out, was a whisker away from being the No. 3 pick in 2021). Aside from Trevor Lawrence, all three are arguably better than the rest of the 2021 first-round class â Zach Wilson, Trey Lance and Justin Fields.
Forget B.S. superstition about how many quarterbacks can be found in a draft. Every single one of the QBs the Patriots hosted will win games at Gillette.
How many? Ultimately, thatâs not up to whoever they draft. Itâs up to Wolf. If he truly âlovesâ McCarthy â or Maye, or Daniels â he better shower him with presents in the form of talent. And the entire team needs to buy-in without reservation on whoever it is.
Otherwise, divorce is almost certain. And they are messy. And expensive.