National Football League
Jets, Milliner agree on 4-year deal
National Football League

Jets, Milliner agree on 4-year deal

Published Jul. 28, 2013 1:00 a.m. ET

The comparisons were inevitable from the moment Dee Milliner was drafted by the New York Jets.

Same position as Darrelle Revis. Same round in the draft. Same lofty expectations.

''I hope when he plays, there are those comparisons, and I understand where people are coming from,'' coach Rex Ryan said Monday. ''But Darrelle was a special player. Dee Milliner is never going to be Darrelle Revis. He's going to be Dee Milliner.

''And I hope that's good enough.''

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Milliner, the No. 9 overall pick out of Alabama, agreed to terms on a four-year deal believed to be worth about $12.66 million late Sunday night.

''I made that call,'' Ryan said, making light of the recent flap over who will make the final decision on the starting quarterback. ''Just kidding.''

Milliner did not arrive in time Monday morning to join his Jets teammates, but was expected to show up at SUNY Cortland later in the day to officially sign his deal.

He will need to pass his physical and conditioning test to begin practicing with the team, but Ryan was unsure when that will happen. Milliner missed the entire offseason while recovering from shoulder surgery in March, but was able to get in classroom work throughout.

''He picked it up real quick,'' defensive coordinator Dennis Thurman said. ''A lot of the terminology we use, Alabama uses, so he came in on top of it and he seems to be a fairly smart guy. The biggest thing for him, the biggest transition for him is going to be the quickness of the game, the speed of the game, how quickly he can get himself acclimated will be is biggest challenge.

''But as far as the mental part of it, he's very sharp.''

Antonio Cromartie will be the player the Jets use in Revis' old role as the No. 1 cornerback who will defend opponents' top receivers. Cromartie thrived last year when Revis went down with a season-ending knee injury early, and they're counting on him for a repeat performance after trading Revis to Tampa Bay shortly before the draft.

The Jets were thrilled when Milliner, considered by some to be a top-5 caliber pick, was available at No. 9. They envisioned Milliner to not replace Revis, per se, but to compete with Kyle Wilson for the other starting spot at cornerback.

''He has to make sure he doesn't get himself caught up in trying to be compared to him,'' Cromartie said of Milliner. ''He's his own man. Darrelle is his own man. The only thing he has to do is come in and be Dee Milliner. That's all we're asking him to do. We're not asking him to come in and be a Darrelle Revis. We're asking him to come in and be Dee Milliner.''

That means being a physical player who thrives in man coverage, the type of cornerback - ''the most complete'' in the draft, according to Thurman - who should fit the defense perfectly. That is, when he gets out on the field and proves he's up to the task.

''He's got to earn it, just like everybody else,'' Thurman said. ''He knows that and we know it. We don't just give anybody anything in this league. You have to earn it. We expect him to be involved and highly competitive to be a starter. That's our anticipation, so we'll see.''

The 6-foot Milliner had six interceptions and 36 pass breakups in his three seasons with Alabama, helping lead the Crimson Tide to two national titles during his time there.

He was the second-to-last first-round draft pick to sign, with the Titans and former Alabama guard Chance Warmack - No. 10 overall - agreeing to terms Monday.

''I think he can be (great),'' Cromartie said of Milliner. ''It just depends on what he wants out of it and what he expects from it.''

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