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‘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.

ScreenRecording2025-10-27at12.57.45PM-ezgif.com-optimize.gif

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.

ScreenRecording2025-10-27at1.08.47PM-ezgif.com-optimize.gif

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.

ScreenRecording2025-10-27at1.42.19PM-ezgif.com-optimize.gif

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.

ScreenRecording2025-10-27at2.24.01PM-ezgif.com-optimize.gif

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.

ScreenRecording2025-10-27at2.37.48PM-ezgif.com-optimize.gif

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.

ScreenRecording2025-10-27at2.54.15PM-ezgif.com-optimize.gif

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.

ScreenRecording2025-10-27at3.01.41PM-ezgif.com-optimize.gif

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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Source: https://www.bigblueview.com/new-yor...s-cam-skattebo-dexter-lawrence-more-headlines
 
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