Saturday 28 December 2013

Fixing The New York Giants



The New York Giants' season is officially over. Their lifeless, "pathetic", 23-0 shutout at the hands of the Seattle Seahawks last weekend put the final nail in the coffin and had Giants fans turning their gaze towards next season.

Ask a fan what he or she thinks the Giants can do to turn things around next season and there's a very good chance that the first thing they'll say is 'fire Kevin Gilbride'. It might not be as simplistic as that, but 'fixing' the Giants starts with the coaching staff - and they should clear house.

Tom Coughlin's past achievements speak for themselves and he has done a great job of keeping the Giants competitive in spite of their many flaws, but I think Hall of Famer Lawrence Taylor has a point when he says that Coughlin has done everything he can for the organisation. Firing him isn't an option - he has earned the right to call time on his career whenever he wants - but this season might be the one to retire after. Conversely if the Giants are going to rebuild, having Coughlin steer the ship wouldn't be a bad idea.


Regardless, the majority of the coaches beneath him need to go; his coordinators - Kevin Gilbride, Perry Fewell and Tom Quinn - have been repeatedly out-coached this season and the Giants will not be contenders if they retain them. Gilbride has enjoyed consistent success in New York, but the Giants' offensive production has regressed in recent years with a difficult-to-execute but easily-defended scheme.

Even so, there is only so much a coach can do - and much of the Giants' struggles this year have been down to the personnel on the field. Many are - through no fault of their own - just not good enough, and some (Hakeem Nicks) have all the talent in the world but aren't playing at a level expected of them.

The good news is that there are a number of young players - including Jason Pierre Paul, Victor Cruz, Prince Amukamara, Linval Joseph, John Conner, Justin Pugh, Rueben Randle, Damontre Moore, Will Hill and Jacquian Williams - around whom Jerry Reese can build a contender.


Much of the Giants' struggles have come from a sizeable number of ineffective veteran starters. If we're 'fixing' the team, guys like Chris Snee, David Diehl, David Baas, Mathias Kiwanuka, Brandon Jacobs and Corey Webster will be finished in New York and others - like Justin Tuck, Kevin Boothe, Mike Patterson and Trumaine McBride - have some value (somewhere close to veteran's minimum) but their days are numbered. Short-term contracts will see important locker room leaders like Tuck help ease the transition, but salary cap restrictions mean that Antrel Rolle would, despite his superlative play this season, be leaving the team.



Without Rolle, and with an offensive line in desperate need of repair, it is vitally important the Giants spend the money they do have (expected to be somewhere around $28 million) wisely in free agency. So who do they go after? The interior offensive line has been a liability all season, and I think Jerry Reese needs to make a move for some underrated talents to fix it - Brian De La Puente (centre, New Orleans Saints) and Jon Asamoah (guard, Kansas City Chiefs) are the stand-out linemen on offer. Prince Amukamara is developing into the player the Giants hoped he would be, but the Giants should turn to the 49ers' underrated cornerback Tarell Brown to help him out.

A lot of fans and pundits are making the point that the past achievements of many Giants players and coaches means that the organisation should resist change in the hope that they once again deliver a championship. This school of thought overlooks the fact that what once worked for the Giants no longer does. The Colts, after a radical overhaul following their disastrous 2011 campaign, made the playoffs in 2012 and 2013. The Chiefs, after posting a 2-14 record in 2012, are 11-4 in 2013. These teams, along with other contenders such as the Seahawks, 49ers, Eagles and Dolphins, experienced major personnel overhauls within the last three years and prove that - in today's NFL - you have to adapt or die.

Tuesday 3 December 2013

Moving The Chains: A Weekly Review Of The NFL - 1/12/2013

Hero of the week:
Russell Wilson



Meet Russell Wilson: MVP Candidate. After a very good first season in the NFL, Wilson has emerged as the true king of the 2012 quarterback draft class. He has outperformed all of his contemporaries - Andrew Luck, Robert Griffin III, Ryan Tannehill, Brandon Weeden and Brock Osweiler, and now shares the company of Brady, Manning and Brees as league MVP contenders. He has undoubtedly benefited from the Seahawks phenomenal defence, but the talents of Richard Sherman and Earl Thomas have little to do with Wilson's passer rating over the last two seasons (third, behind Manning and Rodgers). This season he has thrown 22 touchdowns to 6 interceptions, has posted a passer rating over 100 eight times and - most recently - demolished the New Orleans Saints with a clinical 310 yard, three touchdown performance.

Villain of the week:
Giants @ Redskins officials



One of the most blatantly poor officiating mistakes in recent memory, Jeff Triplette and co. mistakenly announced that the Redskins had converted on second down, when they were - in fact - still on third down. The Redskins, unsure of the down, nonetheless attempted a deep pass which was dropped by Fred Davis. With 1.31 on the clock, the referees announced that the Redskins were on 4th-and-short and the Giants won the game following Will Hill's strip of Pierre Garcon.

Fail of the week:
Mike Tomlin



I firmly believe that Tomlin did not mean to do this but, given the issues this season with players and coaches wandering into the sideline perimeter - a response to the Jets' coach tripping a Dolphins player a few years ago - why put yourself in this position?

My team:



The most impressive win of the season thus far.

I still firmly believe that the Giants - and Giants fans - shouldn't think about playoffs, but it's hard to feel bad about knocking the Redskins out of playoff contention. On Sunday, the Giants put together an ugly-but-tough performance underscored by the 'never say die' spirit of the 2007 and 2011 Super Bowl-winning teams. The Redskins raced to an early 14-0 lead, but the Giants clawed their way back into it with touchdowns from Andre Brown (his first of two) and Brandon Myers. Eli Manning played some of his best football this season (22-of-28 for 235 yards, 1 touchdown and 1 interception), Jon Beason was solid in both pass and run defense - notching 17 tackles, and Justin Tuck recorded 4 sacks.

The win sees the Giants improve to 5-7 and keeps their slim playoff hopes alive - but the Giants' quest to win out the rest of their schedule gets considerably tougher with trips to San Diego and Detroit, and a visit by Seattle.