Photo by Kevin Sabitus/Getty Images
Taking a look at the Jets’ new starting cornerback
The
New York Jets signed former
Baltimore Ravens defensive back Brandon Stephens to a three-year contract early on in free agency. Today we break Stephens down in detail.
The 27-year old Stephens is listed at 6’1” and 215 pounds. He was a third round pick out of SMU in 2021. He has started 48 games in his four seasons with the Ravens, including 33 of 34 games over the past two seasons, and has registered 259 tackles, two sacks and two interceptions.
Background
Stephens was a running back in high school and headed to UCLA as a four star recruit. He only rushed for 95 yards in his first season in 2016, of which 71 came in the same game, but his role increased in 2017 and he generated 151 yards from scrimmage and a touchdown in a reserve role. In one game, he carried 20 times for 83 yards.
Early on in his third season, Stephens made the decision to redshirt and become a graduate transfer at the end of the season. On arrival at SMU, it was decided that he would be converted to cornerback.
In two years as a starting cornerback at SMU, Stephens registered 92 tackles and broke up 22 passes. He recorded the first interception of his career in his final season.
Stephens was invited to the scouting combine, which didn’t take place due to the pandemic, and headed into the 2021 draft as a projected mid-round pick. The Ravens selected him in the third round and immediately announced they were converting him to safety.
In his rookie year, Stephens was the third safety for the Ravens, but moved into the starting lineup following an injury in November and ended up with 11 starts and a career-high 78 tackles. He added four pass breakups.
Ahead of the 2022 season, Stephens was converted back into a cornerback role and played a variety of positions in a rotational role. He only started four games but had 37 tackles, seven pass breakups and half a sack.
2023 was a breakout year for Stephens as he became a full-time starter due to an injury to Marlon Humphrey and started 16 games. He had 74 tackles, 11 pass breakups and two interceptions, then had 12 more tackles in two postseason games. He wasn’t as good in 2024, although he did have 70 tackles, 10 pass breakups and a career-high 1.5 sacks.
The Jets signed Stephens to a three-year deal worth up to $36 million early on in free agency.
Let’s move onto some more in-depth analysis of what Stephens brings to the table as a player, based on extensive research and film study.
Measurables/Athleticism
Stephens has good size and length and put together excellent numbers during his pro day workout. He ran a 4.44 in the 40-yard dash, managed 19 bench press reps and posted great explosiveness numbers. His agility numbers were about average.
Usage
In a short space of time, Stephens has accumulated a lot of experience in a variety of roles. He was mostly an outside cornerback in college but then played as a deep safety for the Ravens which often saw him matched up in the slot.
Since moving to cornerback, he’s mostly played outside, but he did start a few games in a full-time slot role.
As a corner he’s been employed both in press coverage and off coverage and has also played some zone.
Coverage skills
Other than Alontae Taylor, Stephens has been the most-targeted cornerback in the entire NFL over the past two years, so obviously he’s been challenged a lot and given up a lot of volume in coverage.
Having only given up a catch on 50 percent of his targets in college, he’s given up catches 65 percent of the time at the NFL level and quarterbacks had a rating of over 100 when targeting him last year, although his numbers were solid in 2023.
One thing Stephens does well is run stride for stride with his man on deep routes and, when he anticipates well, he can stay tight on his man coming out of a break.
He’s very physical in coverage, often leaning on his man down the field to disrupt their route and making a lot of contact when the ball is in the air.
Stephens’ route recognition can be inconsistent at times, making it difficult to recover if he hesitates.
While he’s often lined up in press position, he bailed out more often than he jammed or disrupted the receiver’s route at the line, but his experience at safety means he’s also comfortable latching onto a coverage assignment down the field when he’s playing off.
Ball skills
In watching Stephens’ film, there are a few causes for concern. Paramount among these is that he is usually late to get his head turned and locate the ball, sometimes not getting his head turned at all and instead resorting to watching the receiver’s timing and swatting blindly at the ball or the receiver’s arms to try to disrupt.
He’s relatively adept at this, but you get the sense that the league’s elite receivers are more often than not going to come down with the ball if he doesn’t get clean contact on it. Even when he does get his head turned, it’s often at the very last moment and he isn’t always ideally positioned to compete for the ball.
Nevertheless, Stephens is competitive at the catchpoint and has had some success at knocking the ball away from a receiver who looked to have a catch secured or causing them to fail to complete a catch with a well-timed hit on their body. As a result, his on-ball production has been good.
He hasn’t intercepted any passes at the catchpoint though. Of his two NFL picks, both came on diving grabs; one on a deflected pass and the other on a wayward pass due to a communication breakdown.
He could have had a couple more interceptions but he dropped one (albeit on fourth down, where intercepting it would have worsened the field position) and had another where he caught the ball but didn’t come down with both feet inbounds.
Tackling
With his experience as a safety, Stephens brings some good hitting ability as a tackler. He has good closing speed, takes good angles in pursuit and can knock a ball carrier backwards or stop him in his tracks.
He is a secure tackler when he has time to line his man up but will miss tackles in space from time to time.
He hasn’t had a forced fumble at the NFL or college level, although he has stripped the ball away from a few receivers to cause incompletions.
Run defense
Stephens contributes well in run support and has made more of an impact as his career has progressed despite moving away from the safety position. He shows a willingness to come up on the outside or into the box and plays with discipline and patience.
In his rookie year, he was much more productive as a tackler against the run, but nearly all of these stops were at the second level or down the field. He’s had a much higher percentage of run stops at or near the line since moving back to corner.
Physicality
As a former running back, Stephens is obviously attuned to the process of being physical, taking on contact and being aggressive in matchups.
That brings us to the other main concern about Stephens’ film. He is very “handsy”, often going right up to the limit in terms of whether or not he could be flagged. If you look at Stephens’ highlights, a lot of the plays where he successfully defended a pass end with the receiver complaining that there should have been a flag.
He’s had 17 penalties in coverage during his career with 10 for pass interference, five for holding and two for illegal contract. That’s not actually too bad when you consider that he’s replacing DJ Reed who had 11 last season alone. However, it’s definitely troubling because he does have a habit of putting his hands on his man and is often late to get his head turned, which is a combination that makes it hard to argue any calls that go against him.
If he comes up against a bigger receiver, he can lose the physical battle too, especially if he’s late locating the ball and finds himself in a less than ideal position to contest.
Blitzing
Stephens hasn’t had many chances to blitz, and even fewer since he moved out of the safety position, but has recorded three sacks in regular season and preseason action and his closing speed is an asset when coupled with the element of surprise that sending him can produce.
He’s also had a few pressures and deflected a couple of passes at the line, including this one to lead to a turnover.
He has had one penalty for roughing the passer.
Special teams
Stephens barely played on special teams in 2024 and probably wouldn’t be expected to do so much (assuming he’s starting) for the Jets.
His main contributions have come on the kick coverage units, as he has had three special teams tackles in college and seven at the NFL level.
Stephens has played some vice and rushed kicks and punts but has not been used as a primary gunner. He has also had one missed tackle and a penalty for running into the kicker at the NFL level.
Instincts/Intelligence
Stephens’ versatility seems to have helped him to adapt to positions and schemes that are relatively new to him quite quickly. He’s played under three different defensive coordinators and multiple defensive backs coaches in his pro career so far but still shows signs of good positional awareness and an ability to read and react.
He has been involved in a few coverage busts and communication breakdowns in the defensive backfield at times, though.
As noted, Stephens graduated college in three years. In high school, he was on the Athletic Director’s Honor Roll and he was on the National Football Foundation Hampshire Honor Society in college.
Attitude
Ravens general manager Eric DeCosta praised Stephens’ attitude and called him a great teammate, as he has been lauded for staying positive in the face of criticism early in his career before breaking out in 2023. DeCosta also said that his attitude didn’t waver in spite of his 2024 struggles.
He is said to have a relentless work ethic, a determination to keep improving and a team-first attitude in terms of his willingness to contribute in other roles.
His on-field discipline has been relatively good, with no personal fouls other than his roughing the passer penalty. He was fined for a helmet to helmet hit that wasn’t flagged though.
Injuries
Stephens has only dealt with minor injuries in his career so far. He had a shoulder sprain in 2021, a quad strain in 2022 and an ankle sprain in 2023. He was also hospitalized due to illness late in the 2022 season. In all, he has missed just three games in his career and played all 17 last season.
Scheme Fit
Stephens’ versatility is sure to serve him well and the Jets appear to have earmarked him as someone who will fit their system, which is expected to be man-heavy.
The assumption is that they intend for him to be the other starting cornerback across from Sauce Gardner, but his history will give them options in the event they need to shuffle the pack because of injuries.
He was a teammate of current Jets John Simpson and Tre Swilling when he played in Baltimore.
Conclusions
Stephens is a good athlete who was regarded as raw when he entered the NFL and arguably overdrafted based on potential. Four years later, he’s established himself as a starter-level player and earned himself a decent contract from the Jets, who reportedly had to outbid the
Dallas Cowboys to land him.
At this stage of his career, there’s still some rawness to his game technically and he appears to have one or two bad habits. It’s possible that Aaron Glenn views these issues as fixable and feels like he has the potential to help him reach another level, but these aspects were frustrating to Ravens fans over the past few seasons and many of them were surprised at the contract he was given. In an offseason where the Jets haven’t taken many risks, this might be the biggest.
Stephens is moving from a situation where he was targeted a lot while teams would shy away from testing Humphrey and Nate Wiggins and that probably won’t change much now he’ll be playing with Sauce Gardner and Michael Carter II. For the deal to pay off, he needs to handle this like he did in 2023, because a repeat of last year’s struggles could make the Jets’ pass defense vulnerable and potentially mitigate Gardner’s impact in a pivotal year for him.