Geno Smith Is Giving Jets Exactly The Stability Fans Have Begged For

Despite not being the long-term solution, Geno Smith's mastery of fundamental plays has quietly positioned him among the top NFL quarterbacks in one crucial area for the 2025 season.

Geno Smith may not be the long-term answer for the New York Jets, but one 2025 metric suggests he still brings something valuable to the table: dependable, routine quarterback play.

That matters for a Jets offense that would be happy just to crack the top 16 in scoring for the first time since 2015. At 36, Smith is being counted on for veteran stability, and Pro Football Focus’ latest quarterback study points to a part of his game where that steadiness showed up clearly, even in a down season with the Las Vegas Raiders.

PFF broke down “zero-graded” throws in the 2025 season, looking at plays that land right at the neutral point on its -2 to 2 grading scale. These are the snaps that don’t make the highlight reel: a checkdown with clean protection, an easy slant off an RPO, the kind of throw an NFL quarterback is expected to complete.

As PFF put it: “The throws that land exactly on 0 are, by design, unremarkable. There is no exceptional decision.

You won’t see it on a highlights show or the condensed-game replay. A zero-graded throw is the ‘control group’ of quarterback play - simply a quarterback doing his job, making a play that an NFL quarterback would be expected to make.”

Smith handled those plays better than most. According to PFF, he averaged -0.009 EPA per attempt on zero-graded throws, which ranked eighth in the NFL. The list ahead of him included Josh Allen, Jared Goff, Daniel Jones, Drake Maye, Kyler Murray, Matthew Stafford and Mac Jones.

That kind of result fits the profile of a bridge quarterback. Smith isn’t there to run for 500 yards, dodge every sack or rip impossible throws into tiny windows on the move. His value is in the less glamorous stuff: working within the system, taking the easy gain, and keeping the offense on schedule.

PFF’s explanation of the study gets at the point: “Removing the extraordinary - for better or worse - leaves a cleaner look at how quarterbacks and offenses operate within the scheme’s structure. It becomes less a study of football’s most unremarkable throws and more a study of efficiency: how consistently quarterbacks execute what’s asked of them, how offenses create production through design and how those two elements work together to generate successful plays.”

For the Jets, that kind of competence has been hard to find. Outside of one Aaron Rodgers season, the position has too often been a mess, with Justin Fields, Zach Wilson and a young Sam Darnold all struggling with the basics. That has dragged down the offense’s floor and made even average scoring feel out of reach.

Smith’s numbers on these ordinary throws suggest he can at least help keep the Jets from living in that kind of chaos.

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