News Giants Team Notes

NY Giants news: Mike Kafka interviews for Eagles offensive coordinator role

New York Giants interim head coach Mike Kafka calls a play against the Washington Commanders


New York Giants offensive coordinator and interim head coach Mike Kafka interviewed for the Philadelphia Eagles vacant offensvie coordinator job, per a report from ESPN’s Jeremy Fowler.

It isn’t particularly surprising that Kafka is getting attention as an offensive coordinator candidate. He’s a respected offensive mind who is respected around the NFL. Kafka has received head coaching interviews every off-season since becoming the Giants’ offensive coordinator, and the Giants’ offense has played above it’s talent level under him.

It also isn’t surprsing that the Eagles would show interest in Kafka. After all, he has significant experience with dual threat quarterbacks after coaching Daniel Jones and Jaxson Dart. Kafka was also originally drafted by the Eagles back in the 4th round of the 2010 NFL Draft, and he both played and coached under Andy Reid.

The Eagles have also interviewed former Giants’ head coach Brian Daboll (who has also interviewed for the Tennessee Titans’ coaching vacancy).

NFL Insider Pete Schrager reported on the Bill Simmons podcast that Kafka remains in the mix for the Giants offensive coordinator position, saying,

“But Mike Kafka, who was the interim coach and the offensive coordinator last year. I got from pretty good people. He’s still in the mix for offensive coordinator of the New York Giants. It’s the rare, like, alright, so I was offensive coordinator, new head coach. And I was the interim head coach. Still might be the OC because Dart actually showed a lot of flashes with him.”

It’s expected that Todd Monken will be the favorite to be the Giants’ offensive coordinator under John Harbaugh. However, there will still be a hiring process and Monken is a candidate for the Cleveland Browns head coaching position. With that in mind, it’s possible that Kafka could win the job outright thanks to the work he’s already shown with Jaxson Dart, or he could become the frontrunner if Monken is hired by the Browns.

That, of course, is contingent on Kafka not being hired by the Eagles before the Giants begin interviewing for their own offensive coordinator role.

Source: https://www.bigblueview.com/new-yor...elphia-eagles-offensive-coordinator-interview
 
What the NY Giants are saying about the hiring of John Harbaugh

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It took more than two days after John Harbaugh had reportedly accepted the job as head coach of the New York Giants to finalize the deal. Harbaugh has now signed on the dotted line. Here is what the Giants were saying in their official announcement of the hiring.

Co-owner and team president John Mara:

“We are proud to name John Harbaugh as the next head coach of the New York Giants. Joe Schoen presented us an outstanding group of candidates, which allowed us to be deliberate and confident in this decision. Through numerous conversations, John consistently stood out for his conviction and vision for leading a winning organization, and we welcome him and his family to the Giants.”

Co-owner and chairman Steve Tisch:

“John is a proven winner whose teams are disciplined, resilient, and prepared. His passion for the game, his ability to connect with players, and his experience leading at the highest level made him an outstanding fit for us, and we’re excited to move forward together.”

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General manager Joe Schoen:

“Throughout our conversations, John stood out for his clarity, competitiveness and approach for building a sustainable winning program. He has a strong track record of developing players, building cohesive staffs, and setting a clear standard of accountability. We are excited to work with John in moving this team in the right direction.”

Harbaugh:

“I want to thank John Mara, Steve Tisch, Chris Mara, and Joe Schoen for the opportunity to lead the New York Giants,” said Harbaugh. “To serve as this franchise’s head coach is a tremendous honor. I come from a football family, and I have deep respect for the history and tradition of this organization.

“I’m excited to begin assembling our staff and getting to work building our team. I would like to sincerely thank Steve Bisciotti and the Baltimore Ravens organization for 18 remarkable years, including the opportunity to become a head coach in the National Football League.

“My family and I are grateful for the welcome we’ve already felt, and we look forward to becoming part of the Giants family.”

The Giants will formally introduce Harbaugh as their head coach at noon on Tuesday.

John Harbaugh Coaching Experience

1984-86:
Western Michigan – Graduate Assistant

1987: Pittsburgh – Tight Ends

1988: Morehead State – DBs/Special Teams/Strength & Conditioning

1989-94: University of Cincinnati – Special Teams/TEs/OLBs/RBs

1995-96: University of Cincinnati – Assistant Head Coach

1997: Indiana University – DBs/Special Teams Coordinator

1998-2006: Philadelphia Eagles – Special Teams Coordinator

2007: Philadelphia Eagles – Secondary

2008-25: Baltimore Ravens – Head Coach

John Harbaugh Coaching Record

2008*:
Baltimore Ravens 11-5 (.688)

2009*: Baltimore Ravens 9-7 (.563)

2010*: Baltimore Ravens 12-4 (.750)

2011**: Baltimore Ravens 12-4 (.750)

2012***: Baltimore Ravens 10-6 (.625)

2013: Baltimore Ravens 8-8 (.500)

2014*: Baltimore Ravens 10-6 (.625)

2015: Baltimore Ravens 5-11 (.313)

2016: Baltimore Ravens 8-8 (.500)

2017: Baltimore Ravens 9-7 (.563)

2018**: Baltimore Ravens 10-6 (.625)

2019**: Baltimore Ravens 14-2 (.875)

2020*: Baltimore Ravens 11-5 (.688)

2021: Baltimore Ravens 8-9 (.471)

2022*: Baltimore Ravens 10-7 (.588)

2023**: Baltimore Ravens 13-4 (.765)

2024**: Baltimore Ravens 12-5 (.706)

2025: Baltimore Ravens 8-9 (.471)

Totals: 180-113 (.614)

*Made postseason

**Won division

***Won division and Super Bowl

Source: https://www.bigblueview.com/new-yor...g-statements-john-mara-steve-tisch-joe-schoen
 
NFL Playoffs: Game times, TV channels, streaming, odds for Sunday’s games

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The Divisional Round of the NFL playoffs concludes on Sunday with the Houston Texans facing the New England Patriots in the AFC and the Los Angeles Rams meeting the Chicago Bears in the NFC.

Use this thread to discuss all of Sunday’s playoff action.

No. 5 Houston Texans (13-5) at No. 2 New England Patriots (15-3)​


New England defeated the Los Angeles Chargers, 16-3, on Wild Card Weekend to secure their first postseason win since Super Bowl LIII (Feb. 3, 2019, against the Los Angeles Rams). Houston earned its first road playoff win in franchise history with a 30-6 win at Pittsburgh and advanced to the Divisional playoffs for the third straight season, the longest such streak in team history.

What: AFC Divisional playoffs
When: Sunday, Jan. 18
Where: Gillette Stadium
Time: 3 p.m. ET
TV: ESPN/ABC
Announcers: Joe Buck, Troy Aikman, Lisa Salters / Laura Rutledge (field reporter)
Streaming: ESPN+/ESPN Deportes
Radio: Sirius XM — National: Channel 88 | Texans: Channel 812 | Patriots: Channel 821| Spanish Radio: Channel 832 ; Westwood One — John Sadak, Jason McCourty
Referee: Shawn Smith
FanDuel Odds: Patriots -3
Weather: 34 degrees. A chance of snow before 2 a.m.. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 22. West wind around 5 mph. Chance of precipitation is 50%. New snow accumulation of 1 to 3 inches possible.

No. 5 Los Angeles Rams (13-5) at No. 2 Chicago Bears (12-6)​


Last week, Chicago overcame an 18-point deficit – the largest comeback in Chicago postseason history – and scored 25 fourth quarter points – the third-most ever in a playoff game – to defeat Green Bay, 31-27, for its first postseason win since the 2010 NFC Divisional round (Jan. 16, 2011, against Seattle). In the Wild Card round, the Rams earned their first road postseason victory since the 2021 Divisional Playoffs (Jan. 23, 2022, at Tampa Bay) with a 34-31 win over the Panthers.

The two teams have not met in a postseason game in 40 years. The last meeting came when the Bears defeated the Rams 24-0 in the 1985 NFC Championship Game.

What: NFC Divisional playoffs
When: Sunday, Jan. 18
Where: Soldier Field
Time: 6:30 p.m.
TV: NBC
Announcers: Mike Tirico, Cris Collinsworth, Melissa Stark / Kaylee Hartung (field reporters)
Streaming: Peacock
Radio: Sirius XM — National: Channel 88 | Rams: Channel 818 | Bears: Channel 805 | Spanish Radio: Channel 832; Westwood One — One: Kevin Harlan, Ross Tucker
Referee: Shawn Hochuli
FanDuel Odds: Rams -3.5
Weather: 18 degrees. A chance of snow. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 4. Chance of precipitation is 50%. New snow accumulation of less than half an inch possible.

Source: https://www.bigblueview.com/general...els-streaming-odds-texans-patriots-rams-bears
 
NY Giants 2025 position review: Does New York need an upgrade at safety?

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The New York Giants have botched their safety situation during the Joe Schoen era. The general manager inherited safeties Xavier McKinney and Julian Love from Dave Gettleman. Both safeties were captains on the Giants; the latter left after the 2022 season, signing a two-year, $12-million contract with the Seattle Seahawks, while the former signed a massive four-year, $68 million contract with the Green Bay Packers at the end of the 2023 season.

Both players excelled in their new homes, with Love signing a three-year, $33-million contract to remain in Seattle. Schoen initially opted for a cheap safety solution, with Jason Pinnock as one option and Dane Belton as depth. Then Schoen spent the 47th pick in the 2024 NFL Draft on Tyler Nubin, who showed promise in his rookie season but whose athletic capabilities were exposed in year two.

To rectify the weakness of the 2024 safety room, Schoen made a big investment in Jevon Holland to start the 2025 off-season. Holland signed a three-year, $45.3-million contract, and returns on that investment were minimal in year one, albeit a new defensive structure could certainly benefit both Holland and Nubin. Plus, the Giants may not be done investing at the position.

2025 season in review


Jevon Holland, Tyler Nubin, Dane Belton, Raheem Layne, Beau Brade

Nubin showed promise during his rookie season but took a step back in Year 2. The image of Nubin struggling to keep pace with running backs up the sideline is one that Giants fans would gladly dispense with; however, to be fair, those backside gaps should never have been left vacant. Nubin was repeatedly placed in difficult situations that exposed his marginal speed and acceleration.

He finished the season with 71 tackles, 15 missed (16.9% missed tackle rate), and 20 STOPs near the line of scrimmage. Schoen drafted Nubin because of his ball-hawking skill set at Minnesota, where he set the university’s interception record. After two seasons, Nubin has two passes defensed and zero picks. Days could be brighter for Nubin, but he may be best suited closer to the line of scrimmage in a Belton-esque role. Nubin missed the final two games of the season with a neck injury.

Speaking of Belton, he played 705 defensive snaps, starting nine games for the Giants, while operating in his sub-package DIME/LB role. Belton started when Holland and Nubin were injured, and he finished the year with 94 tackles and just four missed (4.1% missed tackle rate), with 16 STOPs, four passes defensed, a pick, and three interceptions allowed. The 25-year-old is set to hit free agency.

Belton filled a valuable role for the Giants and was reliable, putting up his best season in a contract year. He played deep safety, buzz defender, in the slot, and he had 272 snaps in the box. You could do much worse than Belton as the third safety.

Holland was known as a ball hawk at Oregon and in the first two years of his professional career in Miami. That did not manifest in Year 1 with the Giants. Holland recorded three passes defensed with one interception, but he did have a pick-six negated by an Abdul Carter offside. Holland was guilty of four penalties and had 57 total tackles, nine STOPs, and seven missed tackles (10.9% missed tackle rate).

Holland wasn’t bad, but — like most players not on the defensive front — did notmake many plays. His presence did not appear to be much of an upgrade over players like Pinnock or Belton. Still, I remain optimistic that Holland and Nubin are in for better days now that the Giants have moved on from former defensive coordinator Shane Bowen.

Raheem Layne played 105 snaps for the Giants’ defense and was a hard hitter who missed 27.3% of his tackles. Brade played just one defensive snap: the 29-yard reception to Marvin Mims Jr. with 33 seconds left in the fourth quarter against Denver. Not Brade’s fault, but that was his only snap of the season.



2026 outlook​


We are uncertain who the defensive coordinator will be for the 2026 season under John Harbaugh. One name linked to the Giants in a weaker 2026 draft class is star safety Caleb Downs of Ohio State. Eric Berry was the last safety drafted in the top five of an NFL draft, and that was in 2010 by the Kansas City Chiefs, although Jamal Adams was selected sixth by the Jets in 2017.

There would be resistance if the Giants spent the No. 5 pick on Downs, given the poor management of the safety room under Schoen’s tenure and the positional value of a safety. Still, Downs has game-changing ability with a rare combination of the three R’s: recognition, range, and run support.

A safety with that type of versatility can allow the Giants to play lighter boxes to entice the run from a two-high-shell, while fitting the run quickly to force STOPs near the line of scrimmage. A player like Downs is a threat over the middle of the field in coverage, and he tilts the math in favor of the defense when he can fit from depth with such consistency. I’m not advocating for the Giants to draft Downs, but I do understand the appeal, especially in this draft.

If the Giants go high at safety with a player like Downs, then Nubin would transition more to a sub-package hybrid-linebacker role. Downs would quickly be the Giants’ best defensive player outside their edge and defensive line group. Myles ‘Ghost’ Rowser of Arizona State could be a day-two option if the Giants really wanted to add another safety, which I don’t envision unless it’s Downs.

Belton is a free agent who may opt to take his talents elsewhere. Belton never received the opportunity to be the starter through his rookie contract, despite the Giants parting ways with Love and McKinney. He earned significant snaps in 2025 due to injury. He may want to explore other options, but a new coaching staff could convince Belton to stay if Schoen and the coaches want his talents here in New York.

Depth additions are necessary if Belton does depart. A player like Alohi Gilman, who played most of the 2025 season with Harbaugh in Baltimore, could be a high-football-IQ option for New York. We’ll know more about the best fits when the Giants hire a defensive coordinator.

Source: https://www.bigblueview.com/new-yor...-nubin-dane-belton-caleb-downs-2026-nfl-draft
 
NY Giants news: Vikings’ assistant to get defensive coordinator interview

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The New York Giants have requested to interview Minnesota Vikings defensive backs coach and pass game coordinator Daronte Jones for their vacant defensive coordinator position, per ESPN NFL insider Adam Schefter.

Jones has already interviewed in-person for the defensive coordinator openings with the Dallas Cowboys and New York Jets.

Jones, 47, has never been an NFL defensive coordinator. He was defensive coordinator at Bowie State from 2005-2009 and at LSU in 2021.

Jones has been defensive backs coach with the Vikings since 2022, adding pass game coordinator to his title in 2023.

Brian Flores, regarded as one of the NFL’s most creative and aggressive defensive coordinators, has been Minnesota’s defensive coordinator since 2022.

Here is a nugget about Jones from Dan Duggan of The Athletic:

The Giants interviewed Jones for their DC job in 2024 before hiring Shane Bowen. No evident ties to Harbaugh, but he overlapped for a year in Miami with Joe Schoen.

Jones’ NFL resume includes stops with the Miami Dolphins, Cincinnati Bengals, and two stints with the Vikings. Jones has also coached in high school, at the Division II level, in the FCS, FBS, and in the Canadian Football League.

This is the first known interview for a coordinator position by the Giants since John Harbaugh was named head coach on Saturday.

Source: https://www.bigblueview.com/new-yor...rdinator-interview-john-harbaugh-brian-flores
 
10 questions John Harbaugh needs to answer as NY Giants introduce new head coach

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The New York Giants formally introduce John Harbaugh as their new head coach on Tuesday in East Rutherford, N.J. Harbaugh has given interviews to Ian O’Connor of The Athletic and Albert Breer of Sports Illustrated since signing his contract on Saturday, but this will be the first time the New York media at-large gets to hear from the man the Giants are hoping will reverse their fortunes.

What are some of the questions Harbaugh is likely to be asked when he steps to the podium some time after noon on Tuesday? Here are 10 questions I hope he will be asked in some form.

What does a ‘winning culture’ look like to you?​


Harbaugh is a CEO style head coach, a one-time special teams coordinator who does not call plays on offense or defense. He hires offensive and defensive coordinators who believe in his philosophy of how the game should be played, and empowers them to do their jobs.

Harbaugh is considered a “culture-setter”, and early in his career in Baltimore he was unafraid to stand up to future Hall of Fame players like Ed Reed and Ray Lewis.

What are the tenets of a winning culture, or the kind of culture that Harbaugh believes in?

These may not all be culture-related, but this snippet from a recent story in the Baltimore Banner, tells us something about how Harbaugh does his job.

It could also take leaving Baltimore for Harbaugh to break out of the coaching rut that doomed his Ravens tenure. Among Harbaugh’s greatest virtues as a coach is his curiosity; through his work with the Harbaugh Coaching Academy, he’s interviewed a handful of fellow head coaches, even Kevin Stefanski, then leading the rival Cleveland Browns, probing them for ideas and insights.

Over a disappointing 2025, Harbaugh rarely seemed to find the right message for his own Ravens team. If he fails with the Giants, it won’t be for a lack of trying. Harbaugh’s openness to evolution and compromise made him the longest-serving head coach in Baltimore’s professional sports history. Now comes the biggest change, and challenge, of his career.

“Coaching at any level is a day-to-day job, and your job is to do the best job you can today, and to do everything you can to help your players and your coaches – if you’re a head coach – be the best they can be every single day,” Harbaugh said late in the season, as questions swirled about his job security. “We have responsibilities, and we’re given opportunities to steward those responsibilities, and you’re given a job to do that until you’re not. And then I try to do the job, not try to keep the job, because there’s no such thing as having a job. You’re just doing a job.

“And so my focus is on always … to try to do the best job I can today and fight as hard as I can so the guys have the best chance to be successful today. And anything after today, I’m not thinking about, because it’s not given for us to think about. We don’t have control over that, except for the job we do today. And if we do a good enough job today, then the opportunity to do that job or a different job will be there tomorrow, and that’s what you hope for.”

Will you consider retaining any current Giants assistants?​


There seems to be some confusion about the status of assistant coaches with the Giants at the end of the 2025 season. Those coaches, to my knowledge, are still under contract to the Giants.

There was one report that some of those coaches had already been told by Harbaugh that they would be let go. Another report indicated that assistant coaches would meet with Harbaugh later this week in what would amount to an interview to keep their jobs.

When I checked with an assistant coach, he was in the dark and had no information either way. That could indicate that assistant coaches are being considered on a case-by-case, or coach-by-coach, basis.

One of the big reasons Harbaugh is now the Giants coach, and that Joe Schoen remains the general manager, is that ownership seems to believe coaching was at the root of the Giants’ issues the past couple of seasons. That could make it difficult for the Giants to keep many of the coaches left from Brian Daboll’s staff.

What does ‘bolster up the analytics’ mean? What needs to be added?​


The Ravens have been known as a team at the forefront in terms of their use of analytics, and Harbaugh said in one of the interviews he gave after taking the Giants’ job that he would like to see the team “bolster up the analytics” department.

So, what does that mean? Adding people to the analytics group? Using it to impact more game-day decisions? Adding more analytics to their study of personnel?

What are the important factors in developing a young quarterback?​


The Giants, of course, have Jaxson Dart and making sure he becomes the quarterback the Giants believe he can be is of paramount importance.

Harbaugh has done the “develop a young quarterback” thing successfully twice. His tenure as Ravens’ head coach began in 2008, when Baltimore took Joe Flacco with the 18th overall pick. The Ravens won a Super Bowl with Flacco, and he was still in the league in 2025. Lamar Jackson has won two MVP awards in eight seasons since the Ravens drafted him No. 32 overall in 2018.

Picking up where Brian Daboll and Mike Kafka left off with Dart will be a new experience for Harbaugh. Daboll and Kafka said they had a multi-year plan for Dart that included a number of “benchmarks” they wanted to see him hit along the way.

Does Harbaugh have similar benchmarks, or does he have another way he looks at guiding the progress of a young quarterback?

Do you have final say on major personnel decisions?​


We already know the answer to this one is “yes.” In truth, it would just be worth getting Harbaugh on the record actually admitting it. Even if asked, though, he will probably say simply that he and Schoen will continue to work until they have an agreement.

The reality is this. There is no way, at least in the short term, that a head coach with a Super Bowel title, 12 playoff appearances, and a freshly-minted five-year contract for more than $100 million, is going to be overruled by a 22-45-1 GM who is fortunate to still have a job. At least in the short term.

Losing close games and big leads has been a habit here. How does that change?​


The Giants, as their fan base knows all too well, excruciatingly lost five games during the 2025 season in which they held double-digit leads. Over the past two seasons they have gone 2-14 in one-score games. They blamed 1-8 in one-score games in 2024 on poor quarterback play, and 1-6 in such games in 2025 on bad defense.

Will Harbaugh have the answer? It is a valid question. The Ravens were 1-5 in one-score games during the 2025 season. With a two-time MVP quarterback in Lamar Jackson at the helm over the past eight seasons, Baltimore never reached the Super Bowl. That period of time is littered with close playoff losses and games during which Harbaugh’s game plans or late-game decisions were questioned.

How does he learn, or how has he learned, from such failures? How can he help the Giants learn to avoid the inexplicable losses that have defined their last couple of seasons?

Will there be other noticeable changes to the organizational structure?​


We already know that the head coach to GM to owner reporting structure the Giants have employed since the days of George Young, if not before, is gone. Harbaugh and Schoen will be on theoretically even footing, both reporting directly to John Mara.

We know that Harbaugh is going to have a stronger voice in personnel decisions than any Giants’ coach in the Super Bowl era.

What other changes will there be?

Chris Mara was a critical player in getting Harbaugh to sign with the Giants. Harbaugh has said the two have formed a good bond. Will he play a bigger front office role, particularly with John Mara struggling through a cancer battle?

Could there be a shuffling of roles in the front office, or even some defections, if Harbaugh wants changes there?

Could Harbaugh encourage changes in how the Giants manipulate the salary cap, particularly the reluctance of Schoen thus far to embrace void years?

The Ravens have long been a team that accumulates a high number of compensatory picks. Could the Giants follow suit?

Could changes come in areas like nutrition, training, and other smaller areas that aren’t seen by the public?

Are you a positional value believer, or a talent/need/grade guy in your draft philosophy?​


Schoen has been a strong believer in positional value. That has shaped decisions like those on Saquon Barkley, safety Xavier McKinney, defensive tackle Leonard Williams, and probably others. The Ravens, while drafting later because they have been more successful, seem to be less inclined to to worry about positional value.

  • In 2025, Baltimore drafted safety Malaki Starks with its first-round pick, 27th overall. The Ravens also drafted placekicker Tyler Loop in Round 6.
  • In 2022, the Ravens drafted safety Kyle Hamilton 14th and center Tyler Linderbaum 27th. Again, two players at positions not considered premium ones by most NFL teams.
  • In 2020, the Ravens drafted linebacker Patrick Queen in Round 1 (28th overall) and running back J.K. Dobbins in Round 2.
  • In 2018, they selected tight end Hayden Hurst 25th. Yes, they also selected quarterback Lamar Jackson No. 32.

Harbaugh may not have had the final call on those picks in Baltimore, but do they indicate he places less emphasis on positional value than Schoen? It is an interesting question because safety Caleb Downs of Ohio State, who plays a non-premium position but might be the best defensive player in the draft, is likely to be available to the Giants at No. 5 in the 2026 NFL Draft.

Was there a point after meeting with the Giants where you believed a deal was not going to happen?​


Ian O’Connor’s fantastic look inside the 48 hours leading up to Harbaugh signing his contract with the Giants indicated that the Giants always seemed confident a deal would get done, but Harbaugh and his reps were less certain.

As badly as he seemed to want to become Giants’ coach, it would be interesting to know if he ever felt it wasn’t going to happen. There were reports the Tennessee Titans were circling, waiting for the deal with the Giants to fall apart.

Second acts have been a mixed bag for successful coaches. Why are you confident this will work?​


No coach who has won a Super Bowl as coach of one team has ever done so as coach of a second team. Sean Payton of the Denver Broncos, who won one with the New Orleans Saints, has a chance to change that history this season. To do so, though, he will have to hope backup quarterback Jarrett Stidham can summon his best Jeff Hostetler impersonation after the unfortunate season-ending injury to Bo Nix.

A high degree of success in one place does not, though, guarantee that same high level of success in another place.

Andy Reid has had more success with the Kansas City Chiefs than he did with the Philadelphia Eagles. Tom Coughlin won both of his Super Bowl titles with the Giants, his second stop as an NFL head coach. Bill Belichick’s run with the New England Patriots followed a losing tenure with the Cleveland Browns.

Mike McCarthy, Bill Parcells, Mike Shanahan and Mike Holmgren are all Super Bowl-winning coaches who not only did not win Super Bowls in a second stop, but did not win games nearly as often as they had.

As hopeful as everyone is that Harbaugh’s hiring will change the fortunes of a franchise that has one playoff victory and just two playoff appearances in the last 14 years success in New York is not a certainty for Harbaugh.

Source: https://www.bigblueview.com/new-yor...h-needs-to-answer-head-coach-press-conference
 
John Harbaugh news: NY Giants’ new head coach on Jaxson Dart, a winning culture

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EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — After making the playoffs just twice in 14 years, and winning just one playoff game, the New York Giants needed a jolt of energy. After 18 mostly successful years coaching the Baltimore Ravens, John Harbaugh seemed on Tuesday to feel like a new start was good for him, too.

“It’s a profound honor to be entrusted with the responsibility of coaching the New York Football Giants,” Harbaugh said. “One of the most iconic franchises in all of sports. I wanted this job … to be on the biggest stage in the biggest sport.”

Harbaugh said he is “really excited” about the idea of starting over again and building something from scratch.

“I can’t wait,” he said.

Harbaugh said he never considered taking time off, but his next job “had to be the right opportunity.”

“This was kind of the obvious one from the beginning. This is the one I wanted,” Harbaugh said. “I wanted it because we have an opportunity to go win. I like these players, man.”

Harbaugh said there will be “a relentless commitment … to do things the right way every single day.”

‘When we set out to do this we knew that John was going to be the perfect person for the New York Giants,“ said general manager Joe Schoen.

Earlier on Tuesday, I posted ‘10 questions Harbaugh needed to answer’ at his introductory press conference. In some way, Harbaugh touched on many of those questions during his first media availability. Let’s go through some of what he said about those topics.

What does a ‘winning culture’ look like to you?​


Harbaugh said the Giants “have to earn the right” to win games.

“You build anything together. You build it from the inside out,” Harbaugh said. “Culture’s kind of a crazy word. What does it really mean?

“ … What is it in football? It’s a bunch of guys that see the game the same way. It’s a bunch of guys that want to play the game together the same way. It’s a relentless brotherhood, having each other’s back. Being unwilling to give up because that guy next to you is unwilling to give up.”

More than a dozen Giants players were gathered in the back of the field house to watch Harbaugh’s presser. He pointed them as he continued:

“We’ll decide what the culture looks like together every single day by what we do together. That’s how you build it. Together.”

Harbaugh, using a saying he got from his dad, long-time coach Jack Harbaugh, talked about “attacking the day with an enthusiasm unknown to mankind.”

“When you do that day-by-day, you build something, you take it on to the field and you let the chips fly, and you go play some ball.”

Harbaugh said that many things change in the NFL, but the “principles” behind everything “are written in stone …. they aren’t ever going to change.”

What kind of players does Harbaugh want?

“To me, the number one thing is we have to have guys that love football. You just have to. It’s football. What are we here for? What do we do? What is this building for? It’s for football. This is a football team,” Harbaugh said. “We need guys that love everything about football. They love the games. They love the practices. They love the weightlifting. They love the meetings. They love the dining hall. They love every part of football. If you love football, guys, if you love football, you’re going to want to be here. You’re going to want to drive in that parking lot every single day. You’re going to want to walk through those doors, you’re going to want to walk up in those halls, you’re going to want to get in front of that tape and watch tape every single day because you’re going to be around a bunch of guys that love what you love. They love football, because that’s what we’re going to be doing, football, all the time, every day.

“If there’s guys around that don’t love football, Joe, we’re probably going to let those guys go play someplace else because if you don’t love football, you’re not going to love it here because we’ll be doing football. That’s the plan.”

Will you consider retaining any current Giants assistants?​


Harbaugh said he will start interviewing assistant coaches on Wednesday. He will talk to current Giants assistants, who are believed to still be under contract.

“Great coaches on this staff that we’re looking forward to talking to,” Harbaugh said. “We’re talking to people all across the league, talking to people in Baltimore, obviously, too. We will build the very best coaching staff that we can.”

Harbaugh said he does believe a few of the assistant coaches from Baltimore will join him with the Giants, but he wasn’t ready to offer names.

“My dad always said it starts with teachers. Coaches are teachers first,” Harbaugh said. “The ability to teach, the ability to take a vision that’s well-organized, a structure that’s put together in a really good way that the players can play fast, play around their skillset, you’ve got to create something like that and then present it to the guys and train it in a way that the guys can get out there and play with a lot of confidence.”

What are the important factors in developing a young quarterback?​


Developing Jaxson Dart is a big part of the key to whether Harbaugh will succeed or fail in New York. Harbaugh did not lay out a plan for Dart, but did share his excitement about working with him.

“The quarterback’s kind of important. That’s kind of a big deal,” Harbaugh said. “I’m excited about Jaxson Dart … You build your team around your quarterback.

“I lik the way he plays. I like his talent, his skillset … more than that I like who he is and what he’s about. To me he’s about football. This young guy loves football. He wants to talk football all the time. That’s kind of what I like doing, too, so I think we’re going to have a lot of great conversations.”

What makes a good quarterback?

“It starts with the ability to make plays,” Harbaugh said. “You watch all the games you’ll see the quarterback is making a difference one way or another. It just takes an exceptional level of talent, play-making ability, awareness, grit, all those things. Sometimes it’s arm strength, sometimes it’s accuracy. It’s almost always the ability to get out of the pocket and make a play. All those things that Jaxson has I’m excited about.”

Do you have final say on major personnel decisions?​


Harbaugh would not say he has final authority on major personnel decisions. He said he has “input” and the ability to set the “vision” for what he wants. He said decisions will be “collective.”

“Everybody wants to make a little bit about who’s making what decision, but at the end the point is that we should all agree to agree,” Harbaugh said.

There were, of course, questions in the media and the fan base about whether an accomplished coach like Harbaugh would want to work with a GM who has built teams that have gone 13-38 the last three seasons. Harbaugh said he expected “great collaboration” with the embattled general manager.

“His knowledge is deep. He knows the league, he knows the coaches in the league, he knows the players in the league, probably knows all the scouts in the league, too,” Harbaugh said. “He was impressive to me.”

Harbaugh downplayed the change in Giants’ organizational structure that will have him reporting to co-owner John Mara rather than to Schoen.

“It’s really not that important in the big picture, in the big scheme of things. I think it’s kind of overblown just a little bit in terms of how it works,” Harbaugh said. “But the main thing is that it works and that we work together. That’s what matters. That’s kind of what I was used to, and it felt like a good way to kind of start off. I think Mr. Mara was happy about that. It seemed like it made sense.”

Losing close games and big leads has been a habit here. How does that change?​


The Giants went 4-13 in 2025 and 7-27 over the last two seasons. In 2025, they lost five games in which they had double-digit leads, and they have gone 2-14 in one-score games over the last two years.

Despite that, Harbaugh likes what he is taking over.

“I see a lot of really good players when I look at the roster. Well, not the roster so much as the tape. That’s where you look, you look at the tape. That’s what shows you, right, guys? It shows you. It’s on the tape. So, I look at the tape and I see a lot of good football players,” Harbaugh said. “And not just me, my dad. He calls me up about three days into this process and he goes, you watch the Giants? I’m like, yeah, I watched them. I watched them. He goes, you see the way they come off the ball on offense, you see that offensive line, you see the offense, see those guys, see that quarterback, you see that defense, see that front, you see those guys flying around back there? I’m like, yeah, I saw it. So, when my dad told me, I knew it was true. We have a chance. We have a chance.”

Harbaugh understands the slim difference between winning and losing in the NFL.

“It’s a league of tight margins. Everybody is really good,” Harbaugh said. “You gotta work really hard. You gotta do all the little things to give yourself a chance to be as good a team as you can be to give yourself a chance to play in the margins. You’ve gotta stay healthy.

“Then when you get in those circumstances in the fourth quarter when all these games are won, it goes one way or the other … Just get ourselves to that point, try to win all the little things to give ourselves a chance to win, and find a way to win in the fourth quarter.”

Harbaugh admitted that neither the Giants nor the Ravens team he coached were able to do that in 2025.

“That’s the way the NFL works,” he said.

Second acts have been a mixed bag for successful coaches. Why are you confident this will work?​


Harbaugh said that Andy Reid, who has had a historic second act with the Kansas City Chiefs after a good run with the Philadelphia Eagles, told him “change can be good” when Harbaugh spoke with him about moving on from the Ravens.

“We’ll sign up for that deal right now,” Harbaugh said of Reid’s time with the Chiefs. “What he did in Kansas City, let’s do that.”

Harbaugh knows what the goal is.

“We’re here with one mission. To become, to earn the right to be called the world champions,” Harbaugh said.

Chris Mara: ‘Let’s get it done’​


Chris Mara played a massive role in this search with his brother, John Mara, the team’s CEO, fighting cancer and limited in what he can do. Was this emotional for him?

“My emotions were, let’s get it done,” Mara said. “Because John, he was really high on Harbaugh and I knew that’s who he wanted. We cast a wide net on the whole coaching staff, and he was number one on it.”

As the negotiations dragged on and Giants fans got increasingly nervous, Mara said he “didn’t have any doubt” a deal would get done.

“I knew there was a lot of work to be done in terms of the negotiation, but I would have bet a lot of money on it myself,” he said.

Mara downplayed his role.

“I just want to make an impression from an ownership standpoint. I think I did that,” he said. “And I just was really conscious of the fact that there was going to be so many different openings, especially with some of these playoff teams that were possibly going to get rid of their coaches.

“So that’s why I thought it was important to beat everybody to it, and that’s what we did.”

More John Harbaugh coverage​


Source: https://www.bigblueview.com/new-yor...w-head-coach-on-jaxson-dart-a-winning-culture
 
Positive injury updates given by NY Giants’ GM Joe Schoen on 2 star players

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New York Giants general manager Joe Schoen shared positive updates on Tuesday regarding the health of start wide receiver Malik Nabers and running back Cam Skattebo, who both finished the 2025 season on injured reserve.

Training camp timetable for Nabers?​


Schoen said that Nabers, who suffered a torn ACL in Week 4, could be ready for training camp.

“Malik is trending to hopefully be ready for training camp,” Schoen said. “Things can change … but that’s the hope.”

That is a more optimistic timetable than Nabers gave when he spoke to media at the end of the 2025 season. At that time, Nabers said he was “not really sure” if he would be ready for Week 1 of the regular season.

“If my body doesn’t feel right then I’m not gonna go out there,” Nabers said.

“Target date is when my body feels ready to be out there.”

Nabers was seen using a came when he arrived at MetLife Stadium for the season finale.

“I had a lot messed up in my knee,” Nabers said. “Successfully operated on. It’s gonna take a little bit of time.”

As a rookie in 2024, Nabers set a franchise record with 109 receptions for 1,204 yards and seven touchdowns. He was named to the Pro Bowl.

New coach John Harbaugh said Tuesday he has only spoken to Nabers by phone.

“I had a chance to talk to Malik on the phone,” Harbaugh said after his introductory press conference. “It was great. He was training out in LA, rehabbing out there for a week or whatever it was and working hard. I just love talking to him. His joy and excitement, he had some really good ideas, he’s really a thoughtful guy. Obviously, saw him coming out (of LSU). He wasn’t a guy we had a chance for, so it was like, ‘Well, look at this guy, he’s really good.’ Just kind of a dream. I figured we might have to cover him someday, and here we are, we get a chance to coach him. So I’m really excited about it.”

Skattebo ready for OTAs​


Schoen expects the energetic running back, who suffered a gruesome dislocated ankle in Week 8 against the Philadelphia Eagles, to be on the field this spring.

“He’ll be fine,” Schoen said. “He’ll actually be prepared for the offseason program on April 6th. He should be good.”

Skattebo gained 410 yards on 101 carries (4.1 yards per carry) with five touchdowns, and also caught 24 passes before being injured.

Schoen did admit he would rather not have seen Skattebo make the appearance he made at Madison Square Garden, where he got physically involved in the event just weeks after surgery.

“I was sitting on my couch at home, I had no idea what was going on and the agent called me,” Schoen said about the WWE appearance. “I would rather him not do that, but as you guys that have been around Skatt (know), that’s just who he is.”

Source: https://www.bigblueview.com/new-yor...njuries-return-dates-joe-schoen-john-harbaugh
 
NY Giants’ GM Joe Schoen says change in team’s power structure ‘doesn’t matter’

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Joe Schoen and John Harbaugh.

No one connected to the New York Giants has uttered the words “head coach John Harbaugh has final say over personnel, not GM Joe Schoen.”

No one has to. It is understood. A Super Bowl-winning coach with 18 years of experience, 12 of those years ending with playoff appearances, is not taking a job where he will be overruled by a first-time GM with a 22-45-1 overall record.

Harbaugh reports directly to co-owner John Mara. He said that “made sense” and was the type of arrangement he had in Baltimore with Ravens owner Steve Bisciotti.

“Everybody wants to make a little bit about who’s making what decision, but at the end the point is that we should all agree to agree,” Harbaugh said.

It is a big deal, though, that in an organization that has operated with the GM at the top of the organizational chart since the days of George Young has taken that power away from a GM who had it for the past four years.

Even Chris Mara would not go so far on Tuesday as to admit that Harbaugh will get final say if Giants’ decision-makers can’t “agree to agree.”

“Well, I know that’s a big deal around here, final say. He doesn’t have final say. It’s collaborative. He was the first to admit that,” Mara said. “If he had final say with everything in that building, he wouldn’t be able to do the job. So he’s going to be the most important cog in the wheel, let’s put it that way.

“In terms of final say, this is going to be a collaborative effort between ownership, general manager, and head coach.”

Schoen, though, clearly understands he does not have the power in the Giants’ organization he had before Harbaugh Docu-Signed his five-year, $100 million contract.

“I’m not worried about that. I’ve been in the league for 26 years. Everywhere I’ve been, the head coach and general manager have worked together. That’s the only way it’s going to work. Get on the same page. Go through the process,” Schoen said. “Something on a piece of paper doesn’t matter. We need to work together in order to come to the final conclusion. It’s always going to be about what’s best for the New York Giants. I have no problem with that.”

The 2025 NFL season saw the Chicago Bears and New England Patriots undergo massive turnarounds after adding the right coach to a nucleus led by a quality young quarterback. Schoen wasn’t making any predictions on Tuesday about the Giants’ 2026 season.

“We’ve got a lot of work to do. I don’t want to make any predictions,” Schoen said. “Those scenarios are great. I’ve been fortunate enough, first-time head coaches, to make the playoffs a few times. It can certainly happen.

“I like the young core. I like John’s leadership and culture building ability. I’m looking forward to our young players and the existing players being exposed to that.”

More Harbaugh coverage​


Source: https://www.bigblueview.com/new-yor...n-power-structure-doesnt-matter-john-harbaugh
 
NY Giants’ Abdul Carter earns PFWA All-Rookie Team honors

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New York Giants rookie edge defender Abdul Carter closed his first NFL season on a high note, earning a spot on the Pro Football Writers of America (PFWA) 2025 All-Rookie Team.

Carter finished the regular season with 43 total tackles (25 solo), four sacks, two forced fumbles, and two fumble recoveries, making an immediate impact in the Giants’ front seven. Notably, 3.5 of his four sacks came in four of his final five games.

Carter, the No. 3 overall pick in the 2025 NFL Draft, had a season marred by a pair on benchings by interim head coach Mike Kafka. One was for missing a walk-through, the other for missing a meeting. Carter’s on-field production increased after those benchings.

Per NextGen Stats, some of Carter’s underlying metrics were encouraging:

Carter recorded 66 pressures, the 8th-most in the NFL and most among rookies this season.

Carter has been fast, generating a league-high 44 quick pressures (under 2.5 seconds time to pressure) and averaging a 2.41-second time to pressure, the quickest in the NFL among defenders with at least 200 pass rushes.

Best guess is that Carter won’t be missing meetings or practices with new coach John Harbaugh in charge.

Source: https://www.bigblueview.com/new-yor...bdul-carter-earns-pfwa-all-rookie-team-honors
 
Dallas Cowboys’ defensive coordinator hiring good news for NY Giants

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Charlie Bullen, outside linebackers coach for the New York Giants the past two seasons and interim defensive coordinator the final five games of the 2025 season, will not become defensive coordinator of the Dallas Cowboys.

The Cowboys are set to name Philadelphia Eagles passing game coordinator Christian Parker as their new defensive coordinator, replacing the fired Matt Eberflus.

Bullen, an up-and-coming coach with ties to general manager Joe Schoen from their time together with the Miami Dolphins, is the only defensive assistant new head coach John Harbaugh is considering retaining from the Giants’ 2025 staff.

In further good news for Harbaugh and the Giants, three other candidates believed to be in consideration to become Harbaugh’s defensive coordinator in New York were bypassed by the Cowboys. Those are Minnesota Vikings’ defensive pass game coordinator Daronte Jones, Baltimore Ravens’ defensive coordinator Zach Orr, and Denver Broncos’ defensive pass game coordinator Jim Leonhard.

Jones is reportedly interviewing on Thursday with both the Giants and Green Bay Packers for their defensive coordinator positions.

Jones, 47, has never been an NFL defensive coordinator. He was defensive coordinator at Bowie State from 2005-2009 and at LSU in 2021. He interviewed for the Giants’ job that went to Shane Bowen in 2024.

Jones has been defensive backs coach with the Vikings since 2022, adding pass game coordinator to his title in 2023.

Brian Flores, regarded as one of the NFL’s most creative and aggressive defensive coordinators, has been Minnesota’s defensive coordinator since 2022.

Jones’ NFL resume includes stops with the Miami Dolphins, Cincinnati Bengals, and two stints with the Vikings. Jones has also coached in high school, at the Division II level, in the FCS, FBS, and in the Canadian Football League.

Leonhard, 43, played in the NFL from 2005-2014. He was defensive coordinator at Wisconsin from 2017-2022, and has been with the Broncos the past two seasons.

Source: https://www.bigblueview.com/new-yor...ker-charlie-bullen-jim-leonhard-daronte-jones
 
NY Giants 2026 NFL Draft scouting report: Lee Hunter, DT, Texas Tech

Texas Tech defensive tackle Lee Hunter (number 2) celebrates after a turnover against TCU in the Big 12 Championship game


The New York Giants were expected to have one of the very best defensive fronts in football last year. They, unfortunately, failed to meet those expectations.

The Texas Tech Red Raiders, however, boasted one of the very best defensive fronts in all of college football. Their front propelled them to the fourth seed in the College Football Playoffs and they should have (at least) four defenders drafted in the first two days.

That includes defensive tackle Lee Hunter, who bears a certain resemblance to a young Dexter Lawrence. Hunter is big, powerful, explosive, and surprisingly quick (in a short area), but hasn’t yet fully unlocked his potential. Could the Giants be just the place for him to reach his ceiling?

Prospect: Lee Hunter (2)
Games Watched: vs. Utah (2025), vs. Kansas (2025), vs. Arizona State (2025), vs. UCF (2025)
Red Flags: none

Measurables​


Height: 6-foot-4 (unofficial)
Weight: 330 pounds (unofficial)

Strengths​


Best traits

  • Size
  • Power
  • Play strength
  • Explosiveness
  • Short area quickness

Lee Hunter is a massive and powerful defensive tackle who also possesses uncommon quickness for a player of his size. Hunter has a prototypical build for a nose tackle at 6-foot-4, 330 pounds, but carries his weight very well and is a surprisingly good athlete. Hunter does an excellent job of keying the snap and is often one of the first defenders moving at the start of the play. He has a potent first step, with good burst and consistently gains ground into the backfield.

Hunter does a good job of pairing leverage with his burst to maximize his play strength, making him a handful for individual blockers and allowing him to control double teams. He’s able to collapse the pocket as well as clog interior gaps in the run game. Hunter’s size and strength also allows him to make plays off of blocks, typically forcing cutbacks or slowing runners so his teammates can swarm to the ball.

He isn’t a great pass rusher on his own, at least not yet in his development. He needs to get more efficient in his hand usage to fully unlock his pass rush potential. However he’s able to push the pocket to prevent quarterbacks from stepping up, as well as create opportunities for his teammates. Hunter opens rushing lanes for blitzers as well as occupying blockers to create one-on-one matchups for Texas Tech’s talented edge rushers.

Finally, Hunter shows great competitive toughness in his pursuit, quickly redirecting in pursuit. He isn’t a speedy player, but offers consistent effort in chasing down ball carriers.

Weaknesses​


Worst traits

  • Long speed
  • Pass rush technique
  • Arm length

The first weakness in Hunter’s game is a byproduct of his sheer mass. While Hunter is quick off the snap, his play speed quickly drops over any kind of distance. That isn’t an issue most of the time, however it impacts his pursuit as well as his pass rush ability if the quarterback is able to scramble or not forced to step into the pocket.

Hunter’s long speed also impacts his ability to be a looper, limiting how he’s able to be used in stunts and twists. There are also questions regarding his endurance and conditioning. He seems to need to be used in a rotation and he has a tendency to pop up off the snap and lose leverage as fatigue sets in.

The second issue in Hunter’s game comes from his tendency to lean on his bull rush as a pass rusher. He doesn’t have much in his pass rush arsenal beyond his bull rush, and his hand usage is still somewhat raw. Hunter is capable of driving blockers back into the pocket, but can struggle to disengage to make a play or disrupt in the backfield. Improving his hands and incorporating a more diverse set of pass rush moves would more fully unlock his potential.

Game Tape​


(Hunter is the Texas Tech defensive tackle with a red sleeve on his left calf, wearing number 2)

Projection​


Lee Hunter projects as a starting defensive lineman with positional and scheme versatility. He naturally fits as an A-gap defender, likely as a 1 or 0-technique nose tackle, however his initial burst and short-area quickness should allow him to play any interior alignment.

Hunter will need to land in a situation where he’ll be able to play in an active rotation as well as develop his hand usage to reach his full potential. That potential, however, is considerable and he has the upside to be an impact player. Hunter should go relatively early on the second day of the draft.

Does he fit the Giants? Yes

Final Word: A Day 2 pick

Source: https://www.bigblueview.com/new-yor...raft-scouting-report-lee-hunter-dt-texas-tech
 
NY Giants news: Tracking every rumor, interview and hire for John Harbaugh’s staff

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New head coach John Harbaugh is trying to quickly shape his New York Giants coaching staff. Harbaugh has already made decisions on the fates of Giants assistants under former coach Brian Daboll, and has reportedly requested interviews with roughly two-dozen staffers who worked for him with the Baltimore Ravens.

Charlie Bullen (outside linebackers) and Tim Kelly (tight ends) are the only former Daboll assistants being kept.

Harbaugh knows what he is looking for.

“We will build the very best coaching staff that we can, Harbaugh said at his introductory press conference. “Coaches are teachers first, the ability to teach, the ability to take a vision that’s well-organized, a structure that’s put together in a really good way that the players can play fast, play around their skill set. You’ve got to create something like that and then present it to the guys and train it in a way that the guys can get out there and play with a lot of confidence and just cut it loose and play fast. That’s what we’re going to try to do and try to bring a bunch of coaches in that are capable of building that. We’re going to do that.”

Stay with our constantly-updated StoryStream as we keep you informed on the news, rumors, interviews, and hirings as Harbaugh’s 2026 staff takes shape.

Right now, the staff looks like this:

Offense​


Tight ends — Tim Kelly | Full story
Running backs — Willie Taggart | Full story

Defense​


Outside linebackers — Charlie Bullen | Full story


Source: https://www.bigblueview.com/new-yor...r-interview-and-hire-for-john-harbaughs-staff
 
New York Giants mailbag: John Harbaugh’s impact, Jerry Reese, Ben Sauls, more

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John Dunleavy asks: Help me understand the idea of the coach reporting directly to the owner and not the GM. I would think the chain of command goes coach to GM to owner as far as information flow goes.

Ed says: John, every team functions differently. Harbaugh reported to ownership in Baltimore. In Kansas City, do you think Andy Reid is the boss or GM Brett Veach? Do you think Mike Tomlin answered to the GM in Pittsburgh? I’m pretty sure Eliot Wolf doesn’t consider himself Mike Vrabel’s boss in New England. I doubt Sean Payton works for GM George Paton in Denver.

To be honest, I am fine with this arrangement. Maybe more than fine. When the GM has a pipeline to ownership based on reporting structure that does not exist for the head coach, guess what happens? The GM has the owner’s ear while the head coach does not have the same level of access, and that results in the possibility that ownership can be swayed to an anti-head coach stance because they might be getting a one-sided picture.

Having both report to ownership might level the playing field.



Adam Singer asks: Do the Giants have any plans to redesign their uniforms any time soon? With the dawn of the Harbaugh and Dart era it feels like a good time for an update and to leave behind the remnants of the last few years. What say you?

Ed says: Adam, there are no plans to do so that I know of. That said, I agree with you. And, I want “GIANTS” on the helmets. Enough with the silly lowercase “ny”.



John Urbielewicz asks: My question is this, new coaches usually bring some players with them. Either through free agency or trade, who on the Ravens are candidates for that?

Ed says: John, I would simply suggest anyone interested in this topic read the piece I had Nick Falato put together on this a few days ago. I will say I’d be all-in on 300-pound fullback Patrick Ricard.



Edward Mcgowan asks: We don’t know how important it was for Harbaugh, (or any other prospective coach), to want to bring in his own GM but wouldn’t that have necessitated a complete rebuild of the scouting and personnel side of the business just four years after Schoen did just that after the Gettleman years. My question is does ownership view the organization that Schoen built positively or does it also need a remake? It would seem to me that if Harbaugh is not reporting to Schoen and Schoen is not reporting to Harbaugh, the owners must feel that the front office is in decent shape or they just didn’t have the stomach for another rebuild after just four years? What is your take?

Ed says: Edward, if ownership did not view the front office Schoen has created positively and did not feel good about the way Schoen works with his front office and with ownership they would have fired him. My take is the fact that he is still the GM is the answer to how they feel.



Chip McCoy asks: Hi Ed, I love Tom Coughlin and think it’s great that he’s in the Giants Ring of Honor. As I recall, he was also honored live at a home game a few years ago. I’ve always wondered, though, why Jerry Reese hasn’t received any similar honors. In fact, I don’t think I’ve heard anything about him since he was fired. I know the final season was messy and the last few years were very disappointing to put it lightly, but we won two Super Bowls during his tenure. Yes, one was his first year, but he had been in the org for years and helped build that team. I think it’s time to give him some recognition. What do you think? How does ownership view him? Was the end too acrimonious? How do you think fans would react?

Ed says: Chip, I think the reaction to Reese is a mixed one. I really don’t know how ownership feels, unless you want to read into the fact that he is not in the Ring of Honor. I think there is a feeling of wanting to give him credit for the early part of his tenure, but pointing the blame at him for the final few years and for how the Coughlin tenure ended.



Jason Kurtzman asks: We are all well aware of the recent woes of the Giants in the kicking department. To me, isn’t one of our 6th round picks absolutely worth using on best kicker available? A 6th rounder at almost any other position rarely turns into a useable NFL player but you can often get best player available at K/P in the 6th round, and isn’t the return on investment extremely high if you are able to take BPA? Taking BPA in a draft at any position has to have a higher hit rate than 6th round value, right? Hopefully we’ve “Saulsed” our problem at kicker but why not spend a 6th on someone like Lucas Carneiro, who one of the commentators on the broadcast called a “weapon” in Ole Miss’s CFP game? What if he’s our Brandon Aubrey? Thanks!

Ed says: Jason, I might agree with you had Ben Sauls not been so impressive in his three-game stint at the end of the season. If the Giants think Sauls is their answer, and I don’t know why they wouldn’t, it makes no sense to use a draft pick on another placekicker. I could see bringing in a veteran kicker as competition so that the job is not simply handed to Sauls. I don’t see the need for drafting a potential replacement, though.



M2-0 Buscemi asks: I know Harbaugh has interest in some of his Raven players that he would bring to the Giants two are center Lindenbaum and safety Gilman.

I don’t think the Giants have this kind of cap money to sign these players. So what magic is he going to use? He might have to go to a plan. B.


Ed says: Let’s not obsess over the salary cap situation right now. It is true that the Giants have only $1.8 million in space on an estimated $295.5 million cap for 2026, per Over the Cap. That, though, is highly misleading.

There are 12 teams — yes, 12 — in worse shape than the Giants. Those 12 teams are all in the red right now and will have to make moves to simply get under the cap.

Between now and the start of free agency in March, John Harbaugh and GM Joe Schoen will be assessing the roster and a number of moves that will free up cap space will be made.

An easy one is cutting placekicker Graham Gano ($4.5 million in savings). James Hudson ($5.38 in savings) is another easy one. Bobby Okereke ($9 million in savings), Jon Runyan ($9.25 million in savings), and Devin Singletary ($5.25 million in savings) are obvious cut candidates. That’s more than $30 million in savings, and there are other moves that could be made.

A big one? What if the Giants decide to trade Kayvon Thibodeaux? That’s $14.75 million in cap savings if they do it before June 1.

Just let the offseason play out. The Giants will make the moves they need to make to chase the players they want to try and bring in.



Bob Donnelly asks: John Harbaugh (thrilled to have him) is described as a CEO style HC who relies heavily upon his coordinators. We have a young quarterback who is early in his development and needs the right coach to bring him along. Jaxson Dart is already going on his second OC in his young career.

If the Giants have a season like NE or Denver had this year and make a deep run in the playoffs we could see our OC becoming a HC target for some struggling franchise in which case our young Quarterback would be working with a third OC in three years.

My question:

Can an NFL team contractually require an OC to commit to a minimum of two years in position before interviewing for a HC position?


Ed says: Bob, no, teams cannot prevent a coach from interviewing for a promotion. They can deny permission to interview for a lateral job, that’s all. Losing coaches or executives is the price of being good.



Brian Misdom asks: Hi Ed, relieved and excited that we finalized terms with Harbaugh as our next HC but hoping you could clarify some of what contributed to the delayed announcement.

I understand part of the delay was that Harbaugh wanted to ensure he was directly reporting to Mara rather than to Schoen. Prior to Daboll, wasn’t this always the case? Coughlin/McAdoo and Reese, Gettleman and Shurmur/Judge were peers, no?

The shift with Schoen and Daboll was supposed to help drive better alignment on the operations. If this has been the normal way of things, was it really that much to unpack and update how things will be with this new regime?


Ed says: Brian, no the change of Harbaugh reporting directly to ownership was not the case before Brian Daboll and Joe Schoen. The Giants have had a structure with the GM at the top and the coach reporting to or working under him since the days of George Young. Probably before that.



Andy Engel asks: From your mailbag last week: in the second letter your response to drafting wide receivers Tate or Tyson was that it wasn’t a good idea because WR is a “place where (we) are already overstocked”; then in the fifth letter you state “I do believe they need another big-time pass catcher, even with Malik Nabors and Wan’Dale Robinson”. You are usually on target with things so I’m asking which do you really mean? I believe they do need one.

Ed says: Andy, perhaps that was a poorly constructed answer on my part. The Giants are overstocked at edge defender, which is why drafting Arvell Reese makes no sense to me. Even if you trade Kayvon Thibodeaux, you still have three players for two positions and have to play one at a spot where he won’t be utilized to his fullest potential. They do need wide receiver help.



Philip Dunne asks: Any thoughts on whether the last two games played into Harbaugh’s decision to come to New York? I feel like coaches respect a team that keeps fighting, even if fans see it differently. Maybe he looked at a young team that managed to squeak out a few wins and thought it was something he could build into a solid program.

Ed says: Philip, Harbaugh has been clear that he likes the quarterback and he likes a lot of what he saw when he watched the Giants on film. I don’t honestly think the late-season victories had much, if anything, to do with his decision. It’s more about the talent he saw, and the fact that it’s a job with an iconic franchise.



Marc Boucher asks: With rumors of Tyler Linderbaum being a potential free agent signing for the Giants, where would that leave JMS? Not sure of cap ramifications, but would a trade, release, backup role, or move to G be the move for JMS?

Ed says: John Michael Schmitz has improved year over year, but is not as good as Tyler Linderbaum. If the Giants sign Linderbaum I see only one realistic path for Schmitz, and that is for the Giants to trade him in exchange for whatever draft assets someone will give them. I can guarantee the Giants would like to acquire a third-round pick, which they don’t have right now after the Jaxson Dart trade.

JMS is not a guard, and you need that flexibility if you are going to be a backup. If Linderbaum is a Giant, Schmitz’s value is as a trade chip.



Stephen Turcotte asks: It certainly seems as if the Mara family ownership succession plan has been revealed by Chris Mara’s increased visibility and role in the pursuit of John Harbaugh, as well as his role in addressing the media after Harbaugh’s press conference.

What is the feeling regarding Chris’s more public role amongst the media and Giants executives, and what does it tell us about John’s ongoing cancer battle and prognosis?


Ed says: Stephen, I think that everyone should appreciate what Chris Mara has done. He stepped up and did what needed to be done when his brother wasn’t physically able to do so. If John Harbaugh changes the organization for the better then Chris Mara will have had a lot to do with that.

As for John Mara’s situation I am not a doctor and I won’t speculate. He is a 71-year-old man in a cancer battle. That’s a serious thing.


Submit a question​


Have a Giants-related question? E-mail it to [email protected] and it might be featured in our weekly mailbag.

Source: https://www.bigblueview.com/new-yor...s-john-harbaughs-impact-jerry-reese-ben-sauls
 
NY Giants 2025 position review: Running back room is what Joe Schoen sought

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The New York Giants let Saquon Barkley walk out the door in free agency — and less than a year later, he was hoisting the Lombardi Trophy with the Philadelphia Eagles, of all teams. It was a tough pill for the Giants to swallow, and it was memed, mocked, and commercialized by Barkley and a Unisom sleep aid.

It’s no doubt difficult for the Giants to win that type of break-up, but the running back room envisioned by Joe Schoen has taken form. The Giants spent two day-three picks in the last two NFL drafts, resulting in Tyrone Tracy Jr. (166th overall, 2024) and Cam Skattebo (105th, 2025). These are two promising and productive backs on cheap rookie contracts.

Schoen also signed Devin Singletary during the 2024 free agent cycle. He signed a three-year, $16.5 million contract with $9.5 million in guarantees and incentives to reunite with Brian Daboll and Joe Schoen. I’m a fan of Motor’s skill set, but that was a slight overpay, especially on day one of free agency.

Nevertheless, the Giants wanted Singletary in the building, and he’s been a reliable backup option who can start. The Giants have three reliable backs on the roster and an exciting practice squad back in Dante “Turbo” Miller, who only saw work in the preseason. The personnel are solid, but Skattebo’s injury throws an unknown into the situation.

2025 season in review​


Tyrone Tracy Jr., Cam Skattebo, Devin Singletary

Skattebo took the NFL by storm with his angry runs that were consistently highlighted by Kyle Brandt and the NFL Network team:

That's Cam Skattebo's music!

The @Giants rookie RB is awarded the Angry Runs Scepter by @KyleBrandt 😤 @camskattebo5

(by @LiquidDeath) pic.twitter.com/gikpR6o8zC

— NFL Network (@nflnetwork) October 14, 2025

The Giants were elated that Skattebo fell to their pick in the fourth round, and the rookie missed most of training camp with a hamstring injury that was reaggravated. Despite that speed bump, his personality and tazmanian devil persona quickly came through. He earned just eight snaps against Washington in Week 1, but his snap share consistently rose, which was compounded by Tyrone Tracy’s shoulder injury in Week three.

Skattebo became the spark for a Giants’ team that desparate for light. He and rookie quarterback Jaxson Dart developed quite a friendship and rapport. Skattebo’s three touchdowns against the Eagles in a game where New York physically dominated Philadelphia (34-17) spawned magnificent energy into the life of a 2-4 Giants’ team.

Two games later, after scoring an impressive receiving touchdown on an isolation rail route, Skattebo’s season came to an end with a devastating ankle injury. His right ankle dislocated, which ruptured his deltoid ligament and fractured his fibula. It was an open wound that required immediate surgery. It was a devastating injury, and Skattebo’s timeline is still tentative, although he’s targeting a return for OTAs.

Cam Skattebo finished the year with 101 carries for 410 yards (4.1YPC) with five touchdowns and one fumble. He forced 22 missed tackles with 3.04 yards after contact average. He had 10 10+ yard runs and caught 24 of 30 targets for 207 yards with one drop. There are so many reasons why Skattebo has quickly become a fan favorite. His rare combination of contact balance, vision, and quickness led to several highlights:

"I appreciate you guys for accepting me for who I am as a crazy motherfucker."

Cam Skattebo 💪🏼 pic.twitter.com/4gHu99xU4N

— Nick Falato (@nickfalato) January 7, 2026

The loss of Skattebo was tough for Giants’ nation, but Tyrone Tracy Jr. handled the call well. Tracy had a promising rookie season, where he rushed for 839 yards with 284 receiving yards. He chastised some play-calling early in the year and found himself in the doghouse. The ascension of Skattebo and Tracy’s injury placed the second-year former receiver in a clear running back No. 2 role until Skattebo’s injury.

Tracy finished the season with 740 yards rushing (4.2 YPC) with 24 missed tackles forced and a 2.66 yards after contact number. He rushed and caught a pair of touchdowns and fumbled the football once. He also secured 36 of 43 passes for 271 yards with two drops. He looked more natural as a receiver in year two and was more comfortable overall.

Tracy Jr. joined Barkley and Odell Beckham Jr. as the third player in team history to have more than 1,000 total yards in his first two NFL seasons.

Tyrone Tracy Jr. and Bucky Irving are the only players from the 2024 Draft to top 800 yards this season.

They were the 45th and 33rd skill position players drafted, respectively.

Tyrone Tracy is the only player with 1,000+ yards in each of his first 2 seasons. pic.twitter.com/4HrY6tmfHz

— Underdog (@Underdog) January 5, 2026

I appreciate the patience Tracy uses to allow blocks to develop; his timing comprehension, paired with his acceleration, maximizes blocks. Tracy finished the year strong and ended the season with 103 rushing yards against the Cowboys — the first Giants’ RB to rush for over 100+ yards since Week 10 of the 2024 season when Tracy accomplished that feat against the Panthers in Germany.

Singletary finished with 119 carries for 437 yards (3.7 YPC) with five rushing touchdowns, 17 missed tackles forced, and a 2.42 yards after contact number. Singletary caught 18 of 19 passes for 151 yards with just one drop. Singletary had a goal-line role throughout the year and was the change-up guy who was healthy for the entire season. He’s a shifty veteran who is tough to angle up, but he’s the clear-cut three when the backfield is healthy, although his role in PONY packages and around the goal-line tended to come at the expense of Tracy.

Grade: B+

2026 outlook​


Will the Giants spend a Day 3 pick on a running back for the third straight year? It’s certainly possible. New York is widely expected to release Singletary, a move that would free up $5.25 million in cap space while leaving behind a $1.25 million dead cap hit. That would leave the Giants’ backfield thin, consisting of Tracy, an ailing Skattebo, Eric Gray, and Dante Miller on the practice squad.

Gray is entering a contract year. While he has contributed on special teams in the past, it’s unclear how the Giants — now under John Harbaugh — will evaluate Gray or Miller. The situation is further complicated by uncertainty surrounding whether Ladell Betts will be retained as running backs coach. What is clear, however, is that Tracy and Skattebo are locks to make the roster.

As a result, New York could look to add size to the running back room. Not Derrick Henry–level size, but a bigger back who can complement Skattebo’s physical, downhill style and Tracy’s shiftier, more dynamic skill set. It doesn’t have to be a big back, though. The Giants could opt to add any type of back, who they believe can compete with Skattebo and Tracy.

Free agency could be an option, but it would have to be a low-level deal, much cheaper than the one the Giants offered Singletary. Keaton Mitchell, who spent his rookie contract in Baltimore under Harbaugh, is set to become a free agent. Mitchell tore his ACL and missed most of the backend of the 2023 season and most of the 2024 season.

Mitchell played in 2025, catching nine of 12 passes for 63 yards while rushing for 341 yards on 59 carries (5.8 YPC) with one touchdown and a fumble. He is a 24-year-old explosive threat with rare speed and acceleration. Mitchell, or another cheap veteran option, could be a target for the Giants in free agency.

Skattebo’s recovery could dictate the level of desperation with which the Giants approach adding personnel to the running back room. If Singletary is released as expected, New York will be forced to add reinforcements, whether through the draft or free agency.



Source: https://www.bigblueview.com/new-yor...tebo-tyrone-tracy-devin-singletary-joe-schoen
 
How will the NY Giants’ spend money in the John Harbaugh era?

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You can bet that before John Harbaugh seriously considered becoming head coach of the New York Giants, he had his agent find out how their financial health stacks up against the rest of the NFL. There is a narrative out there in social media that the Giants are in the red. If so, why would Harbaugh touch this job with a ten-foot pole considering that all that money bought a 4-13 result? Either Harbaugh sees himself as a savior who can succeed where Brian Daboll and his assistant coaches did not with the Giants’ existing roster, or he realizes that their situation is more a result of their financial philosophy up to this point under Joe Schoen and is not as dire as reports make it sound.

There’s probably some of both going on. Many people look at this Giants team and see a group that had fourth quarter leads over Dallas, Denver, Green Bay, Detroit, and Chicago and couldn’t hold any of them. Close those games out and they’re 9-8 with the current roster. Still, no one sees this as a Super Bowl-capable group of players. Even if Harbaugh can work miracles, there are still a bunch of holes to fill if he has any hope of competing for a playoff spot next season. One of the big questions going forward is whether and how Harbaugh will change the Giants’ approach to spending money on players.

How good or bad are the Giants’ finances, really? Let’s take a look at what Over The Cap (OTC) has to say:

Screenshot-2026-01-19-at-8.15.11%E2%80%AFPM.png

The Giants are one of 13 teams whose effective cap space (i.e., cap space after signing their 2026 draft class) is negative. You can see though that they are “in the red” by a measly $8.3M. Pity those teams at the bottom like the Chiefs who have to fill a $70.1M hole.

One positive is that after Daniel Jones’ $22.2M dead money hit to the Giants’ 2025 finances, they enter the 2026 season with only $216,804 in dead money, second least of any team. By comparison, the Jets lead the NFL with $75.6M of dead money ($49M of it a parting gift from the Aaron Rodgers contract).

Of course things could be better. The Tennessee Titans, whom Harbaugh was scheduled to interview with after his Giants visit, have $81.2M in effective cap space, for example. Yet Harbaugh cancelled his meeting with the Titans and took the Giants job.

Here’s why things are aren’t as bad as they look. OTC calculates a “restructure potential” for each team. Here’s what it looks like for every team:

Screenshot-2026-01-19-at-8.34.48%E2%80%AFPM.png

The farther to the right you are on this chart relative to the vertical green line (zero effective cap space), the better. The left edge for each team is their current effective cap space. The squares and diamonds represent where each team could potentially wind up with “simple” or “maximum” contract restructures.

A simple restructure is the oldest trick in the NFL finances book: The GM converts the maximum amount of contract dollars into signing bonuses whose cap hit can be prorated over the life of the existing contract. The player gets more of his money up front, and thus it is usually possible for the team to do this without requiring the player’s consent. It does have an effect on ownership, though, because it implies greater cash spending in the present year. Perhaps with the $1B infusion of money from the 10% equity sale to Julia Koch, the Giants will do more of this. In 2025 the Giants were 15th in the NFL in cash spending, per Spotrac.

A maximum restructure involves either extending the contract to add more years over which the signing bonus can be prorated, or adding “void years” that spread the cap hit into years after the player’s contract is up and he is no longer on the team. This usually cannot be done without the consent of the player and his agent.

Before we discuss the Giants specifically, note a couple of other teams of interest:

  • The Baltimore Ravens are just above the Giants on this chart, i.e., their overall cap health is pretty similar to that of the Giants. Harbaugh is moving from one team to another that is in pretty similar financial shape. At the moment they’re a little bit under the cap in effective space, but their potential to restructure is a little less than the Giants’.
  • The Philadelphia Eagles are just above the Ravens. Their current effective cap space is slightly positive, like the Ravens’, but they have very little restructure potential of either kind. In other words, Eagles’ GM Howie Roseman is already using just about every financial trick in the book. No other team comes close.

The Giants, currently $8.3M in the red in effective cap space, can perform as much as $60.1M in simple restructures, getting them to $51.8M in space available to spend on free agents. They can do this unilaterally. If they want to go the route of contract extensions, void years, and/or option bonuses, the maximum they can add is $125.5M, winding up with $117.2M in cap space to use on free agents. (Note also that effective cap space assumes the team’s current set of draft picks – comp picks and draft trades can change that.)

Of course the easiest way to create cap space is to cut players. How would Joe Schoen and John Harbaugh create cap space to improve the team? Here are some likely or at least possible roster casualties that would make the biggest difference in the Giants’ cap health (assuming pre-June 1 cuts):

  • Graham Gano: $4.5M cap savings, $1.25M dead money
  • Devin Singletary: $5.25M cap savings, $1.25M dead money
  • James Hudson: $5.38M cap savings, $2.3M dead money

To me these are obvious moves, totaling $15.1M in savings. Gano has been replaced by Ben Sauls, Singletary by Cam Skattebo and Tyrone Tracy Jr., and Hudson by Marcus Mbow.

  • Bobby Okereke: $9.0M cap savings, $5,5M dead money
  • Jon Runyan Jr.: $9.25M cap savings, $2.5M dead money
  • John Michael Schmitz: $3.86M cap savings, $0.4M dead money
  • Roy Robertson-Harris: $3.35M cap savings, $2.4M dead money

These are possible but less obvious. Okereke has not been the same since his breakout 2022 season. Maybe whoever Harbaugh hires as defensive coordinator can recapture that Okereke, but maybe it’s best to start fresh with a draftee or a free agent. $9M in cap savings, despite a $5.5M dead money hit next year, is tempting. Runyan has been perfectly acceptable at left guard, but the Giants should be looking to upgrade their interior offensive line to more than just acceptable, and $9.25M in cap savings can’t be sneezed at. JMS has improved as a run blocker and isn’t quite the liability in pass blocking that he was as a rookie, but neither has he become a real asset. RRH has been an acceptable rotational player but nothing more.

Some of these should and certainly will be done, but to do more, restructures are going to have to be the way to go. I’ve mentioned before that the Giants were one of only two NFL teams with no contract costs in void year money back in February, per Nick Korte of OTC. The Ravens on the other hand had $50.8M in void year costs, 11th most in the NFL:

Most cap dollars currently in void years:
1. PHI (duh): $390.4M
2. SF: $204.1M
3. CLE: $187.5M
4. NO: $112.1M
5. JAX:$106.55M
6. NYJ: $87.6M
7. MIA: $70.6M
8. DAL: $62.755M
9. TB: $56.1M
10. DET: $52.1M
11. BAL: $50.8M
12. HOU: $47.09M
13. MIN: $47.08M
14. DEN: $40.3M

— Nick Korte (@nickkorte) February 12, 2025

Thus I’d expect Harbaugh to lobby strongly with Schoen (and ownership since he will report directly to them) to start using void years more regularly to fill holes on the roster. Jaxson Dart needs a WR2. The defense doesn’t just need a good coordinator, it needs a good run-defending IDL, at least one off-ball linebacker if not two, and at the least depth, if not starters, in the secondary. We might expect a couple of those needs to be filled with the Giants’ first and second round draft picks, but they have no third round pick, and any player chosen on Day 3 should not be counted on to start as a rookie. Again, the use of void years to make signing more or better free agents possible implies additional cash spending in the current year, so depending on how many bottles of Silver Oak Cabernet were consumed at Elia Mediterranean last weekend, Harbaugh may or may not have gotten a commitment from ownership to spend more.

By February we should begin to get a sense of how, if at all, Harbaugh has begun to change how the Giants do business off the field, as the Giants begin to position themselves financially for the March free agent period. If we begin to see Schoen-acquired Giants starters released and contracts of some remaining players restructured with void years or option bonuses, we’ll know where the power really resides and to what extent.

Source: https://www.bigblueview.com/new-yor...-salary-cap-spending-john-harbaugh-joe-schoen
 
NY Giants news: John Harbaugh hires defensive, special teams coordinators

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The New York Giants filled two of their three coordinator positions on Sunday. The Giants are hiring Dennard Wilson as defensive coordinator, according to a published report. They are also hiring Chris Horton as their special teams coordinator.

Big Blue View was able to confirm both hirings.

Wilson, 43, worked for head coach John Harbaugh as defensive backs coach with the Baltimore Ravens in 2024. He interviewed for the Giants’ defensive coordinator position in 2023, but chose to take that role with the Tennessee Titans. He was let go when Tennessee hired Robert Saleh as its head coach recently.

Wilson’s defenses did not rank highly in Tennessee as the Titans won just six games in two seasons, but that did not dissuade Harbaugh from bringing him to the Giants.

Jeffery Simmons understands it's not up to him BUT if he has it his way, he'd love to have Dennard Wilson back with the #Titans. pic.twitter.com/Kc4Qhxurko

— TURRON DAVENPORT (@TDavenport_NFL) December 31, 2025

Wilson, Anthony Weaver, Jim Leonhard and Daronte Jones were considered the four most likely candidates for the job. Weaver is still interviewing for head-coaching jobs, Leonhard is pass game coordinator for the Denver Broncos, Jones is still on Minnesota Vikings’ defensive staff. The Giants decided not to wait to see what would happen with Weaver or Leonhard.

Horton, 43, was a defensive back for Washington from 2008-2010. He was with the Giants during the 2012 preseason, but did not make the 53-man roster.

More importantly, Horton has worked for Harbaugh since 2014. He was hired as assistant special teams coordinator and became coordinator in 2019.

The Ravens initially denied the Giants’ request to interview Horton, which is allowed as this is a lateral move for Horton. Once Baltimore hired Jesse Minter as its head coach, though, the Ravens allowed Horton to move to the Giants.

More assistants coming from Baltimore​


According to Matt Zenitz of CBS Sports, several other assistant coaches will be moving from Baltimore to New York.

The Giants are expected to hire assistant linebackers coach Matt Pees, along with three Baltimore quality control coaches — running backs quality control coach Adam Schrack, defensive backs quality control coach Brendan Clark, and analyst Noah Riley.

Source: https://www.bigblueview.com/new-yor...gh-hires-defensive-special-teams-coordinators
 
John Harbaugh’s NY Giants decisions already being questioned by fans

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It is amazing how quickly the opinions of some fans can change. And, how small things no one has any idea ill prove to be right or wrong can be the cause.

When John Harbaugh, a Super Bowl-winning head coach with 12 playoff appearances in 18 years as head coach of the Baltimore Ravens was hired less than two weeks, there was nearly absolute joy in Giants Nation. In our poll asking if hiring Harbaugh was the right decision, 95.21% (5,227) of 5,490 voters said it was.

There were comments like these:

WharfRat
Harbaugh and Dart will deliver us another SB, I truly believe that
beanwantsdeath
Dart’s retiring with more rings than Josh Allen and Lamar Jackson combined. Book it.
Ender_
I haven’t seen Big Blue Viewers this aligned on a decision in my life. May the next decade be one of redemption.

I wrote this after the hiring:

No other hiring would have been met with the excitement, or brought the instant credibility that Harbaugh did. The Giants have been flailing for more than a decade now, going mostly in the wrong direction. Harbaugh offers them the best chance for a course correction.

He comes from a winning environment that he was a big part of establishing and maintaining. He brings with him knowledge of how the Ravens have been consistently good, and the cachet to get ideas implemented with the Giants. We are already seeing some of that take place. He brings a reputation with him for having a keen eye for finding quality young assistant coaches who could help set the organization up for sustained success.

On the field and in the locker room, Harbaugh is a culture-setting CEO type head coach who brings the ability — and credibility — to set standards and hold players accountable. The Giants, and the entire organization, desperately need that.

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Remember John Mara warning Brian Daboll after he won Coach of the Year honors for the 2022 season that it wasn’t hard to go from ‘Bono’ to ‘Bozo’ in the New York/New Jersey market?

Well, when he was introduced as the team’s head coach last Tuesday, Harbaugh was clearly ‘Bono.’ Maybe the Beatles. In a more modern reference, perhaps Taylor Swift.

Today, there are already fans throwing darts at him.

Why?

First, Harbaugh had the temerity to send Carmen Bricillo, a popular, effective offensive line coach, packing. That led to comments like these:

Giantswin5th
This sucks especially if George Warhop is the guy to take over. Nice guy in his 60’s with lots of oline coaching experience. Unfortunately heading up many underwhelming lines.
Do0msday
This is a questionable move at best. I just don’t understand why he wouldn’t stay — especially since he was under contract for another year and has proven that he can work wonders with what he’s given. I also find it strange since Jack Harbaugh gave a ringing endorsement and told him to keep him. I don’t understand this at all.
MaineG1
So there was no bigger supporter of the JH acquisition than MaineG1…. But this is a major disappointment! I don’t understand the reason behind fixing something that’s been so horribly wrong for such a long time under any circumstance. For anyone making claims that this is just minor move and, there’s no reason for concern. You obviously haven’t been paying attention over the last 10 years. Before Bricillo, the offensive line was one of the 3 worst in NFL history.

I can’t understand that Harbaugh looked at that man’s resume and came to the conclusion he could get someone better? Direct disciple of Dante Scarnecchia. Plus the job he did with the Raiders. Who by the way, were an absolute shit show just slightly less terrible than the steaming pile of dung the Giants had been trotting out over the past decade.

I was also a fan of Patterson, but the run defense over the last 3 years has been dreadful…. So letting him go makes sense, but, Bricillo is a head scratcher. I also hope the plan isn’t to bring in the Oline coach from the Ravens? For those who don’t know? Joe D passed away at the beginning of the season and, was replaced by George Warhop. He was the offensive line coach for the 49ers and, Bucs I believe in the early 2000s. For the most part those lines were terrible…. 2024 under Joe D, the offensive line was really good. 2025 under Warhop, absolutely shitty. This can’t be the way.

Then, Harbaugh went and hired a defensive coordinator some fans think is terrible.

Century Milstead
Another bad Tennessee DC. I have, misgivings.

Okay, it was a mistake to hire Harbaugh. Everything is going to hell. Fire Schoen. The Mara’s should be forced to sell the team. Trade Dart for draft picks. Burn it to the ground.

Panic!
A-boogie blue
Was hoping this was not true. Here’s his report card for his last season :

Total Defense Rank: 21st in yards, 28th in points
Opponent Points: 478 allowed (28th)
Total Yards Allowed: 5,867
Defensive Line Ranking: 14th

So total garbage.

Way to really go for excellence Coach! Forget the guy coaching in the AFC championship or the passing coordinator in one of the most complex, vicious, aggressive modern defenses. Let’s get a guy who managed to coach a 3 win teams defense to the 28th ranking.

We really managed to grab a guy from one of the only programs worse than ours, who has no idea what winning looks like, who’s defense just Barely ranked better than Shane Bowen and Bullen…? Just fking wow.

Losing Bricillo and Patterson this week coupled with this latest absurd hire, It’s been a very bad week for John harbaugh.

Hopefully he can at least get Monken in here.
save the offense.

I will says I enjoyed these:

Harboss
LMAO
Folks around here acting like Harbs just hired Shane Bowen again!
Anger Managed
Giants fans last weekend – Give Harbaugh whatever he wants, just get him signed! In Harbaugh we trust!!!

Giants fans this weekend – What??? He hired a different guy than the one I wanted?? Harbaugh out!!!

Let the man work, people!​


Harbaugh was never going to make every decision you or I would have made. Yes, I was hoping he would keep Carmen Bricillo as offensive line coach. He didn’t. So be it. There will be more decisions you don’t like. Harbaugh will be right about some, wrong about others. Probably, he will be right far more often than he is wrong.

Harbaugh has an 18-year body of really successful work with the Baltimore Ravens and a Rolodex compiled over something like four decades of coaching that earned him a five-year, $100 million contract and the ability to make the decisions he wants to make.

Harbaugh is the best, most capable, most qualified person the Giants have hired on their coaching staff or in their front office since they let Tom Coughlin go after the 2015 season.

He knows what he wants in an offensive line coach. He knows plenty of people who could tell him what he wanted to know about Bricillo’s work, and his coaching style. He met with Bricillo himself. He decided Bricillo wasn’t the right coach for what he wanted. I would rather have him make that choice than keep a coach on staff he wasn’t certain about to appease the fan base, or the offensive linemen.

Maybe Harbaugh will hire George Warhop, a long-time NFL offensive line coach who was with him in Baltimore the last two seasons. Maybe he will hire someone else. Maybe it will turn out well. Maybe it won’t.

When it comes to Wilson, again Harbaugh is far more qualified to make this decision and knows far more about Wilson than any of us.

You can simply point to the 2025 statistics that showed Wilson’s Tennessee defense 28th in points and 21st in yardage allowed, and decide he is a terrible coach and a terrible hire. Or, you can look deeper.

You can look back at 2024, his first season. His bio on the Titans’ website, which likely won’t be available much longer, includes this:

During Wilson’s first year in Tennessee, the Titans ranked second overall in total defense (311.2 opponent yards per game)—the team’s highest ranking since leading the NFL in total defense in 2000. The 2024 Titans also finished second in passing defense (177.3), which also was their best ranking since 2000 (first). Wilson’s defense tied for the fifth-fewest first downs allowed per game (18.5) and tied for the fifth-fewest opponent yards allowed per play (5.2) in 2024.

You can trust ESPN Titans beat writer Turron Davenport, who told me recently that Wilson “wasn’t given much to work with” in 2025 but did a good job.

You can trust Pro Bowl defensive lineman Jeffery Simmons, who wanted Wilson to stay in Tennessee.

Jeffery Simmons understands it's not up to him BUT if he has it his way, he'd love to have Dennard Wilson back with the #Titans. pic.twitter.com/Kc4Qhxurko

— TURRON DAVENPORT (@TDavenport_NFL) December 31, 2025

You can trust Jimmy Morris of SB Nation’s Music City Miracles, who wrote this recently predicting Wilson would land with the Giants:

Wilson did a really good job with the Titans this year. The numbers weren’t great, but you have to account for the fact that all three of his starting corners were either traded or injured for most of the season. He also had zero EDGE presence for the entire year.

I thought that Wilson would land as the defensive coordinator for John with the New York Giants. He might still, but it would be surprising if he took the Chargers interview with Jim, knowing he could get the Giants job with John.

The Giants brought in Harbaugh because of his record of success. He is, naturally, going to want to bring in people he knows and has had success with.

Maybe at least wait until the Giants blow a fourth-quarter lead next fall because of a decision Harbaugh makes that backfires before thinking he is a Bozo.

Source: https://www.bigblueview.com/new-yor...ff-decisions-already-being-questioned-by-fans
 
Ex-NY Giants offensive coordinator Mike Kafka hired by Detroit Lions

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Mike Kafka

Former New York Giants offensive coordinator and interim head coach Mike Kafka is joining the Detroit Lions in an undefined “high-ranking offensive role,” per NFL insider Tom Pelissero.

Kafka was hired away from the Kansas City Chiefs to be the Giants’ offensive coordinator in 2022. He filled that role until the middle of the 2025 season, when Brian Daboll was fired and Kafka took over as interim head coach. He went 2-5.

Kafka, who has interviewed for head-coaching vacancies each offseason since joining the Giants, interviewed for the Giants’ job before the organization hired John Harbaugh.

Now, Kafka, 38, will join head coach Dan Campbell in Detroit.

What Kafka’s role will be seems uncertain.

The Lions fired offensive coordinator John Morton at the end of the 2025 season, a year which saw Campbell strip Morton of play-calling duties late in the season. Former Arizona Cardinals offensive coordinator Drew Petzing has already been hired to fill that role.

Lions’ offensive line coach Hank Fraley is the team’s run game coordinator, and long-time Stanford head coach David Shaw is Detroit’s passing game coordinator.

Where Kafka fits with the Lions remains to be seen. He does, though, have a new employer.

Source: https://www.bigblueview.com/new-yor...pbell-brian-daboll-john-harbaugh-drew-petzing
 
NY Giants 2026 NFL Draft scouting report: Keionte Scott, DB, Miami

Miami defensive back Keionte Scott in the first half against Indiana in the College Football National Championship


We don’t know just what the New York Giants revamped defense will look like in 2026. It seems likely that they’ll want to improve their defensive secondary, but we don’t know how or what that will look like just yet

One of the hallmarks of a modern defense has been the shifting philosophies in how defensive backs are used. Increasingly, teams are looking to versatile DBs to play multiple roles to combat how modern offenses are weaponizing speed and spacing.

Miami cornerback Keionte Scott was one of the best defenders in college football in that role last year. While Scott struggled as a traditional cornerback at Auburn in 2024, ultimately landing on the bench, he thrived as a hybrid nickel defender for Miami.

Prospect: Keionte Scott
Games Watched: vs. UCF (2025), vs. Florida (2025), vs. Louisville (2025)
Red Flags: Ankle (2024), Foot (2025)

Measurables​


Height: 6-foot (unofficial)
Weight: 195 pounds (unofficial)

Strengths​


Best traits

  • Versatility
  • Aggressiveness
  • Mental processing
  • Zone defense
  • Run defense
  • Blitzing

Keionte Scott is a versatile, physical, aggressive, and smart defensive back. He has good size at 6-foot, 194 pounds, and wears a wide variety of hats in the Hurricane’s defense.

Scott was primarily a slot and box player, playing slot corner, box safety, and STAR safety/linebacker hybrid. He’s effective dropping into zone coverages and does a great job of recognizing route concepts. Scott has good long speed and is a rangy defender, as well as smoothly picking up and passing off receivers passing through his zone. He also has fantastic mental processing with a great trigger, flying to the ball as he diagnoses the play.

He has great physicality and doesn’t blink at getting his hands dirty in the tackle box. Scott is a willing run defender who’s able to take on bigger blockers, takes great angles to the ball, and does a good job of using his hands to keep himself clean as he navigates the trash. Scott is also a capable blitzer and is very disruptive. He times his rushes well and accelerates hard into the backfield, with 5.0 sacks and 13.0 tackles for a loss last year.

Finally, he is also a dangerous punt returner. Scott was the best punt returner in the SEC when he was at Auburn in 2023 and ranked eighth in the nation.

Weaknesses​


Worst traits

  • Foot quickness
  • Hip fluidity

Scott is listed as a cornerback, however his feet are a bit slow and hips a bit sluggish to be a true cornerback at the NFL level.

Scott is a bit slow in transition from his backpedal to driving downhill on the ball. Likewise, his hips can be a bit stiff to allow him to fluidly stay in phase with receivers through their breaks. That can allow receivers to create separation out of their breaks, particularly when athletic receivers are breaking sharply back to the ball in the underneath area of the field.

His feet and hips also limit his ability to match up with receivers in man coverage, and also create some missed tackles if he has to change course very quickly in close quarters.

Game Tape​


(Scott is the Miami DB wearing number 0, with a white band on his right wrist. He blitzes off the defensive left/offensive right on the first play)

Projection​


Scott is a versatile, aggressive, and smart defender who can help a defense in a variety of wells. Scott might not fit every defense, as he’s best used as a versatile “defensive weapon” or “nickel defender” than strictly as a cornerback.

Scott’s game is somewhat similar to Tyrann Mathieu or Dru Phillips as a player who can line up in a variety of positions and be disruptive. He’s a great run defender and is a dangerous player coming down hill. He’s also a capable zone coverage defender with five passes defensed and 2 interceptions – both of which were returned for a touchdown.

Teams could vary widely on where he falls on their boards. Teams that are fairly traditional in how they employ their defensive backs could struggle to find a good place for him. However, teams that spend a lot of time in nickel or dime sets, and make use of STAR or pseudo-linebackers to add speed at the second level could view Scott as a high second round pick.

Does he fit the Giants? Possibly, depending on scheme

Final Word: A Day 2 pick

Source: https://www.bigblueview.com/nfl-dra...-draft-scouting-report-keionte-scott-db-miami
 
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