Brendan Sorsby is at the forefront of the NFL conversation now that minicamps and OTAs have wrapped up; the noise around him will only increase leading into his July 10 Pro Day. The supplemental draft will likely take place sometime in mid-to-late July, though a date hasn’t been announced yet (and at this point, Sorsby’s application for the draft hasn’t been formally approved).When there was first buzz about Sorsby possibly going to the NFL in April, I wrote about the prospect of the New York Jets pursuing him. The Jets were, obviously, aware of the possibility and have been doing their due diligence. They scouted Sorsby at Cincinnati during the 2025 season, when he was still a candidate for the 2026 draft, and they saw him at Texas Tech’s pro day.The risks are obvious for any team that signs a player with as much baggage as Sorsby, not to mention uncertainty over whether the NFL will suspend him. When a player is suspended, he can’t spend time at the facility or communicate with the coaching staff, so there wouldn’t be much of an opportunity for “development” if the NFL hands Sorsby a lengthy suspension.The talent, though, is obvious. At his best, Sorsby is a gunslinger and a prospect many viewed as a potential first-rounder not only in 2027 but in 2026, had he entered the draft. Others are a little less high on him.Where are the best NFL landing spots for Brendan Sorsby?Dane BruglerI can’t imagine head coach Aaron Glenn would be excited at the prospect of adding Sorsby, who will be a distraction for any team that signs him. The Jets want to see what they have with Geno Smith and fourth-round rookie Cade Klubnik. They don’t feel pressure to add a prospect who almost certainly won’t play in 2026 when the 2027 draft is projected to have a QB class, and when the Jets possess three first-round picks.Some reporting has suggested there will be teams bidding as high as a second-round pick for Sorsby. I’d be stunned if the Jets went that high.A third-round pick would be more understandable, considering all their draft capital, but it still seems unlikely to me. A fourth-round pick is where it gets interesting — a low-risk bid on a potential high-ceiling quarterback would mitigate much of the risk that comes with adding him.However, I don’t see general manager Darren Mougey as someone who would make a move like this unless he really believed in Sorsby’s talent and the infrastructure the Jets have in place to make it work. They don’t need to force it right now.So, contrary to what oddsmakers seem to think, I don’t believe the Jets are the likeliest team to add Sorsby in July.Glenn wrapped last week’s minicamp a day early. This is what I saw this spring, and what we might see this summer and fall:The development of David BaileyThere’s been some consternation on social media about the lack of spring highlights from the No. 2 pick, but I wouldn’t read too much into it. As defensive line coach Karl Dunbar pointed out, pads aren’t even on yet.“I think he is a good athlete,” said Dunbar, who also raved about Bailey’s football IQ and study habits. “He’s bursty, he can get off, he’s smart and that’s all we see because we don’t have pads on.”