Feel free to bookmark this and send it to @OldTakesExposed when Daniel Jones makes the Pro Bowl in 3 years.

I just don’t think that will be necessary. I think the New York Giants swung and missed mightily when they reached for Jones with the No. 6 overall pick in the first round Friday night.

We won’t know who’s right (I am) for 3 years, at least, but everything about the pick screamed Blaine Gabbert. We’ve certainly seen it before. Every year, it seems, teams reach for quarterbacks.

How bad was the Giants’ decision?

Here are the 10 worst first-round QB picks in the previous 10 years — and I think Jones eventually will move into the top 5 on this list.

10. Tim Tebow, No. 25, 2010

Always a lightning rod, Tebow’s slow delivery and accuracy issues forced him out of the game after only 3 years. Always a gamer, Tebow ran for 12 TDs in 16 starts and delivered a walk-off TD throw to beat Pittsburgh in a playoff game.

9. EJ Manuel, No. 16, 2013

Manuel started just 18 games in 5 seasons, finishing with a pedestrian 20-16 TD/INT ratio. Not exactly what the Bills had in mind when they drafted him. In fairness, no other QB in that class has amounted to much. Mike Glennon, a third-round pick who has bounced around, is the only one with more than 30 career TD passes.

8. Blake Bortles, No. 3 overall, 2014

I’m a Bortles fan and it’s criminally unfair to blame him for the the Tom Coughlin’s refusal to get him any outside help last season. But the reality is: The Jaguars traded up to land their franchise QB only to cut him after 5 seasons. (In fairness, Derek Carr is the only QB in the 2014 draft class with more TDs.) This also is the reality: Bortles is the second-best QB in franchise history and led them to an AFC Championship Game. He ranks second only to Mark Brunell in career passing yards (17,646) and TDs (103) and holds the Jags’ single-season record in both categories (4,428 and 35 TDs).

7. Mark Sanchez, No. 5, 2009

Sanchez’s NFL career resembles Bortles’ a bit in that both are/were turnover prone but also had some success. Remember, Sanchez was 4-2 as a playoff starter. No QB drafted after him had a better career, but he still finished with more INTs (89) than TDs (86).

6. Christian Ponder, No. 12, 2011

Ponder was a surprising pick and it didn’t take long to find out how wrong the Vikings were to make it. He lasted just 4 seasons, finishing with 38 career TDs and 36 interceptions.

5. Jake Locker, No. 8, 2011

Locker had arm talent, but struggled with accuracy and couldn’t stay healthy. He was out of the league after 4 seasons, finishing with 27 TDs and 21 interceptions.

4. Blaine Gabbert, No. 10, 2011

GMs certainly struggled with the 2011 QB pecking order. Andy Daulton and Colin Kaepernick were second-round picks, obviously taken after 3 guys on this list. Even worse, the Jags traded up to get Gabbert. He lost his job in his third season after throwing a combined 22 TDs and 24 INTs. Gabbert’s ill-fated stint was the reason the Jaguars were hunting so quickly again for a QB when they drafted Bortles in 2014.

3. Paxton Lynch, No. 26 overall, 2016

Lynch was considered a reach at the time and the fact that Dak Prescott has become one of the better QBs in the NFL only exacerbates the Broncos’ angst. Typically, I’d reserve this level of bust for someone taken much earlier, but Lynch lasted just 2 years in the league. And, again … Prescott. Ultimately, I think this is where Daniel Jones lands.

2. Johnny Manziel, No. 22, 2014

Ouch. Johnny Football’s playground style was never a good fit for the NFL, and it didn’t take the Browns long to realize that. He started just 8 games and threw just 7 career TD passes. The only solace: At least Cleveland didn’t trade into the top 10 to draft him.

1. Robert Griffin III, No. 2, 2012

This might sound harsh, but the higher you’re drafted, the greater the expectations. Coming into the league, my biggest concern wasn’t whether his running style could hold up, but for how long. The answer was what many expected: Not long. He was sensational as a rookie, but just a shell of that afterward. Blame injuries, but they were predictable. He resurfaced last season as a backup, but with just 42 career TD passes, he’s clearly the Ryan Leaf to Andrew Luck’s Peyton Manning. And that’s before you remember the Redskins gave up their 2013 and 2014 first-round picks to land him.