Some final observations - for this morning anyway - on the just concluded three-day rookie minicamp:
-Jeremy Kapinos consistently boomed towering punts during the time the media was allowed to watch minicamp and while the Kellen Clemens/Chad Pennington battle will be – and should be –the headliner of training camp, the Kapinos/Ben Graham one will be worth watching, too.
“We’re going to look at both those guys and give them an opportunity to state their case,” Eric Mangini said Saturday.
- Enamored might be a tad strong, but Mangini clearly believes the Jets got a steal in cornerback Dwight Lowery, the team’s fourth-round pick. Mangini praised Lowery pretty effusively on Friday and Saturday, with one of his Saturday answers, in discussing a predraft interview session with Lowery, providing this memorable quote:
“He comes in and he could explain what he was doing at the corner position, but he could also explain what the whole secondary was doing," Mangini said. "We had some film there, so if it was a blitz or some kind of zone blitz, he could explain what the linebackers were responsible for under these coverages. He saw the whole picture from the corner spot, where a lot of times those corners come in, they can explain, ‘Okay, I got that cat,’ and that’s pretty much it. But you want them to be able to see the big picture so they understand how they fit, and [Lowery] did.”
Two things from that answer: 1. Justin Miller, coming off surgery, better be ready to bring it during camp. And, 2. Mangini, indeed, did use the phrase, “I got that cat.” As good as you think it sounded...it sounded even better.
- Kansas wide receiver Marcus Henry, the team’s sixth-round pick, has enormous hands.
- One interesting thing from the locker room on Friday and Saturday was the general wide-eyed look players gave in talking about the difference in the size of the playbook they received this week as compared to what they had in college.
“Oh man,” Erik Ainge told me Saturday. “It’s about two inches taller. There’s a lot of information, obviously, but that’s part of it. That’s part of coming here, not knowing anything, and you have to learn.”
I asked Henry the same question.
“You have no idea,” he said, shaking his head.
Finally, I’m calling for a moratorium on the phrase “win-now mode” in describing the Jets for this season. I’m the first to include myself among the guilty who have uttered, or written, the phrase, which already in early May has become stale, tired and devoid of any real insight. I'm done with it, or at least until we start writing that a given team is in a "win-later" mode.