FLORHAM PARK, N.J. — If the New York Jets are really going to make their first playoff appearance in over a decade, defensive tackle Quinnen Williams literally will have to be at the center of that ascension. He came into his fourth pro season looking to find a seat among the NFL’s greats. He’s become a one-man wrecking crew who helped this defense feast on quarterbacks over the first seven games. More than anything, Williams is in the perfect position to be that tone-setter for a young team still learning how to thrive every week in this league.
Williams has been a holy terror since Week 1. He’s been living in opposing backfields, crashing through interior blockers and even playing so intensely that he blocked a field-goal attempt in a win over the Green Bay Packers. Williams will still give you that sheepish look and that trademark quick grin when he’s off the field and relaxing at his locker. Put him in shoulder pads and give him a helmet, and he’ll morph into the kind of relentless disrupter that makes it hard for offensive coordinators to sleep at night.
It would be nice if Jets second-year quarterback Zach Wilson (173.3 passing yards per game with a 1:2 TD-to-INT ratio in four games) was playing at a level that scared opponents. It would be even better if rookie running back Breece Hall and second-year guard Alijah Vera-Tucker hadn’t suffered season-ending injuries (a torn ACL in the left knee for Hall and a torn triceps for Vera-Tucker) in Sunday’s 16-9 win over Denver. The biggest reason the Jets should still feel so good about their prospects after a 5-2 start is the presence of Williams. He’s the anchor of a vastly improved defense, and it’s his determination that could help drive that unit to great heights.
Williams brought tremendous promise into the league in the 2019 NFL Draft, when the Jets picked the former Alabama star third overall. This is what the franchise envisioned once he arrived.