The Cardinals’ Kyler Murray, drafted first overall in 2019, has played to expectations, while Jones has outperformed the quarterbacks selected after him in a particularly weak class for the position. He is more frequently compared to the franchise quarterbacks taken the year before — the Ravens’ Lamar Jackson, the Browns’ Baker Mayfield and the Bills’ Josh Allen — because the Giants held the No. 2 overall pick in 2018, and selected Barkley instead of a replacement for Eli Manning.
Baltimore and Buffalo showed patience with their young passers, tailoring offensive schemes and personnel toward their skill sets. Jackson won the Most Valuable Player Award in his second season. Allen showed holistic improvement in his third year and finished second in M.V.P. voting for the 2020 season. Mayfield has shown drastic improvement in decision-making, cutting down his interceptions from 21 in 2019 to 8 in 2020, the year the team hired Alex Van Pelt as offensive coordinator.
Both Orlovsky and Shaun O’Hara, who played seven seasons at center for the Giants and won the Super Bowl in the 2007 season, said it would be unfair to compare Jones to Jackson and Allen’s production. Both have had the same offensive coordinator for their careers. Jones is in his second season under Garrett, who installed the system during the pandemic in 2020. The two also have physical traits — Jackson is a better runner with a quicker throwing release and Allen is 16 pounds heavier with a stronger arm — that Jones does not.
“Those guys have just raised the bottom level of their play while also reaching the top level of their play on a more consistent basis,” Orlovsky said. “Daniel is not even in the same conversation talent-wise, and that's not a knock on him.”
With all those variables clouding the team’s look at Jones, the better barometer of his development has been the statistic most firmly in his control: turnovers. In his first two seasons, he posted 22 interceptions and 17 lost fumbles. While his interception numbers are high, they are actually better than Murray’s, who has thrown four more interceptions than Jones, in four more games, over their careers.