Jets Training Camp: As Players Start To Arrive, No Sign Of First-Round Pick Quinnen Williams

FLORHAM PARK, N.J. (CBSNewYork/AP) — The New York Jets are setting up camp without their top rookie.

Defensive lineman Quinnen Williams, the No. 3 overall pick in April, remained unsigned Wednesday morning and was not among the players who arrived at the team's training facility to report for training camp.

"This is part of the end of the draft process," coach Adam Gase said. "When he's ready, he's ready. When they're ready to get it done, whenever that happens, it happens. We'll coach the guys that are here."

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Williams is slotted to receive a four-year contract worth $32.6 million fully guaranteed, with a fifth-year team option. The sticking point appears to be the schedule of how the former Alabama star's signing bonus — about $21.7 million — will be paid.

Quinnen Williams of Alabama reacts after he was picked #3 overall by the New York Jets during the first round of the 2019 NFL Draft on April 25, 2019 in Nashville, Tennessee. (Photo by Andy Lyons/Getty Images)

According to published reports, Williams would like to receive the entire sum by the end of the year, while the team and new general manager Joe Douglas are looking to defer some of it until next year.

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The sides could still reach an agreement before the Jets hold their first camp practice Thursday morning. For now, though, Williams is the only Jets player to not report.

"When he gets here, he gets here," Gase said.

So, when would it be a concern if Williams isn't signed?

"The playoffs," Gase joked while managing a straight face.

The Jets were in a similar situation last year — albeit with a different coach and general manager in charge— when quarterback Sam Darnold sat out the first three days of camp practices before signing his rookie deal.

"It's nothing that you deal with personally," Darnold said. "Your agents are really trying to figure it out and really the whole agency is trying to figure it out. So, for me, it was really about staying patient, knowing exactly what needed to get done and really staying patient with it."

Darnold, who won the starting job over Josh McCown last summer, didn't think missing a little time on the field at the beginning of camp affected him.

"Really, at the end of the day, those few practices — really, a couple of practices — I did miss, I don't know how much of an impact that had on the season," Darnold said.

Williams was limited during minicamp last month with a calf issue, but he is expected to have a major role — perhaps even as a starter — in coordinator Gregg Williams' defense this season when he rejoins his Jets teammates.

"When he gets in, man, he's going to be rockin' and rollin'," nose tackle Steve McLendon said. "He's going to be ready. And the reason why he's going to be ready is not just me, it's the coaching staff and the other fellas in the locker room, we're going to put everything on him, help him and give him all the answers to the tests because we know we're going to need him this year to play."

NOTES: Gase said all the players who reported Wednesday are healthy and ready to participate fully in practice. S Marcus Maye (shoulder/thumb) and S Brandon Bryant (foot) were placed on the physically unable to perform list Monday, while rookie CB Bless Austin (knee) is on the non-football injury list. ... Former Steelers star WR Hines Ward is one of the team's four interns in camp as part of the Bill Walsh minority coaching fellowship. He joins former Jets WR David Clowney, currently the WRs and TEs coach and co-coordinator at Howard University; Stephen Bravo-Brown, Missouri State's assistant WRs coach; and Bowie State head coach Damon Reginald Wilson. Former Jets left tackle D'Brickashaw Ferguson and linebacker Calvin Pace will serve as the team's two Nunn-Wooten Scouting Fellowship participants as part of the NFL's Football Development program.

(© Copyright 2019 CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. The Associated Press contributed to this report.)

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