By Connor Hughes | NJ Advance Media for NJ.com

While Christian Hackenberg received his most work with the first team this summer, Bryce Petty was the Jets' most impressive quarterback at practice on Wednesday.

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AP Photo

How'd the Jets quarterbacks look?

FLORHAM PARK — Bryce Petty is the forgotten man of One Jets Drive. He watches most team drills, cleans up the scraps of reps, and rarely makes much — if any — impact in practice. He's clearly behind Josh McCown and Christian Hackenberg in this wide-open quarterback competition, but hasn't really been given an opportunity to change that.

Well, that was until Wednesday, when Petty put on a show.

Receiving his most action in 11-on-11 drills to date, Petty completed 9 of 12 passes, highlighted by two long touchdowns to Robby Anderson and Frankie Hammond. He had command in the huddle, poise at the line, and made several impressive throws in addition to his scoring strikes. It was easily the best the third-year quarterback has looked in camp.

But what about McCown and Hackenberg? Here's the complete quarterback report.

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THE ROTATION

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McCown didn't work much at all. This shouldn't come as much of a surprise. The Jets play the Titans in two days. Hackenberg and Petty will see the most action. The rest of this week should be about getting them ready to play.

REP COUNTER (practice):

Josh McCown: 12

Christian Hackenberg: 29

Bryce Petty: 20

REP COUNTER (camp)

McCown: 227

Hackenberg: 196

Bryce Petty: 148

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Day 10 practice report: How'd the non-QBs look?

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THE STATS

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Poor play from the offensive line has been a storyline most of camp. It's clearly impacted both Hackenberg and Petty, because neither, through the first nine practices, had much time in the pocket.

On Wednesday, the first-team line played an awful lot more than usual (mostly all of McCown and Hackenberg's snaps), and the second-team line worked with Petty. This may have been done to evaluate Hackenberg, and see what he looks like with time to throw.

TEAM DRILL STATS

Josh McCown

4 of 5 | sack

Christian Hackenberg

10 of 18 | TD | 2 INTs | 2 sacks

Bryce Petty

9 of 12 | 2 TDs | sack

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CUMULATIVE CAMP STATS

Josh McCown

92 of 140 (65%) | 6 TDs | 3 INTs

Christian Hackenberg

61 of 119 (51%) | 5 TDs | 4 INTs

Bryce Petty

55 of 87 (63%) | 3 TDs | 2 INTs

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Josh McCown: THE GOOD

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He barely played in team drills, so it's hard to praise him for anything. He didn't throw an interception, so that's a positive.

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Peake not worried about Jets' WRs

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Josh McCown: THE BAD

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Again, McCown didn't play enough to truly analyze him.

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Christian Hackenberg: THE GOOD

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Hackenberg threw a beauty of a touchdown to wide receiver Frankie Hammond in red zone work. The second-year quarterback put the ball perfectly over the head of the defender, which allowed Hammond to score on the fade route. It was an impressive throw.

When Hackenberg's good, he's really good. The issue is his lows are so, so low.

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ASJ ready to be go-to guy?

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Christian Hackenberg: THE BAD

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In the first eight training camp practices, Hackenberg didn't throw a single interception in team work. In his last two, he has five (one in 7-on-7s). The alarming aspect of these turnovers is they're seemingly telegraphed to defenders. Hackenberg just isn't making good decisions.

I think this comes down, again, to his read progression. He's locking onto his first receiver, and sticking with him throughout the play. If that guy happens to get open, it's a completion. If he doesn't, the pass falls incomplete... or worse.

The defense is starting to realize this, and just following Hackenberg's eyes. Hackenberg has to dissect the coverage quicker, so he knows when to go to his second target. He's not doing that right now.

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Bryce Petty: THE GOOD

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There was a lot to like about Petty on Wednesday. His arm was alive, and he played with more confidence than at any other point in camp. His touchdown to Frankie Hammond was perfectly thrown. Really a thing of beauty. He did a nice job moving around in the pocket. He's deceptively mobile.

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Powell ready to breakout?

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Bryce Petty: THE BAD

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Not much to complain about. Petty didn't do anything wrong. First time in camp we've been able to say that.

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THE HIGHLIGHTS AND LOWLIGHTS

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Here are a few of the standout plays from practice:

It wasn't as bad as Tuesday, but receivers again struggled with drops. Four, to be exact. Fullback Anthony Firkser, along with receivers Myles White, Jalin Marshall and ArDarius Stewart all had balls go through their hands.

Quarterback Christian Hackenberg seems to be getting more comfortable throwing the fade. He hit Charone Peake for one to beat cornerback Morris Claiborne, and later connected with Frankie Hammond. Good to see. He struggled with that earlier in camp.

This is a silly highlight, but Christian Hackenberg has sliding down pat. He did it twice Wednesday with perfect form. Considering how much Ryan Fitzpatrick and Geno Smith struggled with getting down the last several years, that's a good thing.

Quarterback Christian Hackenberg hit receiver Robby Anderson with a beautiful pass over his left shoulder for a first-down on third down. Nice touch pass.

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What rule changes are coming to NFL?

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WINNER OF THE DAY

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Hackenberg had moments, but his lows were just too low. Petty was the best quarterback on the field Wednesday.

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SCORECARD

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McCown: 6 practices "won"

Hackenberg: 2

Petty: 2

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