News Giants Team Notes

Giants-Bears final injury report: New kicker for New York on Sunday

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Placekicker Graham Gano, who has a herniated disc in his neck, did not practice for a third straight day on Friday and has been ruled out Sunday against the Chicago Bears. That means Younghoe Koo, who is on the practice squad, will be the placekicker on Sunday for the New York Giants.

This will mark the second time this season and the fourth time in three seasons that an injury has sidelined the 38-year-old Gano. Gano missed the final nine games of 2023 with a knee injury. He missed seven games in 2024 with a groin injury. This year, he already spent four games on injured reserve with another groin injury. Now, a neck injury will necessitate the Giants turning to their fourth placekicker of the season, counting punter Jamie Gillan missing an extra point filling in for Gano when he was injured during warmups for a Week 3 game against the Kansas City Chiefs.

Gano’s health issues led to this response from former Giants kicker Lawrence Tynes, a good friend of Gano’s:

Listen to the end of this clip to hear what @lt4kicks believes the Giants should have done with Graham Gano at the start of this season. https://t.co/329TQYg8np

— Paul Schwartz (@NYPost_Schwartz) November 7, 2025

Other players who will be out Sunday vs. the Bears are:

CB Paulson Adebo |Knee
C John Michael Schmitz | Shin
WR Beaux Collins | Neck
DL Chauncey Golston | Neck
ILB Darius Muasau | Ankle

This will be Adebo’s third consecutive missed game. Golston, signed to a three-year contract in free agency, has played in just four games.

Edge defender Victor Dimukeje is doubtful with a shoulder injury. Right tackle Jermaine Eluemunor (pec) and safety Jevon Holland (knee) are questionable. Holland and Eluemunor did not play last week against the San Francisco 49ers.

Bears’ injuries​


Out

DB Josh Blackwell | Concussion
LB T.J. Edwards | Hand/Hamstring
DL Dominique Robinson | Ankle

Questionable

RB D’Andre Swift | Groin/NIR (Personal)
TE Durham Smythe | Calf

Source: https://www.bigblueview.com/new-yor...l-injury-graham-gano-younghoe-koo-nfl-week-10
 
Giants news, 11/8: Koo to kick Sunday, Abdul Carter, Jaxson Dart, more headlines

New York Giants News


Good morning, New York Giants fans!

From Big Blue View​

Other Giant observations​

Jaxson Dart is taking a beating; the Giants must do a better job protecting their QB | The Athletic

The Giants have lost three straight games, with Dart providing the sole source of excitement. It’s depressing to even imagine Russell Wilson trudging back into the huddle if Dart gets hurt. Remember, that even the bad seasons with Daniel Jones didn’t go fully off the rails until his backups took over.

So Daboll should start to practice an ounce of discretion with the one player who could save his job. And Dart would benefit from a touch of self-preservation by sliding or getting out of bounds when possible.

Word association with Brian Burns​

Burns did not hold back 😅 pic.twitter.com/pTZAfizOYF

— New York Giants (@Giants) November 7, 2025

10 things to watch in Giants vs. Bears | Giants.com


OLB Brian Burns vs. LT Theo Benedet – Burns enters Week 10 with a league-high 11 sacks on the season, with at least one sack in eight of nine games and multiple sacks in three. This week he will be matched up against Benedet, who has allowed just one sack but 15 total pressures since being inserted into the starting lineup in Week 4. Benedet allowed five pressures against the Bengals last week and was called for two penalties. Bears QB Caleb Williams has an average time to throw of 3.24 seconds this season, the longest average by a qualified QB in a season over the past decade.

Giants’ Abdul Carter: I’m ‘holding myself accountable more’ for negative plays | New York Daily News


Abdul Carter isn’t making enough of an impact right now, just like almost every other player on the Giants. The NFL Draft‘s No. 3 overall pick was the first one to say it this week when asked specifically about how he has defended the run.

“I gotta do better,” said Carter. “It’s about being more physical, more violent, being in the right gap. I just gotta do better.”

NFL Week 10 picks, predictions, schedule, odds, fantasy tips | ESPN.com


The Giants haven’t been able to stop the run this season — really, for the past four seasons. They’re allowing an NFL-worst 5.5 yards per carry and have allowed over 30 points in three straight games. It’s not going to get any easier against the Bears’ second-ranked rushing offense. Where are the answers for the defense? “We’re working, putting our head down, and hopefully we can get some better results here going forward,” coordinator Shane Bowen said. It might take more than that this week to stop Chicago from running the ball.

Breakout players at every position at the midpoint of the 2025 NFL season | PFF


Cornerback: Cor’Dale Flott, New York Giants. Flott earned a starting position with the Giants at the outset of the season and has taken full advantage of the opportunity. Through Week 9, Flott’s 79.6 PFF coverage grade places him fifth among qualified cornerbacks. So far, he’s surrendered just a 62.6 passer rating into his coverage while intercepting one pass and breaking up six others. Still just 24 years old, this could be the beginning of an exciting era in Flott’s career.

Boomer: Giants made right choice in passing on Nix as Dart is better​

Boomers says it is clear that Jaxson Dart is ALREADY better than Bo Nix: pic.twitter.com/3cnLFQ7idu

— WFAN Sports Radio (@WFAN660) November 7, 2025

Theo Johnson tells The Post what he’s working on to solidify Jaxson Dart connection | New York Post


Theo Johnson is becoming a touchdown machine, one sometimes in need of a reboot. On one hand, Johnson’s five touchdown catches are tied for the third most among NFL tight ends and are the most by a Giant at the position since Evan Engram in 2017. But he also has 4 drops. Boom or bust.

What to make of his connection with Jaxson Dart? “Our chemistry is going to get to the point of stuff you don’t really coach. The longer we play together and build that, it’s going to be special.”

Waiting game for Ridgewood’s Younghoe Koo to end Sunday with chance to kick for NY Giants | The Record


Younghoe Koo has been waiting six weeks for the opportunity to kick again on game day without the certainty when – or if – one would come.

His wife and 9-month-old son stayed back in Atlanta while Koo came home to North Jersey for a chance with the New York Giants, and he’s spent the last month-plus on the practice squad, away from his family.

Jameis Winston wants to stay, set to be Giants’ backup next season | ESPN.com


Winston after Sunday’s loss to the San Francisco 49ers that he wanted to remain in New York even though he isn’t in line to play any time soon.

“I just want to help this team win,” he said emphatically. “When a team gives me the opportunity and believes in me, they give me a job, I want to play for that team and do my best for that team. I don’t care what the record is, I don’t care what the circumstances, situation or facts is, I always say what I want for myself, I want for everyone. I’m a solutions-oriented guy, so I want to be a part of the solution. I don’t just want to run away when things get bad.”

Biggest Need for Every NFL Team in 2026 Free Agency After 2025 Trade Deadline | Bleacher Report


New York Giants: Offensive Line. Right tackle Jermaine Eluemunor isn’t a bad player, but the rebuilding Giants could find ways to upgrade over the soon-to-be 31-year-old pending free agent. With Evan Neal and Greg Van Roten (35) also in possession of expiring contracts, the Giants will need to address much of the line outside of the left tackle spot.

Daboll responds to a question about his job status​

"Not winning enough games, there's a lot of reports out there."

Brian Daboll was asked about a report that his job was in jeopardy after the Giants' loss to the Broncos: pic.twitter.com/IR54qYN6mY

— Giants Videos (@SNYGiants) November 7, 2025

Giants Mailbag: On the futures of Joe Schoen, Brian Daboll, and Shane Bowen | SNY.tv

The feeling around the league right now is that Daboll won’t survive unless things turn around. Schoen is believed to have more job security, but would John Mara really run it back if this team finishes with three or four wins? That seems unlikely, considering his comments at the end of last season.

The key thing to remember, though, is that it’s early November. The Giants aren’t making a playoff push — no shot. But if they find a way to get to six wins with a rookie quarterback, the outlook on this regime can change. That would show tangible proof Schoen and Daboll are headed in the right direction.

The Biggest Question Facing Each NFL Team in the Second Half of 2025 | Fox Sports

Can Jaxson Dart do enough to save Brian Daboll’s job? There is no doubt that the Giants’ future looks bright. That’s the power of finding your QB of the future. And that could be enough to lift John Mara’s mood enough that he won’t clean house after the season. But how good will Dart have to be to save Daboll, and is that even possible? Maybe they’re delusional, but the feeling in the organization is they have a much better roster than their 2-7 record indicates, and that they’ve blown several winnable games. That’s on the coach. It doesn’t help that they’ve lost two key players — WR Malik Nabers and RB Cam Skattebo — but Dart has still managed to keep the offense going. Daboll deserves some credit for that, but he will probably need to start winning more, too.

Should Giants sign this WR to give Jaxson Dart a massive boost? | NJ.com


If not, might the Giants address receiver before the draft — by spending big on George Pickens in free agency? Pickens — now thriving in Dallas after opening his career with three uneven years in Pittsburgh — will be the big fish in next year’s receiver free agent group. So he will not come cheap.

But as we have mentioned, the Giants can give themselves almost $50 million in total salary cap space by making enough logical cuts to free up $35 million in additional cap room. At the very least, the Giants figure to enter the offseason with just north of $30 million in total cap space, after making no-brainer cuts.

This week’s opponent​

D’Andre Swift listed as questionable for Sunday | Pro Football Talk


Bears running back D’Andre Swift could be back in the lineup against the Giants this weekend. Swift missed Week 9 with a groin injury, but he has been listed as questionable to play on Sunday. Swift was up to full practice participation on Thursday, but missed practice Friday for personal reasons. Kyle Monagai ran 26 times for 176 yards last weekend and head coach Ben Johnson said at his press conference that he plans to ride the hot hand when both backs are available.

Chicago Bears linebacker T.J. Edwards had surgery this week to repair a broken hand, coach Ben Johnson announced Friday. Edwards has been ruled out against the Giants on Sunday after not practicing during the week, but he will ultimately not be placed on injured reserve.

NFL Week 10 picks, predictions, schedule, odds, fantasy tips | ESPN.com


Special teams issues piled up in Week 9: Chicago’s opening kickoff was returned for a touchdown by the Bengals’ Charlie Jones; Cairo Santos missed a field goal and had another blocked; and the execution on a late onside kick allowed the Bengals to score two touchdowns in 49 seconds. Coach Ben Johnson said Chicago’s special teams units were “too passive at times,” while coordinator Richard Hightower vowed to make sure the litany of blunders doesn’t happen again. “We’re going to work night and day to get it all cleaned up,” Hightower said. “I can promise you that I will bust my ass and they will, too, all right, to get it cleaned up.”

Rome Odunze not fretting over dad’s shots at Bears following WR’s catchless game vs. Bengals | NFL.com

After the contest, Odunze’s father, James, took to social media to suggest the Bears should trade his son to a team that would “actually throw to him” and noted that Rome, in his opinion, should be seeing “at least 10 targets per game.”

Rome Odunze brushed aside his father’s comments, noting that he’s comfortable with his role, even if he doesn’t always put up big numbers every week. “I don’t make a big deal out of it,” the 23-year-old said. “Obviously, he has his opinions, and I have mine. And he feels like he needs to voice those things on social media. That’s his prerogative. But he speaks for himself. I speak for myself.”

Around the league​


Washington Commanders Injury Update: Jayden Daniels won’t need surgery or go to IR | Hogs Haven

Jaelan Phillips on Eagles trade: “Literally the greatest thing that’s happened in my whole life” | Bleeding Green Nation

Why Colts’ trade for Sauce Gardner locks in Daniel Jones as Indy’s franchise QB | The Athletic

Sauce Gardner, Michael Pittman set to play Colts-Falcons on Sunday | Pro Football Talk

Jets WR Garrett Wilson ‘shocked’ by trades but trusting front office: ‘I don’t get paid to have a vision’ | NFL.com

Browns WR Cedric Tillman to play; Shedeur Sanders back as QB2 | ESPN.com

Jaguars reportedly planning to play 2027 home games in Orlando, pending NFL owners approval | CBSSports.com

BBV mailbag​


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Source: https://www.bigblueview.com/new-yor...koo-graham-gano-nfl-week-10-headlines-updates
 
6 roster moves for New York Giants before Week 10 game vs. Chicago Bears

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Darius Muasau

With injuries necessitating juggling the roster before Sunday’s game against the Chicago Bears, the New York Giants on Saturday made a series of roster moves.

Placed on Injured Reserve:

WR Beaux Collins | Neck
LB Darius Muasau |Ankle

Free-agent signings from practice squad:

LB Zaire Barnes
OLB Tomon Fox

Standard elevations from practice squad:

PK Younghoe Koo
WR Ray-Ray McCloud III

Koo, in his eighth NFL season, will be making his Giants debut. He has been on the practice squad for the last six games. He will replace Graham Gano, out with a herniated disc in his neck. Earlier this season, the Giants chose to bring Jude McAtamney off the practice squad when Gano missed four games with a groin injury.

Collins, an undrafted free agent rookie, has mostly played on special teams. He has two receptions for 25 yards.

Muasua, a 2024 sixth-round pick, has started at inside linebacker since Micah McFadden went on injured reserve. He has 32 tackles this season, two for loss.

McCloud was elevated from the practice squad for the first time last week against the San Francisco 49ers. He had a single catch for 5 yards. Perhaps his role in the offense will increase as he gains comfort with quarterback Jaxson Dart.

Barnes, a 2023 sixth-round pick by the New York Jets, has played exclusively on special teams in three appearances. Fox, a Giant since 2022, has played in two games this season.

Source: https://www.bigblueview.com/new-yor...er-moves-before-week-10-game-vs-chicago-bears
 
Giants at Bears, NFL Week 10: Game time, TV channel, streaming, odds

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The New York Giants (2–7) travel to Soldier Field this Sunday to take on the Chicago Bears (5–3).

Kickoff is set for 1 p.m. ET on FOX, as quarterback Jaxson Dart and the Giants look to turn things around in the second half of the season.

The Giants have lost three straight games, while the Bears have won five of six.

This marks the 56th regular season meeting between the two franchises, with the Giants trailing the all-time series, 22–31–2. The last matchup came in Week 4 of the 2022 season, when the Giants topped Chicago, 20–12, at MetLife Stadium.

TV channel, streaming, odds​

  • Channel: FOX
  • Announcers: Joe Davis (Play-by-Play), Greg Olsen (Analyst), Pam Oliver (Sideline)
  • Postgame: Giants Postgame Live presented by Hackensack Meridian Health
  • MSG Networks, The Gotham Sports App, YouTube, Giants.com, Giants App, Giants TV
  • Odds: Bears -4.5
  • Radio: Giants Radio Network — WFAN 101.9 FM, 660-AM and affiliated local stations (Play-by-Play: Bob Papa | Analyst: Carl Banks | Sideline: Howard Cross; SiriusXM Los Angeles | New York | National Radio (Sports USA) — Play-by-play: Larry Kahn | Analyst: Marvin Lewis
  • Pre- and Post-game: John Schmeelk, Tiki Barber
  • Pre-game: Giants Gameday begins at 11 a.m. ET, presented by Hackensack Meridian Health
  • Post-game: Giants Extra Point
  • Referee: Shawn Hochuli
  • Weather: 45 degrees, rain, winds 12 MPH

Source: https://www.bigblueview.com/new-yor...l-week-10-game-time-tv-channel-streaming-odds
 
Giants-Bears winners and losers: New York turns victory into defeat

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The New York Giants did what they do on Sunday, turning a game they should have won into a 24-20 loss to the Chicago Bears. The Giants are now a miserable, inexcusable 2-8, have lost four straight games, have lost four road games this season they led by at least 10 points, and have now lost 11 consecutive road games.

Let’s get to the ‘Kudos & Wet Willies’.

Kudos to …​


Jaxson Dart — Until he was forced to leave the game, Dart was outstanding. He did have a game-changing fumble when the Giants were on the verge of potentially taking a three-score lead in the third quarter, but otherwise the outstanding rookie quarterback did little wrong.

He completed 19 of 29 passes for 242 yards in wet, cold conditions. He ran six times for 66 yards and two scores, one of those a 24-yard scamper where he expertly maneuvered around a Wan’Dale Robinson block.

Do the Giants win the game if Dart doesn’t suffer a concussion? I don’t know. I do know the young man wasn’t going to escape without suffering one of those eventually.

Theo Johnson — The second-year tight end had a dominant first half with six receptions for 71 yards, many of them difficult catches. He finished with seven receptions for 75 yards. That was the kind of play the Giants need from him.

Darius Slayton — I have given Slayton a hard time for not making difficult plays and for dropping some easy plays this season. The spinning, left-handed catch he made in the first half to set up a Giants’ scoring drive was as difficult a catch as I can ever recall Slayton making. He finished with four catches for 89 yards, though he had only one catch for 4 yards while playing through a hamstring issue in the second half.

Brian Burns — As usual, Burns was the Giants’ best defensive player. He had five tackles, one for loss, two quarterback hits and a pass defensed. Like the rest of the Giants’ defenders, though, Burns couldn’t get Caleb Williams on the ground.

Gunner Olszewski — Forced into action at wide receiver when Slayton went out in the first half, Olszewski saved Dart a turnover and saved the Giants three points by turning into a defensive back — which he was in college — and knocking a terrible Dart pass into the end zone out of the hands of Chicago’s Nayshon Wright.

The white throwback uniforms — I love them. They are the best uniforms the Giants have. I am a big fan of ‘GIANTS’ on the helmets.

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Demetrius Flannigan-Fowles — The veteran inside linebacker played well with seven tackles, one for loss, and a quarterback hit. He nearly had a fourth-and-2 stop in the second quarter but DeAndre Swift bounced off of him for a 9-yard gain. The fact that Cor’Dale Flott missed Swift and slammed into Flannigan-Fowles didn’t help.



Wet Willies to …​


Brian Daboll — This is four times the Giants have led games on the road by 10 or more points. This time, Daboll will be heavily criticized for not accepting a fourth-and-goal penalty with 10:9 to play that would have given the Giants a chance to go for a touchdown and a two-touchdown lead from inside the 1-yard line. Instead, he accepted a 19-yard Younghoe Koo field goal that made the score 24-10.

The Giants, without Jaxson Dart, never scored again as the Bears rallied for an improbably victory.

Here is Daboll explaining taking the three points there:

Brian Daboll was asked about kicking a field goal from the one-yard line with the Giants up seven points in the fourth quarter:

"I thought about it. I thought take the points, get a 10-point lead in the fourth. I thought our defense was playing good." pic.twitter.com/1r0Bny2n5C

— Giants Videos (@SNYGiants) November 9, 2025

Whether you think the decision was right or not, again and again we find questionable game management at the heart of losses for the Giants that should have been victories. I understood the decision. The field goal made it a two-score game, and you should be able to win at that point. I also understand the ‘go for the touchdown’ argument. It forces the opponent to get two touchdowns.

The game shifted after that. There is no argument there. Was it the fourth-down decision? The absence of Dart? Just the fact that these are the 2025 Giants, and a meltdown was inevitable?

Fourth-quarter defense — Whatever you want to say about the absence of Dart in the final quarter, the decision-making by Daboll, or even the late-game play of Chicago quarterback Caleb Williams, the Koo field goal gave the Giants a two-score lead with 10 minutes to play.

The defense should have been able to close the game out. It was not. Even with a win probability of 95% with as little as 8:41 to play.

The Giants still had that 10-point lead when Chicago got the ball at its own 9-yard line with 6:13 to play. They still had a 94% win probability with the Bears facing second-and-10 at their own 26-yard line and 5:35 to play.

Then, the defense fell apart. Williams consistently eluded pass rushers and made plays. The Giants pressured Williams 15 times throughout the game, but let him slip out of their grasp on a number of occasions. That happened several times in the closing minutes.

The Bears went 91 yards in nine plays for one score, then 53 yards in four plays for the game-winning score. The defense that was supposed to be the backbone of the 2025 Giants, again melted when it mattered.

Cor’Dale Flott — Not a great game for Flott in his return from a concussion. He had a third-and-9 holding penalty that negated a Dexter Lawrence sack and led to Chicago’s first touchdown. He also slammed into Flannigan-Fowles, missing Swift completely on a fourth-and-2 he probably should have stopped

Jamie Gillan — The punter took over kickoff duties a few weeks ago and had, until Sunday, done a nice job. Against the Bears, though, his kickoffs were penalized twice. One went out of bounds. One missed the landing zone. He was replaced on kickoffs by Koo. Gillan also shanked a 26-yard punt that helped set up Chicago’s game-winning touchdown.

Isn’t there always a shanked punt that contributes to a late comeback.

Kwillies to …​


Kayvon Thibodeaux — In its early, unofficial grading, Pro Football Focus credited Thibodeaux with six pressures. Unfortunately, none of those turned into sacks. That is because Thibodeaux missed four tackles, most of those on Williams.

Deonte Banks — Banks had a terrific 39-yard kickoff return to set up a Giants’ scoring draft. He also gave up three receptions in four targets and committed a pair of penalties. One of those penalties negated an Abdul Carter sack. The other went for 19 yards and set up a Bears’ first-and-goal they turned into three points in the third quarter.

Source: https://www.bigblueview.com/new-yor...ers-top-performers-statistics-matchup-results
 
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