Giants injury news: Darius Slayton, John Michael Schmitz again miss practice

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Wide receiver Darius Slayton and center John Michael Schmitz did not practice for the New York Giants for a second straight day on Thursday. That calls into question their availability for Sunday’s game against the Denver Broncos.

Slayton, who has a hamstring injury, did not play last Thursday against the Philadelphia Eagles. Schmitz suffered a concussion during that game and remains in the protocol.

Three players were added to the report. Defensive tackle D.J. Davison did not practice with a knee issue, while cornerback Paulson Adebo (shoulder) and Dane Belton (neck) were limited. Edge Chauncey Golston (neck) did not practice after being limited on Wednesday.

Thursday injury report​

Giants​


Did not participate

LB Swayze Bozeman | Ankle
LB Demetrius Flannigan-Fowles | Hamstring
C John Michael Schmitz Jr. | Concussion
WR Darius Slayton | Hamstring
DL D.J. Davidson |Knee
DL Chauncey Golston | Neck

Limited participation

OT Jermaine Eluemunor | Shoulder/Back
WR Jalin Hyatt | Ankle
DL Roy Robertson-Harris | Knee
CB Paulson Adebo | Shoulder
S Dane Belton | Neck

Full participation

CB Deonte Banks | NIR – Personal
OLB Victor Dimukeje | Pec

Source: https://www.bigblueview.com/new-yor...yton-john-michael-schmitz-again-miss-practice
 
Giants’ backup center Austin Schlottmann aims for ‘seamless transition’

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When New York Giants starting center John Michael Schmitz left Thursday’s game against the Philadelphia Eagles with what would ultimately be ruled a concussion, Austin Schlottmann had not played center in a regular season game since Week 5 of the 2023 season, when he played a single snap for the Minnesota Vikings.

Schlottmann, in fact, had not played in a regular season game since Week 14 of that season, when he played a pair of snaps at left guard for the Vikings.

The moment wasn’t too big for Schlottmann, a 30-year-old journeyman who has played in 74 games with 14 starts in a career that began with the Denver Broncos in 2018.

“I’ve got to do my job,” Schlottmann said from his locker this week. “I think you get ready during the week, like you’re going to play, obviously. You prepare, JMS and I prepare like we’re going to play.

“We work with each other, we help each other out. And then game day, you warm up like you’re going to play. You go out there, run out the tunnel like you’re going to play, and then you’ve just got to stay warm. And as hard as it is, you kind of just have to psych yourself in the middle of the game. Like, all right, I’m playing today, let’s go.”

Schlottmann had one false start penalty when he misinterpreted something quarterback Jaxson Dart was communicating. Otherwise, there were no snap snafus and the offensive line continued to function efficiently with a new man in the middle making the line calls.

“He did what he needed to do, which was to come in and operate at the center for us,” said head coach Brian Daboll. “He did a nice job.”

More than 1,000 snaps of playing experience on offense helped Schlottman understand that “You can’t over-hype it or under-hype it. You’ve got to just go out there and play football. It’s the same game we’ve been playing since I was seven years old.”

Make no mistake, though, Schlottmann was thrilled to be on the football field in a game that counted. He missed most of last season with a broken fibula, playing only three special teams snaps in the 2024 season finale.

“It’s just super exciting to play football,” Schlottmann said. “When you have an injury like that, I’ve had a few injuries, and every time it happens, like, man, this stinks. Am I going to get to play again?

“You never know how you’re going to feel when you get back. So it’s like getting into training camp this year and the preseason and last Thursday, it’s just super fun to play. You’ve got to enjoy it. You’ve got to treat it like it’s your last.”

Schmitz, who is still in the concussion protocol, did not practice Wednesday or Thursday. With several steps yet to clear in the protocol, it seems likely at this point that Schlottmann will be the Giants’ starting center on Sunday against the Broncos.

Schlottmann hopes nobody notices a difference in the performance of the line if it’s him in the middle rather than Schmitz.

“I think the coaches do a good job of installing things, and we do a good job of talking about it, scheme-wise, getting everyone ready to know what to do,” Schlottmann said. “JMS and I work with each other on that, whether it’s memorization or how we’re going to MIKE stuff, and how we’re calling stuff. So we both prepare the same way, so when we’re both in there, we’re saying the same things.

“I think as long as we can do that, it’s kind of a seamless transition, hopefully. That’s kind of what you want. You want it to be as seamless as possible for the other guys, so they’re not, they don’t have to think about, oh, it’s me in there instead of JMS. It should be easy.”

Source: https://www.bigblueview.com/new-yor...n-schlottmann-john-michael-schmitz-concussion
 
Andre Patterson: ‘Call everybody we play’ to see how Dexter Lawrence is playing

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Don’t tell defensive line coach that Dexter Lawrence isn’t playing this season like the dominant defensive tackle the New York Giants have become accustomed to seeing.

Told on Friday by a media member that Lawrence probably isn’t playing up the level he is used to, Patterson shook his head vigorously.

“I wouldn’t agree with that statement at all. At all,” he said.

It is absolutely accurate that Lawrence’s statistical production is not matching what he has done the past three seasons, when Lawrence totaled 21 sacks, 65 quarterback hits, and 22 tackles for loss while making the Pro Bowl three straight times and twice being a second-team All-Pro.

After getting nine sacks, 16 quarterback hits and eight tackles for loss in 12 games a season ago, Lawrence is still looking for his first sack, has just two quarterback hits and a single tackle for loss.

Patterson doesn’t care about the numbers.

“Call our opponents,” Patterson said. “Call everybody we play and ask them if Dexter Lawrence is still playing like Dexter Lawrence.

“There’s no other d-lineman in this league that gets as many double teams as he does. Not even close.”

Patterson pointed out that Lawrence even gets double teams on passing down, unheard of for nose tackles who are usually on the sidelines in pass rush situations.

Per Pro Football Focus, Lawrence is the fourth-most double-teamed defensive lineman in the NFL on pass-rush attempts. He has faced double teams 71.51% of the time and triple teams 6.99%. That is 78.5% of his 186 pass-rush snaps facing multiple blockers. Overall numbers could not be found.

“The reason that Burnsie [Brian Burns] is getting the production he’s getting, that 51 [Abdul Carter] is getting the production he’s getting is because they’re putting two dudes on Dex,” Patterson said. “So, we’ve got two guys getting one-on-ones because they’re putting two guys on Dex.

“As a football player, what he does on Sundays, he’s playing like Dex. I get it, people don’t see the sacks that he had last year and think ‘oh, he’s not playing up to his standard because he’s not getting sacks’ No. He’s not getting sacks because he’s getting doubled all the time and he may get three one-on-ones through the course of a whole game.”

Patterson believes “the sacks will come,” in no small part due to the idea that teams will at some point begin shifting more double teams toward Burns and Carter.

“For me to stand here and say Dexter Lawrence is not playing like an elite d-tackle in this league, that’s a big time misnomer,” Patterson said. “He helps our defense because of his presence, and what the offense has to do to handle him, and it helps the other guys on our defense be successful.”

Source: https://www.bigblueview.com/new-yor...ying-like-dex-giants-dl-coach-andre-patterson
 
Survey results: Confident fans want the Giants to wheel and deal

New York Giants rookies Jaxson Dart and Cam Skattebo celebrate after a touchdown


There’s renewed life around the New York Giants.

The emergence of Jaxson Dart and Cam Skattebo, as well as the Giants’ win over the Philadelphia Eagles on Thursday Night Football has energized everything around the franchise.

Fans are excited and the media ecosystem suddenly wants to talk about the Giants. Former players, analysts, pundits, and reporters are all saying that the Giants are suddenly fun, likeable, and a team the want to watch. They might not necessarily think the Giants are good or a force yet, but they’re at least interested.

That probably has something to do with the conversation around the Giants and the trade market shifting. We’re seeing fewer think pieces and listicles that involve taking the Giants roster to the chop shop and distributing their good players to other teams. Instead, there’s actual conversation about using the trade market — and rapidly approaching trade deadline — as an avenue to build the team going forward.

So with that in mind we asked the Big Blue View community what you want to see the Giants do on the trade market over the next couple weeks.

The answer was, overwhelmingly, “wheel and deal”.

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I suspect that if we only included a binary choice, either buy or sell, the survey would have been split pretty evenly. But the results clearly show that fans want the team to be active.

The Giants have a couple clear weaknesses on their roster, with wide receiver and off-ball linebacker standing out in particular. The only way for the Giants to address those positions with an impact player before free agency and the draft is through the trade market.

We’ve brought up names like Chris Olave, Rashid Shaheed, Jakobi Meyers, Jerry Jeudy, and Jaylen Waddle as potential players who could be impact pieces the Giants could add through a trade.




On the flip side of that, there may also be opportunities to flip some players for future draft capital, or use them as trade chips.

Some outlets are still trying to pry Kayvon Thibodeaux loose from the Giants’ defense. That’s understandable from a surface perspective, considering he’s a good player but viewed as a third wheel behind Brian Burns and Abdul Carter. However, I suspect those pieces are written looking at a roster and not the Giants’ game tape. Thibodeaux’s stats might not compare well to Burns’ at this point, but he’s a vital member of the Giants’ defense and has become a very good all-around edge defender.

Quarterback Russell Wilson is also frequently brought up and we’ve heard that the Giants are willing to listen to offers for Wilson. That said, I suspect their price might be higher than expected on the outside, considering his dual role as a back-up and as a mentor for Jaxson Dart. Multiple players have remarked about Wilson’s value as a coach in the locker room, and the Giants have gone to pretty significant lengths in building an incubator for Dart.

I’m not sure the Giants would be quick to abandon a plan just because it’s working.

However, there might yet be a trade market for players like Evan Neal and Deonte Banks if the Giants are actually over them. They’re still young players with enough athletic upside that a team in need of a big powerful lineman or a hyper-athletic press-man corner could find value. They’re young players at high value positions who were first round picks for a reason.

Even if they fail at their first stops, those types of players usually get multiple chances.

Assuming they aren’t in the Giants’ long-term plans, either could be a part of a trade package, and the survey results suggest that this is exactly what most fans want to see.

Turning to our weekly fan confidence poll, I wrote last week that I expected to see another spike in fan confidence following the results of Thursday Night Football.

Thanks to the short turnaround last week, we didn’t get the results from Week 6 until after Thursday Night Football. Fan confidence tumbled from 72% down to 24% following the collapse against the Saints. The rout of the Eagles erased that fall, and more.

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This is the most confident we’ve seen Giants fans since the start of the season, when 92% believed the team was heading in the right direction following their performance in the preseason. There’s good reason for the confidence, with the rookie duo of Jaxson Dart and Cam Skattebo giving the team an offensive identity despite the loss of Malik Nabers, as well as the Giants’ defense seeming to round into form.

I expected to see a spike, and we definitely got that.

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Things are unlikely to stay rosy throughout the season, and there will almost certainly be more tough losses. This is a young team that’s leaning on rookies and second-year players at multiple positions. There are going to be ups and downs as they grow and develop, and as other team learn how to play them.

It’ll be interesting to see if fan confidence endures the ride.

Source: https://www.bigblueview.com/nfl-rea...fident-fans-want-the-giants-to-wheel-and-deal
 
Giants vs. Broncos, Week 7: How to watch, stream, listen, wager

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The New York Giants (2-4) hit the road this Sunday to face the Denver Broncos (4-2) at Empower Field at Mile High.

Kickoff is set for 4:05 p.m. ET on CBS, as Brian Daboll’s squad looks to continue their momentum and steal a road win in one of the NFL’s toughest environments.

This will be the 15th all-time meeting between the two teams, with the series (including postseason) tied at 7-7. The last time the Giants played in Denver was in Week 6 of 2017, when they pulled off a 23-10 upset win. The teams last met in Week 1 of the 2021 season at MetLife Stadium.

Fans will be watching closely to see how rookie Jaxson Dart fares against one of the leagues top defenses and whether Dexter Lawrence and the Giants’ defense can slow down Denver’s balanced attack led by Bo Nix and Courtland Sutton.

How to watch


Matchup: Giants vs. Broncos
Date: Sunday, Oct. 19
Time: 4:05 p.m. ET
Location: Empower Field at Mile High – Denver, Colo.
TV: CBS
Announcers: Kevin Harlan (play-by-play), Trent Green (analyst), Melanie Collins (sideline)
Streaming: NFL+ (subscription required)
Odds: Giants +5.5 (-110) [line subject to change]

How to listen


Radio: WFAN 660 AM | 101.9 FM – Bob Papa (play-by-play), Carl Banks (analyst), Howard Cross (sideline)
Pregame: Giants Gameday, 4:05 p.m. ET (presented by Hackensack Meridian Health)
Postgame: Giants Extra Point

Follow us on social media


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Source: https://www.bigblueview.com/new-yor...oncos-week-7-how-to-watch-stream-listen-wager
 
4 things we learned from the Giants’ 33-32 loss to the Broncos

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Is there such a thing as an important game against a team from the other conference in Week 7 of the NFL season? The New York Giants’ road trip to face the Denver Broncos turned into that during the week. Suddenly, the downtrodden (by their own play) Giants had become a “thing” with their convincing victory over Philadelphia on a national stage, both because of their excellent play in that game and the “aura” developing around the Giants’ two confident (brash?) rookies, Jaxson Dart and Cam Skattebo. Maybe Abdul Carter a bit, too. Suddenly, Broncos players were making snippy comments to the press, inciting a war of words between Giants and Broncos fans on social media. Even the Denver press was getting into the act.

In truth, this game against a good opponent would be a referendum on whether the Giants have actually taken a step toward relevance, or whether previous wins over the Chargers and Eagles were just fools’ gold. So what did we learn from the Giants’ 33-32 loss to the Broncos?

No team loses more often because it doesn’t value the kicking position than the Giants​


Some teams actually use draft picks on kickers. Others make sure they have a capable backup kicker in place in the event that the starter gets injured. The Giants, though, are always figuring it out on the fly. There was a time when Graham Gano was one of the best kickers in the NFL. Now, for the third season in a row, he can’t stay healthy. How bad must Younghoe Koo be at this point in his career that he won the competition over Jude McAtamney? McAtamney missed an extra point last week but it didn’t matter because the Giants won easily. Today he missed two more, costing the Giants the game. This would seem to be the end of McAtamney’s time as a Giant.

Playing not to lose usually causes you to lose​


Some teams can run down the clock with a lead because they have a punishing, dominant run-blocking offensive line. That is not the Giants. The offensive line has run-blocked better this year, but against a stout defensive line like Denver’s, you can’t assume they will just run out the clock for you. True to their nature, though, when the Giants got the ball back ahead 26-16 with 5:13 on the clock, they ran Cam Skattebo twice up the middle for a total of 5 yards, forcing Denver to use its first two timeouts. I get it as strategy, but the best strategy is just to keep the ball until the clock runs out. Dart finally passed on third down when Denver knew he had to and was intercepted, leading to a TD that narrowed the margin to 26-23.

The next time the Giants got the ball back, they ran again on first and second down, getting a total of only 2 yards, and Dart was long on a pass to Wan’Dale Robinson on third down. Denver got the ball back at their 32 with 2:42 left. Bo Nix promptly drove the Broncos for the touchdown that gave them their first lead on a drive that took less than a minute off the clock.

The Giants were fortunate to get a questionable pass interference call that helped temporarily gave them the lead back after a 1-yard keeper by Dart, but they never should have been in that position in the first place. Play to win.

Pass coverage is still the Giants’ Achilles heel​


Yes, the Giants lost both of their big free agent signings, Paulson Adebo and Jevon Holland, to injury during this game. To be honest, though, neither one has been all that much of an impact player so far this season. It seemed today that Adebo was getting picked on a bit. Of more concern is Dru Phillips, who was picked on relentlessly by Nix. The most important came on third down with a little more than two minutes left, when Nix completed a 32-yarder to Marvin Mims Jr. with Phillips in coverage. That set up Denver’s go-ahead touchdown three plays later. In Phillips’ defense, he had nine solo tackles today…but some of those were on receivers who’d caught passes on his coverage.

The Giants do have a couple of defensive backs who are playing well. Cor’Dale Flott had an excellent game last week against the Eagles and it seemed that he played well today, with two passes defensed. Dane Belton had 6 tackles and 4 assists in relief of Holland. Still, if I am an NFL offensive coordinator, I’m not worried much about the Giants’ secondary.

Look on the bright side of life: The offensive line​


Coming into this game, all I heard about was the fearsome Denver pass rush, and most notably edge defender Nik Bonitto, who led the NFL with eight sacks coming into the game. He left the game still with eight sacks. Giants left tackle Andrew Thomas handled Bonitto with ease – so much so that Broncos’ defensive coordinator Vance Joseph, who to this point had almost exclusively lined Bonitto up on the right side of the defense, switched Bonitto to the other side in the middle of the game because Bonitto was getting nowhere against Thomas. Denver did manage to sack Jaxson Dart four times on Sunday, but Bonitto had none of them.

Source: https://www.bigblueview.com/new-yor...ned-from-the-giants-33-32-loss-to-the-broncos
 
Giants-Broncos: 3 plays that led to the loss, 2 that should have led to victory

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Jude McAtamney’s two missed extra points were crucial in Sunday’s loss.

The New York Giants blew an 18-point lead in the final six minutes during their collapse in Denver against the Broncos on Sunday. New York continues to find frustrating ways to lose football games, while making history:

An improbable collapse…

NFL teams have won 1,602 consecutive games when leading by 18 points in the final six minutes of a game, per CBS broadcast.

Only the #Giants.

— Nick Falato (@nickfalato) October 19, 2025

The Giants surrendered four straight touchdowns before Bo Nix drove Denver 56 yards on four plays in 37 seconds to set up Wil Lutz’s 39-yard field goal to win the game, 33-32. The amount that had to go wrong for the Giants to find themselves in that position – it’s astounding, but should it be at this point?

There were plenty of positive takeaways from the Giants, who dictated on both offense and defense for 75% of this game. Nevertheless, they leave Denver with another loss, as the seats for Joe Schoen and Brian Daboll continue to sizzle. Here are five plays, or sequences of plays, that were noteworthy.

Play(s) 1: This kicker situation…​


The Brian Daboll regime just can’t figure out the kicker situation. Week 2 against Washington in 2024 was a catastrophic loss, where the Giants entered the game with an injured Graham Gano, then suffered another injury chasing down Austin Ekeler on the opening kickoff, so New York played the rest of the game with no kicker. The 38-year-old then injured himself this year in his Week 3 pregame warmups against Kansas City.

Since that injury, the Giants have signed Younghoe Koo to the practice squad, but they’ve opted to trot out international pathway player, Jude McAtamney, who missed an extra point last week. McAtamney has a big leg, but is inconsistent and unreliable. His longest field goal is 31 yards since he took over for the injured Gano. Gano’s inability to stay healthy, coupled with the Giants other kicking options, have lost this football team multiple games. It’s easy, and correct, to point at last week’s missed extra point and ask – why is Koo still on the practice squad?

Play 2: Tae Banks is Tae Banks​


Paulson Adebo exited the game with an injury, which forced Tae Banks into the lineup. The Giants defense gave up three consecutive touchdowns, including this go-ahead score with less than two minutes left in the game:

BO NIX BRINGS THE BRONCOS ALL THE WAY BACK pic.twitter.com/kqIZuEaX0T

— PFF (@PFF) October 19, 2025

Banks is an incredible liability in run defense. He, AGAIN, chose to go inside of Garrett Bowles (72) on this QB boundary pin-pull concept. It’s inexcusable at this point. Banks also surrendered a few other plays and just should not see the football field defensively anymore. This play above could have been in Play(s) 3, but the play of Tae Banks deserved its own “Play.’

Play(s) 3: An epic meltdown​


The Giants surrendered 33 fourth-quarter points – 33 POINTS in the final quarter of play, to blow their 18-point lead and render the subsequent points scored insufficient. It’s mind-boggling, frustrating, concerning…there’s a lot of words that could describe it, but it’s NOT GOOD!

Former Duck Troy Franklin with some great focus to continue tracking this one and haul in the TD. Epic game.
pic.twitter.com/SeTTGCRmws

— Max Torres (@mtorressports) October 19, 2025
Bo Nix rushes for a Broncos touchdown.

The 2-point try was good.

The Giants lead over the Broncos is now 26-16 in the 4th.
pic.twitter.com/h5b4LDH8DR

— Doug Rush (@TheDougRush) October 19, 2025
RJ Harvey Touchdown🫡🫡

📺 NYGvsDEN on CBS pic.twitter.com/l1cOnYQ9DW

— UCF Football (@UCF_Football) October 19, 2025

The Giants also allowed two 2-point conversions and the Broncos drove 56 yards in 37 seconds with no timeouts to allow Lutz to boot a game-winning field goal. The Giants failed to convert either of the 2-point conversions they were forced to try due to McAtamney.

Another devastating loss in the books – one where the Giants snatched defeat from the jaws of victory.

Play(s) 4: Daniel Bellinger!


It started fun. Let’s mention that. The Giants reliance on 12 personnel in lieu of their starting receivers, and Daniel Bellinger came through with a career performance, including this 44-yard blown coverage touchdown on the Giants’ third offensive drive:

Daniel Bellinger Touchdown!👏🏾 pic.twitter.com/g6wcwNKjvq

— Nick Falato (@nickfalato) October 19, 2025

A condensed 12 personnel vertical concept form the double-Y set against a middle-of-the-field-closed defense; the single-high safety was held in place by the backside curl and Theo Johnson’s vertical stretched the deep third defender toward the sideline, leaving Bellinger open in the middle of the field.

What’s even more impressive about the Bellinger touchdown was the presnap communication that would suggest Dart, and the offense, killed a previous play and switched to the one that resulted in the score above. Dart may be a rookie, but he’s displaying precociousness indicative of a comfortable rookie quarterback. Bellinger also secured a second explosive play on the Giants’ second-touchdown drive, a 29-yard catch:

12 personnel out and up to Daniel Bellinger for a chunk gain. The #Giants offense is dealing against the #Broncos No. 1 ranked defense. pic.twitter.com/qlBlPvFIhb

— Nick Falato (@nickfalato) October 19, 2025

Bellinger squeezed underneath Johnson’s vertical release (sit) to work up the field, where Dart put a beautiful pass on the veteran tight end.

Play(s) 5: Why the Giants’ should have won…​


If they weren’t a bad football team, of course, one that constantly finds creative ways to lose football games. The Giants allowed four consecutive touchdowns to blow an 18-point lead. NFL teams have won 1,602 consecutive games when leading by 18 points in the final six minutes of a game, per the CBS broadcast. The Giants would have been the 1,603rd team, but they’re the Giants. Here are some plays that allowed them to mount a dominant lead on the road – one they failed to preserve. To start, Cam Skattebo’s screen touchdown:

Cam Skattebo receiving TD 🚨

NYGvsDEN on CBS/Paramount+https://t.co/HkKw7uXVnt pic.twitter.com/ni6YpamzKq

— NFL (@NFL) October 19, 2025

The Giants have struggled to find a successful screen game for years. However, Skattebo’s first receiving touchdown concluded a 10-play, 82-yard drive. The screen came on a third-and-11 after a false start penalty against Jermaine Eluemunor. The Giants then had an impressive goal line stand, up 13 toward the end of the first half. Dane Belton read the Courtland Sutton screen and made a physical tackle on fourth-and-goal:

Dane Belton with a fourth-down stick on Courtland Sutton to force a turnover on downs.

Belton just relieved an injured Jevon Holland. pic.twitter.com/HW91qaBBFO

— Nick Falato (@nickfalato) October 19, 2025

The Giants scored a touchdown on this 31-yard Tyrone Tracy Jr. run at the end of the third quarter. This well-blocked run was utilized during Tempo and caught the Broncos off guard. This gave the Giants a 19-0 lead:

Tyrone Tracy Jr. for a 31-yard touchdown run. pic.twitter.com/dmQBxmM7rV

— Nick Falato (@nickfalato) October 19, 2025

It appears that the safety followed Daniel Bellinger (82) on the kick-out block to the flat, and the defender seemingly ran himself out of the run fit. The Giants weren’t done, though, as they proceeded on a six-play, 67-yard drive to respond to Denver’s first touchdown drive and two-point conversion. This was the touchdown on that 67-yard drive – a third-and-17:

This play lol pic.twitter.com/XyBhJeR1QC

— Nick Falato (@nickfalato) October 19, 2025

Prematurely and foolishly, I thought this was the dagger as momentum was surely on the Giants’ side. Unfortunately, though, Paulson Adebo exited the game, bringing Banks onto the field, and the defense started to fracture at that time. An epic collapse after a rather dominant performance by the Giants for three-fourths of the game. As we all unfortunately know, the Giants find creative ways to lose football games.

Source: https://www.bigblueview.com/new-yor...led-to-loss-2-that-should-have-given-ny-a-win
 
Giants news, 10/21: Bowen remains defensive coordinator, Jaxson Dart, Bobby Okereke, more headlines

New York Giants News


Good morning, New York Giants fans!

From Big Blue View​

Other Giant observations​

If Giants fire Shane Bowen, here are 5 midseason candidates to replace him | NJ.com


Antonio Pierce (former Las Vegas Raiders head coach and CBS analyst). He has not called plays at the NFL level, but with Pierce as the Raiders’ head coach, they still used a lot of zone, but they also blitzed 29.9% of the time. He would also be a good motivator. This is what he said about his mindset as a Giants player: “We don’t apologize for how we play. Nobody is going to apologize if they whoop our (expletive), so we press on the gas, and we don’t apologize for anything. We smoke our (expletive) and talk our (expletive).”

Others mentioned included Wade Phillips (San Antonio Brahmas), John Egorugwu (Giants inside linebackers coach), Andre Patterson (Giants defensive line coach) and Marquand Manuel (Giants secondary coach and passing game coordinator).

Bobby Okereke: We’re all hands on deck​

Bobby Okereke is asked if the Giants' defense is fully bought in to Shane Bowen as defensive coordinator:

"All hands on deck, we're all bought in. Everyone's got to look at the man in the mirror…we're excited for this upcoming opportunity." pic.twitter.com/Zt7g5AUKlC

— Giants Videos (@SNYGiants) October 20, 2025

Trending 📉 📈 after Sunday of NFL’s Week 7 as Jonathan Taylor makes his MVP case | The Athletic


📈 Exciting Giants games. New York led 26-8 with under six minutes remaining, but Denver’s 33-point fourth quarter broke a longstanding streak. While explaining the disastrous loss, Dan Duggan pointed out a 🤯 stat:

“There had been 1,602 consecutive wins by teams leading by 18 points with six minutes remaining, according to the CBS broadcast.”

Jaxson Dart has bright future but can’t overcome Giants’ current identity | New York Daily News

The question, then, is how to proceed with Dart’s development after 2026. Daboll is the one who banged the table for the Giants to draft Dart in the first place and then start him in Week 4 at 0-3. So he would make the argument that he deserves to continue to develop the QB.

On the flip side, Dart would be better off playing for a coach and a team that has a better understanding of how to manage a roster and games, that drafts better and that puts players in better positions to succeed.

All of that is to say Dart’s future looks bright, but as long as he plays for this version of the Giants, he’ll be subjected to gutting losses — to a lot of losses.

Politi: Giants can find a silver lining in this unthinkable Denver disaster. No, really | NJ.com

He’s right. The interception just one of a half dozen unacceptable things the Giants did during one big, fat, unacceptable loss that wrings any momentum right out of this season. This franchise has endured a pile of soul-crushing losses over the past decade, and somehow, this one belongs near the top of the list.

Still, if fans squinted a little, they might be able to see a silver lining. For once, it’s not just the vision impairment from banging their heads against the wall.

Historic Meltdown Leaves New York Giants the Most Directionless Team in NFL | Bleacher Report

The meltdown shined a light on everything wrong with this team under Daboll—poor play calling, decision-making and exploitable weaknesses along the roster. While there isn’t much left to be said about the incomprehensible implosion, the Giants ultimately don’t have a good path forward.

By selecting Dart and rapidly developing him, Daboll appeared to have bought himself more time to convince ownership that he’s the coach to lead this franchise back to glory. The Denver defeat revealed the type of flaws that will prevent the team from making a serious run under his stewardship, however. Even if ownership doesn’t opt for a midseason firing, it’s almost impossible to envision the pairing lasting beyond Black Monday after this past weekend’s showing.

Giants left searching for answers after historic fourth quarter collapse in Denver | SNY.tv

This was their ninth straight road loss. They have the second-worst record in the NFL over the past 10 years (56-110-1). They really thought things had changed after beating the Eagles. Dart himself called it a statement. It sure looked that way through three quarters — until it all fell apart.

Silver lining: Dart looks good. Really, really good. The Giants may very well have their franchise quarterback. But how they pick up the pieces — to salvage the season — is the real challenge.

This is the kind of loss that can fracture a team. One that can spiral. And spiraling for the Giants might very well lead to the loss of jobs. Burns isn’t alone in wondering: How did that just happen?

Is Giants’ Brian Daboll brown-nosing Jaxson Dart to save his job? One person thinks so | NJ.com


Despite the epic loss, Daboll can be seen attaching himself to young quarterback Jaxson Dart — and ESPN host Chris Carlin has an idea why.

“Why is it that we need to be kissing the ass of the quarterback the entire time if you’re the head coach? Why?” Carlin in his midday show on ESPN New York on Monday. “All that looks like to me, I have seen it 1,000 times in corporate life, you see it all the time: somebody gets fired, and you bring in a new guy, and you’ve always known those two or three guys who are going to go right in and try to work their way right up their you-know-what. Trying to figure out exactly how can I position myself best … That’s exactly what this looks like with the coach, just on top of Dart, every chance he gets.”

This week’s opponent​

Jalen Hurts: The feeling of losing drove Sunday’s performance | Pro Football Talk

After the game was over, Hurts said that it was “not a time to want or wish something happens, but time to make it happen” and added that he used those two losses as fuel for his big afternoon.

“The feeling of losing, simple as that,” Hurts said, via Zach Berman of TheAthletic.com. “I know there’s a clip to confirm where I said, ‘We’re not losers anymore.’ That’s all I could think about during the last two weeks. . . . I think definitely there was some fire there. But within that fire, you have to be the calm.”

NFL Week 7: Biggest questions, takeaways for every game | ESPN.com


Is the Eagles’ offense back? The 30th-ranked passing offense coming into the game found its stride against Minnesota. Quarterback Jalen Hurts threw three touchdown passes, wide receiver DeVonta Smith had a career-high 183 yards and a touchdown and A.J. Brown had a pair of touchdown catches. Hurts’ 304 yards to receivers was the second most of his career. The Eagles still haven’t gotten running back Saquon Barkley going, but they were able to generate some answers in the pass game during their mini-bye, which is encouraging.

Spadaro: 10 observations from a historic victory over the Vikings | PhiladelphiaEagles.com

7. Let’s talk depth, shall we?. The Eagles were and are banged up. But they went deep into their reserve group and players stepped up. Let’s give a hand to Brett Toth for replacing Cam Jurgens at center, Kelee Ringo for replacing Adoree’ Jackson at cornerback, Patrick Johnson for good reps at edge in place of Azeez Ojulari. Ojomo also went out late in the game. Jeremiah Trotter, Jr. left the game so the Eagles had players step for him on special teams. It may not have been discussed much, but that part of the win has to be recognized.

Around the league​


Dan Quinn: Another DE to IR; Jayden Daniels’ hamstring injury not significant or long-term | Hogs Haven

Cowboys vs Commanders: Dak Prescott is playing like the best quarterback in the NFL | Blogging the Boys

Jets’ Aaron Glenn undecided on whether Justin Fields or Tyrod Taylor will start against Bengals | NFL.com

Dolphins’ McDaniel sticks with Tagovailoa as QB, expects less INTs | ESPN.com

Bryce Young expected to miss Panthers’ game vs. Bills with ankle injury: Source | The Athletic

Raiders expect TE Brock Bowers, WR Jakobi Meyers to return from injury in Week 9 as team limps into bye | CBSSports.com

Lamar Jackson remains out of practice Monday | Pro Football Talk

BBV mailbag​


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

BBV YouTube​


You can find and subscribe to Big Blue View YouTube from the show’s home page

BBV on X: Follow @BigBlueView | Ed Valentine: @Valentine_Ed | Threads: @ed.valentine | Bluesky: @edvalentine

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Source: https://www.bigblueview.com/new-yor...efensive-coordinator-after-meltdown-more-news
 
New York Giants roster moves: PK Jude McAtamney waived, CB Korie Black re-signed

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The New York Giants have waived placekicker Jude McAtamney, who missed three extra points in the last two weeks, and re-signed cornerback Korie Black.

Ryan Dunleavy of the New York Post was first to report the McAtamney news. Dan Duggan of The Athletic broke the re-signing of Black.

McAtamney kicked for four games in place of Graham Gano, who is on Injured Reserve with a groin injury. McAtamney went 9 of 12 on extra-point tries, with all of the misses in the last two games. His two misses on Sunday against the Denver Broncos were a crucial part of the Giants’ 33-32 loss. He made both of his field-goal attempts, but the longest was only 31 yards — shorter than an extra point.

The kicker against the Eagles this Sunday is likely to be either Gano, should he be ready to come off IR, or former Atlanta Falcons placekicker Younghoe Koo, who is on the Giants’ practice squad.

Black, a seventh round pick by the Giants in the 2025 NFL Draft, chose to join the New York Jets practice squad when the Giants waived him during cuts to the 53-man roster rather than rejoin the Giants on their practice squad.

Black was elevated to the game day roster twice by the Jets, playing 15 special teams snaps. The Giants had a need for cornerback depth with Paulson Adebo dealing with a knee injury.

The Giants also terminated the practice squad contract of linebacker Jonas Griffith and re-signed defensive lineman Elijah Garcia, waived from the active roster last week, back to the practice squad.

Source: https://www.bigblueview.com/new-yor...ude-mcatamney-waived-cb-korie-black-re-signed
 
Graham Gano likely to return as Giants’ placekicker vs. Eagles

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If he comes through the week of practice looking healthy, Graham Gano will return to his role as placekicker for the New York Giants on Sunday against the Philadelphia Eagles.

The Giants opened the practice window for Gano, who has been on Injured Reserve with a groin injury the past four weeks, on Wednesday.

The Giants waived placekicker Jude McAtamney on Tuesday. McAtamney missed three extra points in the past two games, two of those in Sunday’s one-point loss to the Denver Broncos.

Head coach Brian Daboll said this won’t be a competition between Gano and Younghoe Koo, a veteran placekicker who is on the Giants practice squad.

“If Graham is ready to go Graham will be the kicker,” Daboll said. “We’ll go through the week here and [if he] looks good hopefully he’ll be out there.

“He’s done a good job for us. Couldn’t do anything about the injury that he had.”

Gano suffered his groin injury just minutes before kickoff of the Giants’ Week 3 game against the Kansas City Chiefs. He kicked a short field goal late in the game, but was unable to do anything else. He was placed on IR before the Week 4 game against the Los Angeles Chargers.

This is the third straight season during which Gano has missed significant time due to injury. In two straight seasons, Gano has suffered pre-game or in-game leg injuries that have left the Giants without a placekicker.

In 2023, he kicked in only eight games due to a knee injury that ended his season. In 2024, he suffered a groin injury on the opening kickoff of a Week 2 game against the Washington Commanders and missed seven games.

“If he’s ready to play and he goes through practice and he feels good, then he’ll be the kicker,” Daboll said. “Let’s see how it looks Friday after practice.”

Daboll said he will see Gano kick on Wednesday for the first time since his injury.

“They [the training staff] think he’s ready to go,” Daboll said. “They feel comfortable about what he’s been doing.”

If something happens with Gano during the week, Koo would likely be elevated from the practice squad to kick against Philadelphia.

Not practicing​


Edge Brian Burns
Safety Jevon Holland
Cornerback Paulson Adebo
Defensive lineman Chauncey Golston

Wide receiver Darius Slayton, out with a hamstring injury the past two weeks, will practice.

Source: https://www.bigblueview.com/new-yor...ns-darius-slayton-paulson-adebo-jevon-holland
 
Giants news,10/23: Burns backs Bowen, Graham Gano, Ray-Ray McCloud, more headlines

New York Giants


Good morning, New York Giants fans!

From Big Blue View​

Other Giant observations​

Chance for Jaxson Dart, Giants to rewrite, not repeat, a team’s painful history in Philly | The Record

Jaxson Dart has been open about how the recent history of losing for the New York Giants has no bearing on the game day reality for the current team.

This is inherited Giants history for Dart, not earned, and that’s sentiment that Big Blue manifested into an upset victory over the Eagles two weeks ago.

Denver linebacker admits Dart “better then we thought”​

Nik Bonitto had to give QB Jaxson Dart his flowers after that wild Week 7 Broncos-Giants game 🤝@nikkkkbonitto | @Broncos | @JaxsonDart | @heykayadams pic.twitter.com/kstnpnkPkB

— Up & Adams (@UpAndAdamsShow) October 21, 2025

Brian Daboll needs to make his Giants stand now — or else | New York Post

When you lose the way the Giants did in Denver, the way no team has lost, it is incumbent upon the head coach, especially one who began the season on the hot seat, to pick up his team by the scruff of its neck and illustrate to every eye staring at him, from John Mara on down, that he is a leader worth following and keeping.

NFL pass-rusher rankings ahead of Week 8 | PFF


Best Rookie Pass Rusher: Abdul Carter, New York Giants. Carter is in a tier of his own when it comes to rookie pass-rushing production through the first seven weeks of the season. The No. 3 overall pick in this year’s draft leads all rookies with at least 65 pass-rushing snaps in PFF pass-rush grade (75.4), total pressures (27) and win rate (12.4%).

NFL Week 8 latest buzz, questions, news and fantasy tips | ESPN.com

Here are a few things to keep in mind on [the wide receiver trade] front. One, competitors for receiver help might prove scarce. Teams often window-shop but ultimately stand pat. The Giants come to mind here. They could use help for Jaxson Dart, but multiple teams I’ve spoken to believe the Giants would prefer to keep their draft picks as a team still in transition. There’s always a surprise team lurking, and perhaps the Giants end up being that, but Pittsburgh can afford to wait this out and see who gets desperate.

The 2025 NFL Quarterback Commitment Index | The Ringer

Too Much PDA: New York Giants and Jaxson Dart. Brian Daboll and Jaxson Dart are that couple that is way too comfortable with PDA. They’re sitting on the same side of the booth at the restaurant. They’re making out in the back of the Uber. They eye-fuck across the party. But you know that underneath all that carnal desire there just might be actual love blooming. You can’t fake the kind of devotion Daboll showed Dart after the rookie got his first career win (and New York’s first win of the season) versus the Chargers.

And the relationship isn’t just hot and heavy. Real love proves itself in sickness and in health. Get you someone who will barge into the blue tent for you, fines be damned.

Jaxson Dart: I am a playmaker​

A priority of Jaxson Dart's as a quarterback is for opposing defenses to never "have the book" on him:

"Playmakers find ways to make plays – that's been my mindset" pic.twitter.com/qihsH9IwmB

— Giants Videos (@SNYGiants) October 22, 2025

2025 NFL trade deadline: Ranking top 25 players who could move | ESPN.com


19. Russell Wilson, QB, New York Giants. Trading Wilson would be a challenge because of the scarcity of available starting QB jobs. The Bengals had a clear opening two weeks ago but opted for Joe Flacco. The Giants could slide Jameis Winston into the No. 2 quarterback spot if they aggressively pursue a trade of Wilson. At this stage of Wilson’s career, compensation would not be steep. His days as a productive starter appear to be over. He has a trade-friendly base salary of $2 million. Predicted chance of getting traded: 10%. Team fits: Las Vegas Raiders, New Orleans Saints

25. Evan Neal, OT/G, New York Giants. This feels like an ideal time to deal away Neal, the No. 7 pick in 2022 who has been inactive all season. The Giants’ starting offensive line finally feels settled, which would make parting with Neal easier, even if for just a late-round pick swap. Teams are always looking for offensive line help. Predicted chance of getting traded: 25% Team fits: Las Vegas Raiders, Los Angeles Chargers

NFL trade deadline 2025: Why Ravens should still buy, Jakobi Meyers could move and more | The Athletic

New York Giants: Stand pat. The Giants went into a Week 7 matchup with the Broncos with plenty of buzz about trading for a top receiver. A win in Denver would’ve only increased that chatter. But the Giants dropped to 2-5 after blowing a 19-point lead in the fourth quarter in a wild 33-32 loss. Offensively, it wasn’t all bad, and rookie Jaxson Dart found his tight ends for plenty of help. We don’t know yet if the Giants will watch the trade deadline craze from afar or if the loss will prompt selling considerations, but they were at least competitive until the end.

Veteran WR says he is trending upwards for Sunday​

Darius Slayton says his chances of playing this week are "high"

"I'm optimistic, I feel good" pic.twitter.com/vmEBE2gUhY

— Giants Videos (@SNYGiants) October 22, 2025

This week’s opponent​

What will Eagles do if Cam Jurgens can’t play against Giants? | NJ.com


For just the second time since replacing Jason Kelce as the Eagles starting center at the beginning of last season, Cam Jurgens may not be healthy enough to start a game.

The Pro Bowl center left Sunday’s win over Minnesota after just two offensive series with a knee injury and he was replaced by Brett Toth. Jurgens was not on the practice field Wednesday as the Eagles started preparations for their game Sunday against the Giants at Lincoln Financial Field.

Eagles open CB Jakorian Bennett’s practice window, sign G Sua Opeta to practice squad | PhiladelphiaEagles.com


Defensive Coordinator Vic Fangio has bounced between Adoree’ Jackson and Kelee Ringo as the starting outside cornerback next to Quinyon Mitchell, and Bennett could enter the mix when he returns to game action. Jackson left last week’s game with a concussion.

The Eagles traded for Bennett from the Raiders about a month before the season opener. Fangio said that he wasn’t able to get a strong evaluation of Bennett due to the limited reps. “Incomplete. I just never felt like I had a good handle on what he is and what he isn’t,” Fangio said. “I just don’t think he played enough to answer that with definitive conviction.”

Picking Each Division Winner Entering the Heart of the 2025 NFL Season | Bleacher Report


Who’ll Win It: Philadelphia. These Eagles feel a bit like the 2024 Chiefs. They aren’t executing too well on either side of the ball, but they’re a veteran team finding ways to win.

They’ve got a multiple-game lead on Dallas along with the tiebreaker at this stage, and Washington is in shambles as a result of offensive injuries and defensive inadequacies. You never know with the wild NFC East, which hasn’t had a repeat winner in 20 years. But it seems that trend will finally be bucked in 2025.

Around the league​


Jayden Daniels reportedly ruled out; Marcus Mariota gets the start vs Patrick Mahomes and the Chiefs | Hogs Haven

Lamar Jackson returns to Ravens practice for first time since suffering hamstring injury | NFL.com

Raiders meet with Maxx Crosby to reinforce commitment to star pass rusher amid trade rumors: Source | The Athletic

Bryce Young did not practice Wednesday, has not been ruled out for Week 8 | Pro Football Talk

Justin Fields shrugs off Jets owner Woody Johnson’s criticism | ESPN.com

Darren Waller injury: Dolphins place top TE on IR, sign Greg Dulcich to shorthanded pass-catching group | CBSSports.com

BBV mailbag​


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

BBV YouTube​


You can find and subscribe to Big Blue View YouTube from the show’s home page

BBV on X: Follow @BigBlueView | Ed Valentine: @Valentine_Ed | Threads: @ed.valentine | Bluesky: @edvalentine

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Source: https://www.bigblueview.com/new-yor...graham-gano-ray-ray-mccloud-updates-headlines
 
Giants’ OC Mike Kafka: Giants trust Jaxson Dart when they have ‘gotta have it’

New York Giants rookie quarterback Jaxson Dart drops back to pass against the Denver Broncos.


One quarter. One bad quarter for the New York Giants was the difference between a third statement win in four weeks and another heart wrenching loss. This time, it was the Giants surrendering a 26-8 lead over the Denver Broncos and falling 33-32.

The turning point in the game was rookie quarterback Jaxson Dart’s interception in the fourth quarter. The Broncos quickly turned the pick into their second touchdown in just 2 minutes, 24 seconds of game clock. Like a flash, the Giants’ 26-8 lead was trimmed to 26-23.

The interception came on third-and-5 at the Giants’ 35-yard line, as the Giants were trying to protect a 26-16 lead with 4:56 left in the game. Conventional wisdom holds that the Giants should have run the ball three times to minimize the risk of turnover as well as keep the clock moving. However, they elected to throw a pass after picking up 5 yards on the ground with their first two downs.

It was an aggressive decision, and one born of the coaching staff’s absolute confidence in rookie quarterback Jaxson Dart.

“I think those decisions always come down to just your confidence level in the quarterback and in the players,” offensive coordinator Mike Kafka said.

“I have a tremendous amount of confidence in Jaxson and the ability to put the ball in his hands in certain situations, whether it’s third down, whether it’s fourth down. You saw that in the Chargers game, third down in the Chargers game to Theo (Johnson), big play. You saw it at the end of the game against Denver, first and goal at the one, putting the ball in his hands.”

Kafka also said that a similar situation came up in the Giants’ game-planning during the week, and he said that their confidence in Dart made it an easy call.

“When we talked about it as a staff early in the week, you look at the ‘gotta have its’ and the plays that we like, that was the one that was high on our list,” he said. “We talked about it, really, two drives before that even came up. And in the four-minute ‘gotta have its,’ we talk about it on Saturday night. It’s the same thing. We go through the checklists and walk through those plays and talk about them. So, when you get in that situation, it’s an easy, fast call. The guys can get up and go, and then go operate it.”

Kafka noted that his confidence in Dart comes from watching every pass he’s made as a member of the New York Giants.

“I have a lot of confidence in putting the ball in his hands there and putting the ball in our offensive line’s hands and having the ability for our skill guys to go,” he said.




While Pro Football Focus may have graded Dart as the worst player on the Giants’ offense against the Broncos, others noted that Dart has made incredible progress over the course of his young career. We all knew that he was athletic and has high-level arm talent, but the most impressive improvement has been in his ability to process at the line of scrimmage. That’s come as a surprise to those who judged him by Lane Kiffin’s offense, but it was on display against the Broncos’ sophisticated pressure packages.

The evolution of the mental side of Dart’s game is another — or perhaps another aspect of the — source of Kafka’s confidence in Dart.

“Jaxson does a great job,” Kafka said. “It starts with his preparation, just identifying his keys that we go through, man coverage IDs, zone coverage IDs. And then on top of that, it’s putting together a good plan for him so that he can go execute. But he has to see it, he has to feel it. And then all the guys around him have to go do their jobs as well. So, it’s never about one guy, I always see it as an 11-man operation. I think Jaxson is carrying the mental load in terms of understanding what we’re trying to get done and take advantage of the certain looks, and he’s going out there and executing.”

Even after the interception, Kafka noted Dart’s resilience to lead the Giants back down the field for a go-ahead touchdown with less than two minutes on the clock.

“it was really a great execution all the way around, across the board,” Kafka said. “We were taking some shots downfield, guys were tired, they had to dig deep. And obviously, several guys made plays on that drive, whether it was downfield, getting there, or getting the flag. But yeah, it was cool to see those guys go down there and get it.”

“I got a lot of confidence in Jaxson and the whole group,” he added. “And so for Jaxson to step up in that environment against that crew and everyone else around him too to kind of raise their game and go and step up and make plays as well is impressive. That’s something that I told him I was really proud of for those guys to go in there and compete and battle all the way to the end.”

Sure, in retrospect the Giants might have called a different play on the interception. And they may have wanted the offense to burn more clock before scoring the go-ahead touchdown.

But as Kafka said, “…it’s hard to tell an NFL football player to not score at the one.” That’s what Dart did, and he put the Giants in position to win.

That’s really all the Giants could ask from their rookie quarterback in his fourth start, and against no less than the (arguably) best defense in the NFL.

Source: https://www.bigblueview.com/new-yor...rust-jaxson-dart-when-they-have-gotta-have-it
 
Giants’ DC Shane Bowen defends rush 3, drop 8: ‘Felt like we were in a good call’

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When a team surrenders 33 points in the fourth quarter and becomes the first in 1,603 NFL games to blow an 18-point lead with less than six minutes to play, that team’s defensive coordinator is going to face serious questions.

New York Giants defensive coordinator Shane Bowen, whose team authored such a performance Sunday in a 33-32 loss to the Denver Broncos, faced the music on Sunday.

In short, Bowen said he thought he had the right call on the much-criticized ‘rush three, drop eight’ play that resulted in a 29-yard completion on the Broncos’ game-winning drive. He did, though, take responsibility for star defensive tackle Dexter Lawrence being off the field on that play.

‘Cat-and-mouse’ game​


Brian Burns said this week that the ‘rush three, drop eight’ call “was perfect for that situation.”

The situation was first-and-10 at the Denver 23-yard line with :33 to play and the Giants protecting a 32-30 lead. The Giants rushed three, dropped eight into coverage and this happened:

Nix to Mims! A FG will win it 👀

NYGvsDEN on CBS/Paramount+https://t.co/HkKw7uXVnt pic.twitter.com/jKlRL6GLOe

— NFL (@NFL) October 19, 2025

Bo Nix overthrew Courtland Sutton and the ball fell into the unsuspecting arms of Marvin Mims.

Denver had a seven-man protection and, with Bobby Okereke eyeing the running back, the Giants ended up with seven defensive backs against three Broncos receivers.

Why that call in that spot?

“It’s all about how you want to delegate your resources. The situations, they’re always changing. They’re always evolving. They’re all a little bit different,” Bowen said. “Them not having any timeouts. I think they were in seven-man protection. They had those guys in there. So, I mean, it’s a cat-and-mouse game, understanding how they’re going to attack you. I had an idea of what was coming. It felt like we were in a good call. Obviously, it didn’t work out, and it wasn’t what we wanted it to be … I have continue to work that to make sure I can put our players in the best position to execute in those moments.”

‘It’s me. It’s all me.’​


Bowen didn’t explain why Dexter Lawrence was on the sideline and Roy Robertson-Harris was at nose tackle on that play. He did take responsibility.

“It’s me. It’s all me,” he said. “It was tempo there in the fourth quarter, I think we ran over 30 plays in the fourth quarter there. So, there’s going to be some moving in and out, and it affects what you’re able to do just in terms of packaging and some of that too, because guys are running in and out. And again, just the most critical moments, those critical plays, I have to make sure that our best players are on the field.

“I have to make sure he’s [Lawrence] out there on the field.”

Brian Daboll’s involvement​


Bowen said that he and head coach Brian Daboll are always in communication.

“I think me and Dabs are always in constant communication on game day,” Bowen said. “He knows what’s going on. It’s always back and forth. As what he sees, what I see, along with our defensive staff, I think we got a good communication in terms of that on game day.”

His relationship with Brian Burns​


“We got a good relationship. We talk. I think with all these guys, I got a good relationship with all these guys where I hope they’re able to voice their opinions to me, good, bad, indifferent as it goes,” Bowen said. “Again, we talk through everything as a group, as a coaching staff, and then along with these players as well, making sure we’re on the same page. I think the more we can communicate, they can understand my perspective, I can understand their perspective on things. It allows us to kind of come together and understand where each guy’s coming from and how we want to play the game.

“I talked to all of them about all the play. I talked to them, I approached all those guys about the play.”

Source: https://www.bigblueview.com/new-yor...-8-vs-denver-felt-like-we-were-in-a-good-call
 
New York Giants injury news: CB Paulson Adebo out vs. Eagles

Injury-Report-Graphic.jpg


The New York Giants will be without starting cornerback Paulson Adebo and probably without starting safety Jevon Holland on Sunday against the Philadelphia Eagles. Adebo has been ruled out with a knee injury and Holland is listed as doubtful, also with a knee injury.

Neither player practiced this week.

Edge defender Brian Burns, was a limited participant in Friday’s practice with a hip injury. He is listed as questionable. Burns insisted earlier in the week that he would play on Sunday.

Defensive lineman Chauncey Golston is also out with a neck injury.

Defensive tackle D.J. Davidson (ankle) and placekicker Graham Gano (groin) are questionable. Gano is still on Injured Reserve, but is eligible to come off. After waiving replacement kicker Jude McAtamney, the Giants have been using this week to try and determine if the 38-year-old Gano, with a history of leg injuries, can be trusted to kick on Sunday.

Center John Michael Schmitz has cleared the concussion protocol and will be available to play.

A.J. Brown out for Eagles​


Star wide receiver A.J. Brown, who has a hamstring injury, heads a long list of Eagles’ players declared out for Sunday.

Friday injury report​

Giants​


Out

CB Paulson Adebo | Knee
DL Chauncey Golston | Neck

Doubtful

S Jevón Holland | Knee

Questionable

OLB Brian Burns | Hip
DL D.J. Davidson | Ankle
K Graham Gano | Groin

Eagles​


Out

WR A.J. Brown | Hamstring
CB Adoree’ Jackson | Concussion
C Cam Jurgens | Knee
OLB Azeez Ojulari | Hamstring
CB Jakorian Bennett | Pectoral
DE Brandon Graham | Not Injury Related

Questionable

WR Darius Cooper | Shoulder

Source: https://www.bigblueview.com/new-yor...-adebo-out-vs-eagles-brian-burns-questionable
 
2026 Draft prospects for the Giants in College football Week 9

Indiana quarterback Fernando Mendoza prepares to receive the snap against Michigan State.


Good morning New York Giants fans! Happy Saturday and welcome to Week 9 of the 2025 College Football season.

This is an interesting week in college football, with few “must watch” games. But while we lack big marquee matchups this week, we several opportunities to see some under-the-radar prospects. The Giants have done a good job in recent years of adding role players on the third day of the draft. Players like Daniel Bellinger, Dane Belton, Micah McFadden, D.J. Davidson, Tyrone Tracy, Theo Johnson, Darius Muasau, Marcus Mbow, and (obviously) Cam Skattebo all emerging from the fourth round — and later — to be contributors.

Keeping an eye on the smaller programs can help us identify players who could emerge as later round steals.

(2) Indiana vs. UCLA​


Fox – noon

Raise your hand if you predicted Indiana being the second-ranked team in the country at any point this year?

Okay put your hand down, liar.

But anyway, here we are and the Hoosiers are favored by 25.5 points over the Bruins.

Indiana’s ascension is due in large part to the rise of quarterback Fernando Mendoza. The Giants (probably) aren’t going to be interested in Mendoza, but he’s provided a foundation for Indiana’s other players to blossom. This game probably won’t add to the chaotic pile of upsets we’ve enjoyed this year, but it’s a solid opportunity to get a look at some players we’re going to hear a lot of this year. In particular, the Giants might want to pay attention to WR Elijah Sarratt and OT Carter Smith.

Players to watch​


(2) Indiana

  • Fernando Mendoza (QB – 15)
  • Carter Smith (OT – 65)
  • Pat Coogan (OC – 78)
  • Elijah Sarratt (WR – 13)
  • Mikail Kamara (EDGE – 6)
  • D’Angelo Ponds (CB – 5)

UCLA

  • Nico Imalavea (QB – 9)
  • Garrett DiGiorgio (OL – 72)
  • Rico Flores (WR – 1)
  • Gary Smith III (iDL – 58)
  • Cole Martin (CB – 21)

Iowa State vs. (11) BYU​


Fox – 3:30 p.m.

BYU doesn’t have many prospects who are highly regarded at this point in the process. They have a bunch who are (currently) expected to be later round picks, and yet they’re currently ranked 11th in the country. That suggests a team that’s well-coached and playing at a high level. They could be a very good team to keep an eye on for role players who can contribute from the back end of the draft.

Iowa State has an extensive injury report and unfortunately defensive lineman Dominique Orange is listed as doubtful for the game. He’s a very stout interior lineman at 6-foot-4, 325 pounds and would probably be the best player on either team in the game. He could be of interest to the Giants if they want to add more beef to their defensive interior behind Dexter Lawrence and Darius Alexander.

Players to watch​


Iowa State

  • Rocco Becht (QB – 3)
  • Benjamin Brahmer (TE – 18)
  • Gabe Burkle (TE – 84)

(11) BYU

  • LJ Martin (RB – 4)
  • Chase Roberts (WR – 2)
  • Weylin Lapuaho (iOL – 61)
  • Keanu Tanuvasa (iDL – 57)
  • Jack Kelly (LB – 17)

(24) Arizona State vs. Houston​


I wouldn’t blame anyone for watching the game between (20) LSU and (3) Texas A&M in this slot (ABC, 7:30 p.m.). But we’ve already taken quite a few looks at LSU this year (including just last week against Vanderbilt) and I want to focus a bit on the smaller programs.

Unfortunately, Arizona State WR Jordyn Tyson is out of the game with a hamstring injury. He’s in contention to be the first receiver off the board in the 2026 NFL Draft, and should be on the Giants’ radar unless they make a move to trade for a “WR 1b” before the trade deadline.

So with Tyson out, I’d like to highlight Houston TE Tanner Koziol. Koziol is a big, long tight end at 6-foot-7, 250 pounds, but moves more like a wide receiver. He’s able to stretch the field or attack the seam, as well as pick up yards after the catch. He’s also remarkably sure handed, currently leading the nation in contested catches while also not having any drops on the season. The Giants don’t need a tight end right now, but that could change if they let Daniel Bellinger walk in free agency.

The Giants could also be interested in Arizona State cornerback Keith Abney II. He has solid size at 6-foot, 190 pounds, and is allowing a completion percentage of just 47.4 when targeted.

Players to watch​


(24) Arizona State

  • Sam Leavitt (QB – 10) *currently listed as questionable
  • Max Iheanachor (OL – 58)
  • C.J. Fite (iDL – 9)
  • Keith Abney II (CB – 1)

Houston

  • Connor Weigman (QB – 1)
  • Tanner Koziol (TE – 9)
  • Dean Connors (RB – 44)
  • Amare Thomas (WR – 0)

Source: https://www.bigblueview.com/new-yor...cts-for-the-giants-in-college-football-week-9
 
New York Giants’ Graham Gano activated, will kick Sunday vs. Eagles

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The New York Giants have activated placekicker Graham Gano from Injured Reserve for Sunday’s game against the Philadelphia Eagles.

Gano, 38, was 6 of 6 on field-attempts with a long of 55 yards and 4 of 4 on extra points before being injured during pre-game warmups for the Giants Week 3 game against the Kansas City Chiefs.

Second-year placekicker Jude McAtamney missed three extra points over the past two games, including two in Sunday’s one-point loss to the Denver Broncos.

Gano has missed time with leg injuries in each of the past three seasons, and his injuries have twice left the Giants without a kicker for the majority of a game. The Giants will not elevate veteran placekicker Younghoe Koo from the practice squad as insurance in the event Gano suffers another injury.

The Giants elevations will be wide receiver Lil’Jordan Humphrey, who has been a valuable contributor on offense the past two weeks, and safety Raheem Layne. This will be Humphrey’s final elevation before the Giants need to add him to the 53-man roster. Layne is being elevated for the first time as depth with starting safety Jevon Holland having been upgraded from doubtful to out due to a knee injury.

To make room on the 53-man roster for Gano, the Giants waived linebacker Swayze Bozeman. Bozeman played in four games for the Giants this season.

Source: https://www.bigblueview.com/new-yor...ham-gano-activated-will-kick-sunday-vs-eagles
 
No sweep for New York as Philly wins 38- 20 rout

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The Philadelphia Eagles dominated their NFC East rematch on Sunday afternoon, defeating the New York Giants 38–20 at Lincoln Financial Field in a game defined by explosive plays and a devastating injury to Giants’ rookie running back Cam Skattebo.

Philadelphia wasted no time seizing control. On just the second snap of the game, Saquon Barkley broke free for a 65-yard touchdown run, his first run of over 20 yards this season to give the Eagles an early 7–0 lead. New York answered with an 18-yard score from Skattebo on a wheel route from Jaxson Dart, tying the game 7–7 midway through the first quarter.

Moments later, the Eagles struck again. Barkley added a second touchdown this time on a nine-yard reception from Jalen Hurts to put Philadelphia back in front. But the mood quickly shifted when Skattebo suffered a gruesome ankle injury on a short reception late in the half. Players from both sides surrounded the rookie as he was carted off the field with his leg in an air cast. Skattebo was said to have a dislocated right ankle.

Hurts finished an efficient 15 of 20 for 179 yards and four touchdowns, spreading the ball to five different receivers. Barkley was unstoppable, totaling 150 rushing yards and 24 receiving yards with two total scores before leaving with what appeared to be a minor leg issue.

Dart was sacked five times and limited to 136 passing yards with one late rushing touchdown. Their run game mustered just 60 total yards without Skattebo, and New York’s depleted secondary couldn’t contain DeVonta Smith, who led all receivers with 84 yards.

Philadelphia improves to 6–2 and maintains its spot atop the NFC East standings. The Giants fall to 2-6.

Key Stats

Eagles

  • Jalen Hurts: 15/20, 179 YDS, 4 TD
  • Saquon Barkley: 18 CAR, 150 YDS, 1 TD; 3 REC, 24 YDS, 1 TD
  • Dallas Goedert: 3 REC, 28 YDS, 2 TD
  • DeVonta Smith: 4 REC, 84 YDS
  • Defense: 5 sacks

Giants

  • Jaxson Dart: 14/24, 193 YDS, 1 TD pass, 1 rushing TD
  • Cam Skattebo: 4 CAR, 22 YDS; 2 REC, 23 YDS, 1 TD (left game – ankle injury)
  • Graham Gano: 2/2 FG, 1/1 XP
  • Defense: Allowed 38 points, 356 total yards

Cam Skattebo injury​

  • The Giants lost rookie running back Cam Skattebo to a scary-looking right leg injury in the first half. [FULL STORY]
  • Cornerback Cor’Dale Flott suffered a concussion.
  • Tight end Daniel Bellinger suffered a neck injury in the third quarter and was questionable to return.

Giants inactives​


CB Paulson Adebo | Knee
S Jevon Holland | Knee
DL Chauncey Golston | Neck
OL Evan Neal
WR Jalen Hyatt
OT James Hudson III
QB Jameis Winston | Emergency 3rd QB

What’s next?​


The Giants return to MetLife Stadium in Week 9 to host the San Francisco 49ers. Game time on Sunday, Nov. 2 as 1 p.m. ET. The broadcast will be on CBS.

Source: https://www.bigblueview.com/new-yor.../philadelphia-eagles-final-statistics-matchup
 
‘Devastated’ Jaxson Dart hopes loss to Eagles motivates Giants

New York Giants quarterback Jaxson Dart after the Week 8 loss to the Philadelphia Eagles.

Jaxson Dart after Sunday’s loss.

Oct. 26th, 2025 was probably the worst day for the New York Giants in 11 years.

The Giants’ loss to the Philadelphia Eagles in Week 8 was the kind of emotional blow a team gets once a decade, if that often. It wasn’t just the 38-20 loss on the tail of a 33-32 collapse, but the loss of one of the Giants’ spark plugs in gruesome fashion.

This time it’s rookie quarterback Jaxson Dart trying to pick up the pieces after Cam Skattebo was lost for the season to a brutal dislocated ankle. Last time (Oct. 12, 2014) it was Eli Manning after Victor Cruz lost to a torn patellar tendon.

Dart and Skattebo injected new life into the Giants after each took over the starting job for their respective positions. But more than that, Dart and Skattebo were fast friends and two of a (very rare) kind in the Giants’ backfield. Their attitude and energy was infectious, powering the team and uplifting the fanbase. Now, like Malik Nabers — Skattebo won’t be on the field for the Giants again until 2026.

“I was devastated,” Dart said. “It’s my boy, man, so seeing him go down and obviously reacting to what happened, that sucks. It’s the worst part of this game.”

Jaxson Dart says he was "devastated" by Cam Skattebo's injury

"That's my boy, so seeing him go down and obviously, reacting to what happened, it sucks. It's the worst part of this game." pic.twitter.com/QTB6TCr5T0

— Giants Videos (@SNYGiants) October 26, 2025

“It’s emotional,” he added. “But you try to go back in the huddle and try to just reload and just try to go down and score.”

The Giants also lost tight end Daniel Bellinger to a neck injury, forcing Dart to (try to) play without another dependable weapon. But he also took the weight of picking up the slack on himself.

Just know I got to keep making plays and do my job to put our team in the best situation,” he said. “Obviously it’s not ideal [losing offensive weapons], it stings, and there’s more people in the rotation, but I got to be better, too, making more plays and putting us in a good situation to win.”

The Giants have been ravaged by injuries over the last month, and came into the game without two starting defensive backs (cornerback Paulson Adebo and safety Jevon Holland), and also lost cornerback Cor’Dale Flott to a concussion in addition to the losses of Skattebo and Bellinger. But even so, Dart isn’t blaming the injuries for the Giants’ loss.

“I’m not ever going to quit,” he said. “I don’t care what the situation is. If I’m on that field, I’m playing as hard as I can. I’m going to try to lead the best that I can. I have the same expectation every time we go out on the field and try to preach that to the guys so when we step through the lines, we should be competing and playing as hard as we can every time.”

"I'm not ever going to quit. I don't care what the situation is. If I'm on that field, I'm playing as hard as I can."

– Jaxson Dart pic.twitter.com/dxf3xY4Rfa

— Giants Videos (@SNYGiants) October 26, 2025

Instead, he says that the Eagles simply out-played the Giants and dominated them.

“I felt like, honestly, I felt like we kind of got, I’m trying to say this the right way”, he said. “I thought they did just a lot more things better than we did in a lot of areas. I don’t like the feeling of – I thought they really kind of dominated most of the game and it’s an embarrassing feeling.”

That said, the rookie also believes that the embarrassment should motivate the team.

“That’s just kind of how I feel,” he added. “It’s frustrating because I felt confident coming into this game. I felt obviously extra motivated because of how things happened last week and I really didn’t want one to lead to another. I’m just disappointed that we lost.”

“I mean, hopefully it just motivates everybody more throughout the whole facility” Dart said. “It’s not just the players, it’s not just the coaches, it’s everybody. I hope everybody can be more and more motivated to get better, to try to take another step in [our] preparation and how [we] lead. That goes for me, too. I have to take accountability because I need to be way better. Fair or unfair, a quarterback is judged by [their] wins and losses. We got to bounce back and I feel confident in the guys and that’s what we’re going to do.”

The hurt will fade with time, but right now the wounds of losing the game — and his friend — are still raw. But Dart promises that he’s going to use the twin losses to motivate him to be better.

“This is all fresh, so I’m still going to be frustrated tomorrow about it,” Dart said. “But like I said, I hope it’s just motivating for everybody. It’s going to be motivating for me to be better and I mean, the overall feeling is I hate losing and everybody here hates losing and we got to figure out how to start winning.”

You can see Jaxson Dart almost get emotional about losing at the end of his press conference. Can tell how much this means to him. Can hear it in his voice and with him rocking back and forth after a second straight loss for the Giants. pic.twitter.com/HtW2yy0q56

— Jordan Raanan (@JordanRaanan) October 26, 2025


Source: https://www.bigblueview.com/new-yor...on-dart-hopes-loss-to-eagles-motivates-giants
 
Film study: How did Giants’ CB Tae Banks play against the Eagles?

Giants cornerback Deonte Banks attempts to tackle Eagles running back Tank Bigsby.

Deonte Banks tries to tackle RTank Bigsby on Sunday.

The New York Giants’ Week 8 loss to the Philadelphia Eagles was a no-good, rotten, very bad day.

Very little good came out of the loss. It could be argued that the play of Jaxson Dart in the face of Vic Fangio’s defense was a positive in the context of his long-term development. But even then, the outcome was poor thanks to the play of the team around Dart. He was let down time and again by his receivers, while also losing Cam Skattebo to a gruesome ankle injury that required emergency surgery and Daniel Bellinger to a neck injury.

The Giants were already missing some of their best players due to injury, and losing more just added injury to insult (literally).

Lost in the conversation around the loss, Skattebo’s injury, and how the game was officiated (or not officiated, as the case may be), is that third-year cornerback Deonte Banks quietly played well against the Eagles.

Banks was pressed into a starting role after Paulson Adebo suffered a knee injury against the Denver Broncos. Fans and media members alike predicted that the Eagles would key on Banks, picking on a corner who has struggled throughout his young career.

I noted in a post on The Feed prior to the game that Banks’ play was one of the things I wanted to track throughout the game, saying, “I’m going to try to keep track of his assignments and how often Hurts checks and moves on, not just what happens if he’s targeted.”

So how did Banks do?

Run defense​


The Giants’ run defense was, in a word, atrocious against the Eagles. For the most part, all three levels failed, albeit at different times (on most plays). Banks himself didn’t have much of a role in the Giants run defense in the game. Not that he wasn’t asked to be a run defender, but the Eagles tended to run to the opposite side of the field than the one he was on.

No, they probably weren’t avoiding him. It’s (much) more likely that it’s simply how things worked out. The times the Eagles did run his way, the results were uneven, but not altogether terrible.

We’ll get the bad out of the way first, then finish on a couple high notes.

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Banks is the boundary cornerback here, aligned outside of Brian Burns. The Eagles line up in a jumbo package with offensive tackle Fred Johnson declaring as a jumbo tight end. Eagles’ running back Tank Bigsby takes the hand-off and presses the gap between Johnson and tight end Dallas Goedert.

Burns’ job is to set the edge and control the tight end. He positions himself to the outside, which cedes the D-gap to Bobby Okereke, and establishes Banks as outside contain. Unfortunately, Banks is sucked inside by Bigsby pressing the gap, and isn’t able to get back outside to either tackle Bigsby slow him until help can arrive.

This was, frankly one of Banks’ two worst plays of the game. But there was more good than bad elsewhere in his play.

For instance, we have the 5-yard run by Saquon Barkley on the previous play.

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Banks is the boundary corner here as well, lined up at the top of the screen.

This time he does a very good job of coming downhill to aggressively establish outside contain. Banks is met on the edge by a pulling Landon Dickerson and knocks him back, despite being outweighed by about 130 pounds. He does a great job of coming in low, getting under the guard’s pads, and using his velocity (and leverage) to overcome Dickerson’s mass. Banks taking on, and beating, Dickerson’s block forces Barkley back inside and back to the Giants’ defense. Had Dickerson been able to establish the block, it might have been another long touchdown run.

Darius Muasau doesn’t get leverage on center Brett Toth (who also pulled), creating a narrow seam through which Barkley was able to squeeze.

Banks showed a similar level of decisiveness and violence triggering downhill later in the game, this time on a toss play.

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Banks is, once again, the boundary corner for this play, lining up at the top of the screen.

Abdul Carter knifes through the Eagle’s blocking, forcing running back Will Shipley back inside as he tries to turn north-south. That forces Shipley back to Banks, who shows no hesitation triggering downhill, and does a great job of breaking down in the gap. He doesn’t quite get a clean tackle on Shipley, but is able to stop his momentum and splits the tackle for no gain with Kayvon Thibodeaux.

All in all, this was the type of performance the Giants need to see from their defensive backs. Aggressive (but disciplined) downhill triggers, filling gaps, and tackling with solid form has been a lacking piece of the Giants’ run defense dating back to the pre-season.

Pass coverage​


Banks’ run defense was largely solid — not something we could say for much of the Giants’ defense. However, a cornerback’s primary job is to defend the pass and that’s something Banks has struggled with. He has been exceptional at forcing tight window throws over the last two years, but has also been very poor at the catch point.

As noted above, there was significant concern that the Eagles would make a point of targeting Banks with Adebo out. However, Pro Football Focus charted Banks with just two targets — though to my eye he was only the principle coverage player on one target.

On the play I dispute, a 5-yard reception by Dallas Goedert, Banks dropped into a Cover 3 zone while the Dane Belton was in charge of the flat underneath him. Goedert goes into jet motion just before the snap, and was picked up by Belton. However, Belton allowed Goedert to get outside of him and it fell to Banks to come down and make the stop as the tight end caught the ball. This wasn’t a significant play (second-and-11 with 6:37 left in the game), and Banks did his job to limit the yards after the catch.

The other target… Well, he was simply burned by DeVonta Smith.

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Banks is matched up on Smith in man coverage on the bottom of the screen. Man coverage has historically been the strength of Banks’ game, and he does have great traits for the technique, but here his size and speed get the better of him.

Banks is in tight coverage on Smith, sitting in his hip pocket and squeezing him to the sideline. He gets his head around as Smith’s shoulders swivel back toward the line of scrimmage, indicating that the ball might be in-bound. However, it’s a comeback route and Smiths’ quickness (and slight frame) allows him to easily stop and work back to the ball while Banks’ momentum carries him further down the field.

This is an ugly-looking rep and Banks may have been able to be more disruptive with his jam at the start of the route. A more physical jam might have allowed Banks to re-route Smith closer toward the sideline and perhaps even squeeze him out of bounds and make him an ineligible receiver. However, doing so may also have opened Banks up to a defensive pass interference call.

Credit where its due, this was a great route from Smith.

That said, Banks did a very good job of keeping the ball in Jalen Hurts’ hand and forcing him to look elsewhere.

For instance, let’s take a look at the play that set up the fateful tush-push.

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Banks aligns at the top of the screen, dropping into zone coverage (it appears to be a Cover-6 shell with Banks covering the deep half on the boundary side) at the snap. Dane Belton picks up Saquon Barkley as he releases into a route, while Banks picks up Dallas Goedert as he runs a curl route. The Giants play great coverage, forcing Hurts to hold the ball and scramble. Hurts repeatedly tries to pick up Goedert on the scramble drill, but Banks stays in tight coverage with the tight end and Hurts ultimately gets outside.

(Never mind the hold on Darius Alexander by Jordan Mailata that allows Hurts to get outside. Just throw it on the pile.)

Okereke is able to knock Hurts out of bounds, with the quarterback transferring the ball to his left hand — which keeps it safe from the linebacker, but also prevents it from crossing the first down marker.

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Later in the game we have Banks getting in similarly sticky coverage on wide receiver Jahan Dotson. Banks aligns in man coverage on Dotson, once again getting in the receivers’ hip pocket. Dotson tries to run a come-back, but Banks stays in tight coverage, keeping the ball in Hurts’ hand while the pass rush breaks through.

He then stays in remarkably tight coverage on the receiver, using the sideline to effectively create a double team and give Dotson no room to work free. Hurts attempts a desperation throw to… someone with Thibodeaux closing in, but the edge gets a piece of Hurts’ arm and the ball flutters incomplete.

Banks also helped contribute to at least one of the Giants’ sacks.

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The Giants are showing a Cover 3 shell at the start of the play with Tyler Nubin walking down to the tackle box. However, he reverses at the snap and sprints into a deep quarter to create Cover 4. Banks is aligned as the field corner on the top of the screen and he picks up DeVonta Smith as he passes into his zone.

Judging by how Hurts’ helmet swivels, Smith is the primary read on the play and he was hoping to drop the ball between Banks and the underneath coverage. Instead, the tight coverage from Banks forces Hurts to move on — or at least he would have if Dru Phillips wasn’t blitzing. Phillips comes free on the slot blitz, forcing Hurts to pull the ball down and climb the pocket, right into the waiting arms of Rakeem Nunez-Roches.

Final thoughts​


There were very few bright spots in the Giants’ loss to the Eagles, but we should probably acknowledge that Banks’ play was one of those bright spots.

Granted, it was a boon for the Giants that A.J. Brown missed the game with an injury, but Banks still played well. Banks’ game is such that when he’s playing well, he’s effectively invisible. He is so good at forcing tight windows that quarterbacks often move right past him in their read progressions, which can make his failures that much more stark.

Banks was only really targeted once, and while he did give up the reception, Hurts avoided him far more often. And so much happened over the course of the game that we never realized that we rarely — if ever — heard Banks’ name. His play was so forgettable that he only gave up 11 yards on 23 coverage snaps (0.48 yards per snap) and yet was completely absent from this week’s ‘Kudos & Wet Willies’.

Does this mean that I think it’s “Clicked” for Banks? No, I won’t go there yet. It’s an encouraging sign, but Banks has had very good games in the past, such as against the Seahawks last year. Considering Adebo is still dealing with a knee injury and Flott has a concussion, there’s a good see Banks as a starter again against the San Francisco 49ers.

He’ll have the opportunity to build on this performance, and perhaps get his career back on track.

Source: https://www.bigblueview.com/new-yor...d-giants-cb-tae-banks-play-against-the-eagles
 
Giants news, 10/28: Praise for Dart grows, Cam Skattebo, Dexter Lawrence, more headlines

New York Giants Notes


Good morning, New York Giants fans!

From Big Blue View​

Other Giant observations​

Giants employee — and team legend — to star: ‘No one respects you’ | NJ.com

“Dexter Lawrence,” said Carl Banks, a two-time champion with the Giants. “Nobody respects you anymore. Nobody. Your opponents do not. The pre-injury Dexter is not there, in their heads. They don’t respect you. And there’s a difference. You’re on the field. They’re blocking you with a nine-year backup center. You’re not making a difference. The old Dexter would.”

Boomer calls push tush call “crap”​

Boomer and @GioWFAN sound off on the "crap" tush push ruling in Sunday's Giants loss: pic.twitter.com/3xoXEJfyvf

— WFAN Sports Radio (@WFAN660) October 27, 2025

NFL coaches on the hot seat: Why Brian Daboll’s status is more complex than you think — Pick Six | The Athletic


There’s no way to make a case for Daboll staying based on an 11-31 record over the past three seasons. If the fire-breathing version of Daboll we see on the sideline resembles the version the Giants are living with behind the scenes, that would seem to work against him as well.

“If the offense is on track and the quarterback is on a developmental track that is acceptable, they’ll let them go another year,” another coach said. “The only way they turn it over is if they get a big name…They have shown they do not have a good process hiring head coaches anyway.”

Giants’ defeat at Eagles ties franchise record with 10th straight road loss | New York Daily News

Schoen and Daboll are no strangers to setting and breaking records. Their Giants set a new franchise record last season by losing 10 straight games overall between Weeks 6 and 16. The Giants now have a 5-20 record under Schoen and Daboll since the start of the 2024 NFL season and a 3-17 record in their last 20 games.

So rolls on the lowered standards of their ownership and organization deeper into the record books.

Giants are in the Jaxson Dart danger zone after step back that continues losing ways | New York Post

The Giants are entering the danger zone.

Scratch that. They aren’t entering anything. They are in it, entangled in it, mixed up in a familiar ensnarement that is impossible to escape and is pulling them down into the depths that they have inhabited for so very long.

Van Roten: Dart does not carry himself like a rookie​

"He's a rookie in title alone. He carries himself like a vet. He takes a lot on his shoulders and I think the future is bright for him."

Greg Van Roten gives an extended answer on Jaxson Dart and how he compares to veteran quarterbacks: pic.twitter.com/PC2qF72zlD

— Giants Videos (@SNYGiants) October 27, 2025

NFL Exec Says Jaxson Dart’s ‘Spark Is About to Dissipate’ as Teams ‘Make Him Play QB’ | Bleacher Report


One NFL executive feels teams may be learning the book on New York Giants quarterback Jaxson Dart as the first-round pick gets more snaps.

“When you lose a game like you just did, allowing 33 points in one quarter, I feel like you do not recover,” they said. “I feel like now, teams are going to have a good feel for who this quarterback is, and that magic he had from going in there and being the spark is about to dissipate, because teams are going to make him play quarterback.”

Future of Jaxson Dart’s team is now, so Giants must act like it at NFL trade deadline | The Record

The New York Giants are not making the playoffs, so let’s get that out of the way.

There are no delusions of grandeur here for a team that continues to spin its wheels each and every time there’s an opportunity to take an enormous leap forward, showing the maturation and development still needed to truly become contenders within the NFC East and beyond.

Even in lost season, Giants must do everything possible to maximize Jaxson Dart’s rookie year | SNY.tv

Dart elevates the play of those around him, even if it’s not always perfect. In his last three games (two against the Eagles, one against the Broncos), Dart has accounted for eight touchdowns.

The Giants have a decision to make over the next two weeks. Most teams with this record are done with the season. They fixate on the draft. The Giants are different. There will be no playoff run — no one is suggesting that. But with Dart, the priority shifts to him and his development. The Giants must do everything they can to get the most out of him and prepare him for the future. If an opportunity presents itself to give up assets for a proven receiver who can help Dart now and in the future, the Giants must pounce.

Cam Skattebo injury: 6 potential replacements for Giants’ running back | SB Nation


Among them is a player who would not have to move far: the Jets’ Breece Hall has been often mentioned as a player potentially playing for somebody else in the near future. Gang Green has not made any concrete efforts to sell him as far as we know, but that might change if the right offer comes along.

Other names to keep an eye on include Tennessee’s Tony Pollard or Miami’s Jaylen Wright — two players, like Hall, on teams whose seasons are not going anywhere and who might be willing to part ways with some of their talent as a result. Pollard would add additional experience and proven production to the Giants backfield, whereas the sophomore Wright has some intriguing traits currently not being utilized by the moribund Dolphins.

Defensive lineman talks about Cam Skattebo​

Rakeem Nuñez-Roches talks about what Cam Skattebo means to the Giants' locker room:

"It's hard not to love a guy like that, when you're working so hard for something and you see a guy putting in the work and getting the results from what he's doing." pic.twitter.com/VQkCep1o4r

— Giants Videos (@SNYGiants) October 27, 2025

‘Monday Night Football’ moments for all 32 NFL teams | ESPN.com


The Giants and 49ers met in a massive “Monday Night Football” matchup late in the 1990 season in San Francisco. The physical, low-scoring game, won 7-3 by the 49ers, was more memorable for what happened after, and in the coming weeks, than the game. 49ers star safety Ronnie Lott and Giants quarterback Phil Simms (pictured) went face-to-face after the contest because of bad blood between the teams.

The Giants would get their redemption. They won the NFC Championship Game in San Francisco to ruin the 49ers’ attempt at a three-peat.

This week’s opponent​

49ers’ Houston no-show laid bare their biggest roster issue, and leaves them with tough decision | Niners Nation

Given the level of injury adversity the 49ers are dealing with, it was no surprise to see a game like this finally arrive. Eventually, the blows just became too much and, in a game in which the offensive line was overmatched against the Texans’ ferocious defensive line, the 49er attack could not do enough to support a defense that simply didn’t have the horses to get Houston off the field.

Tight end George Kittle defended the undermanned defense’s performance, praising Robert Saleh’s unit for playing “bend but don’t break” defense amid yet more injuries to the likes of Sam Okuayinonu, Jordan Elliott and Dee Winters. The defense allowed two touchdowns and four field goals.

Lessons from NFL Week 8 blowouts: Taylor, Barkley, Kraft star | ESPN.com

Kyle Shanahan’s offense didn’t manage a first down until the final drive of the first half and failed to move the chains even once on six of its nine possessions. One week after his best game of the season, Christian McCaffrey was held to 25 rushing yards on eight carries, while most of the star back’s 43 receiving yards came late in the fourth quarter with the 49ers trailing by double digits. The Texans didn’t let McCaffrey beat them, and no other 49ers player was up to the task of taking over the game.

Around the league​


‘We have our own little fraternity’: Shaun O’Hara mourns loss of Nick Mangold | Giants.com

Former Titans, Seahawks WR Tyler Lockett expected to sign with Raiders | NFL.com

Brian Thomas Jr. trade rumors: Liam Coen shuts down speculation, says Jaguars have ‘no plans’ to move WR | CBSSports.com

J.J. McCarthy was practicing on Monday, but Carson Wentz was not | Pro Football Talk

Bills expect star DT Ed Oliver to be out indefinitely with torn biceps: Source | The Athletic

Rams acquire CB Roger McCreary from Titans with draft pick swap | ESPN.com

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