Giants WR Darius Slayton Honored by NFLPA | News Briefs
DEC. 20. GIANTS WR DARIUS SLAYTON HONORED BY NFLPA FOR COMMUNITY WORK. New York Giants receiver Darius Slayton has been named the Week 16 NFLPA Community MVP.
Slayton’s honor comes in part from his contribution of $50,000 to provide gifts and household needs to 24 New York families through charitable events hosted by his Left-Hand Right-Hand (LHRH) Foundation.
“It is a big honor to be named the Week 16 NFLPA Community MVP,” Slayton said in a statement released by the NFLPA. “This means a lot to me because I try to help out any way, shape, or form that I can.”
Slayton and the LHRH Foundation recently hosted its third annual holiday gift giveaway for families from the NYPD-led Far Rockaway, Harlem and Bronx Giants football programs. They bestowed gifts and food to eight underprivileged families in each of the three boroughs.
This is just the latest recognition Slayton, a six-year NFL veteran, has received for his off-field work. He was named the United Way of New York City's "Hometown Hero" Award winner earlier this spring at the organization’s 2024 Gridiron Gala for helping raise more than $2.3 million for children and families in New York City.
He was also recently named the Giants 2024 “Walter Payton Man of the Year Award” nominee.
As a WPMOTY nominee, Slayton will be among those recognized for his achievements during the week leading up to Super Bowl LIX in New Orleans.
He also receives up to $55,000 good for the charity of his choosing for having been nominated and will up to $265,000 for the charity of his choosing if he’s selected as the WPMOTY award winner.
DEC. 17. GIANTS-COLTS GAME TO BE PLAYED ON SUNDAY, DEC. 29. The NFL announced that the New York Giants’ regular-season home finale against the Indianapolis Colts will be played on December 29 at 1:00 p.m.
There had been some consideration of having the game played on Saturday, December 28, which would have been the anniversary of the 1958 NFL Championship game between the Baltimore Colts and Giants, more commonly known as “The Greatest Game Ever Played,” which was played on December 28, 1958, at Yankee Stadium and won by the Colts 23-17 in sudden death overtime, the first such game to be decided int hat fashion.
However, with both the Giants (2-12) and Colts (6-8) each having poor seasons and other more meaningful games with playoff implications of interest, the network decided to take a different approach.
Week 17 will feature two games on Christmas Day: the Chiefs at the Steelers and the Ravens at the Texans. Then, on the day after Christmas, the Seahawks will visit the Bears.
The Saturday games, while not officially announced by the league, though by process of elimination, appear to be the Chargers at Patriots, the Broncos at the Bengals, and the Cardinals at the Rams.
The Monday night game will see the Lions at the 49ers. The rest of the scheduled games will be played on Sunday.
DEC. 11. GIANTS PLACE ROOKIE SAFETY TYLER NUBIN ON IR. New York Giants rookie safety Tyler Nubin, the promising second-round draft pick this year, has been placed on season-ending IR with an ankle issue that popped up last week.
Nubin came to the Giants from the University of Minnesota and appeared in 13 games with 13 starts.
He finishes his first NFL season with a team-leading 97 tackles (57 solos), four tackles for loss, one pass breakup, and one fumble recovery.
Dane Belton will presumably take Nubin’s place in the starting lineup for the rest of the season.
Nubin’s move to IR opens a roster spot for cornerback Divaad Wilson, whom the Giants signed off the Cardinals practice squad.
The Giants signed tackle Jalen McKenzie, 6-foot-5 and 320 pounds, to their practice squad. McKenzie played his college ball at USC and has been on the Seahawks, Raiders, and Patriots practice squads.
The Giants also announced they opened the 21-day window for interior offensive lineman Austin Schlottman, who was placed on IR just before the start of the season with a broken fibula.
Given the injuries on the offensive line–center John Michael Schmitz and guard Jon Runyan, Jr. are new additions to this week’s injury report–Schlottman if activated, can provide depth at both guard and center.
DEC. 11. GIANTS ADD CORNERBACK DIVAAD WILSON FROM CARDINALS PRACTICE SQUAD. The hits keep coming for the New York Giants–and not in a good way.
According to NFL insider Jordan Schultz, the Giants have signed cornerback Divaad Wilson off the Arizona Cardinals practice squad.
Wilson, nicknamed “Newt,” played college ball in Georgia from 2018 to 2019 before finishing up his career at UCF, where he played from 2020 to 2022 and earned second-team All-ACC honors.
Wilson, 6 feet and 195 pounds, was initially signed as an undrafted free agent by the Jaguars. However, after spending all of the summer of 2023 with them, he did not make their roster and was signed by the Arizona Cardinals, where he remained until the Giants signed him.
Wilson has appeared in four games for the Cardinals, with two starts. His most recent appearances, both on special teams, came in Week 8 against Miami and Week 10 against the Jets.
The year prior, he appeared in two games, Weeks 12 against the Rams and 13 against the Steelers, both of which were on defense. His appearance against the Steelers was his first career start.
On Tuesday, the Giants placed cornerback Tre Hawkins III on IR and filled his roster spot with Greg Stroman, whom they signed off their practice squad.
While no corresponding move has been mentioned as of yet regarding how the Giants cleared a space for Wilson, rookie cornerback Dru Phillips, who, according to The Athletic, has a partially torn rotator cuff in his shoulder, and cornerback Deonte Banks, who is dealing with a rib injury that has sidelined him for two games so far, could potential candidates for IR, as could offensive lineman Jon Runyan, Jr. (ankle).
DEC. 9. CB TRE HAWKINS III SUFFERS SPINAL INJURY. New York Giants second-year cornerback Tre Hawkins III, who made his fourth career start and first of the 2024 season in Sunday’s 14-11 loss to the New Orleans Saints, suffered a fractured lumbar spine injury in the loss, according to a report by The Athletic.
Hawkins’ injury was not mentioned by Giants head coach Brian Daboll when he spoke to the media on Monday afternoon, but it looks like the young cornerback, who finished with six tackles (third on the team) and who recorded the defense's first interception since Week 1 (and first by a defensive back) is done for the season.
Hawkins, who spoke to the media in the postgame locker room, seemed to struggle bending to tie his shoes, but it was thought that he was simply sore from his first extensive game action since Week 7 when he played 23 snaps on defense.
The Giants’ sixth-round draft pick in 2023 (No. 211 overall) out of Old Dominion finished as the second-highest graded Giants defender in the loss, behind outside linebacker Kayvon Thibodeaux, and the highest-graded Giant in coverage.
The Giants have been hit hard this season by injuries, and cornerback, a position that was already thin to begin with, has especially been hit hard. Starters Deonte Banks (rib) and Cor’Dale Flott (knee) did not participate in the Giants loss to the Saints, Banks inactive and Flott active but held out of action.
The team also had slot cornerback Dru Phillips (shoulder) inactive against the Saints after he popped up on the team’s injury report late last week.
DEC. 8. WR MALIK NABERS WILL "TRY TO PLAY" DESPITE GROIN, HIP INJURIES. New York Giants wide receiver Malik Nabers, who is dealing with groin and a hip flexor injuries, will be a game-time decision.
ESPN’s Adam Schefter reported that Nabers “will try to play” in the team’s Week 14 game against the New Orleans Saints, but that before any decision is made, NAbers will go through a pregame warmup to see how he feels.
If he does play, Nabers is expected to have a limited role on offense so as not to exacerbate what he is already dealing with.
The Giants didn’t add any receivers from their practice squad on Saturday, but their decision seems to have been based on prioritizing where the team needed the most help to get through Sunday’s game.
The top priority was the defensive line. The Giants added two defensive linemen (Casey Rodgers and Elijah Garcia) to the 53-man roster after losing Dexter Lawrence and D.J. Davidson to IR and not having Rakeem Nunez-Roches (burner) for this week’s game.
Offensive tackle is another priority, as Jermaine Eluemunor (quad) has been declared out, and Evan Neal (hip) and Christopher Hubbard (knee) are both questionable for the game.
The third priority is cornerback. Deonte Banks (rib) has already been declared out. Cor’Dale Flott (knee/quad) and Dru Phillips (shoulder) were late additions to the injury report, and both are listed as questionable. Thus, the team elevated Greg Stroman from the practice squad and added Dee Williams off waivers from Seattle.
The Giants and Saints kick off at MetLife Stadium on Sunday at 1 p.m..
DEC. 6. GIANTS CLAIM CB/KOR/PR DEE WILLIAMS OFF WAIVERS. The New York Giants have claimed cornerback/kick returner Dee Williams off waivers from the Seattle Seahawks.
Williams, 5-11 and 194 pounds, originally entered the NFL as an undrafted rookie out of Tennessee following the 2024 draft. He’s appeared in 12 games for the Seahawks this season and has returned 15 punts for 111 yards (7.4-yard average). He also has returned nine kickoffs for 254 yards (28.2 yards per return).
Defensively, Williams has only played four snaps for Seattle, all four of those coming in run defense. His three tackles have all come on special teams this season.
The Giants had an opening on their 53-man roster after placing defensive lineman Dexter Lawrence II and tight end Theo Johnson on injured reserve this week.
The Giants are ailing at cornerback, with Deonte Banks having declared out of Sunday’s game with a rib injury. While it’s unclear if Williams will be active for the game, if he is, it will probably be on special teams.
DEC. 5. DARIUS SLAYTON NOMINATED FOR PRESTIGIOUS AWARD. New York Giants receiver Darius Slayton has been named the team’s 2024 Walter Payton Man of The Year award nominee.
Slayton, who is in his sixth season with the team, learned of his nomination during a team meeting earlier this week. The announcement surprised the former Auburn star.
"I was thinking Dabs (coach Brian Daboll) was about to show an inspirational video,” Slayton told Giants.com,
"I expected it to be a team highlight. Then he put on the video, and it was a couple of highlights of me. I was like, 'Oh wait, this is just me.' I didn't know what it was. Then I started to see the different things in the community (Slayton is involved in). I thought, 'I'm getting something.'"
Slayton, who received a trophy to mark the honor, is one of 32 nominees for the annual award, which honors athletes for their impact in the community. Nominees receive a $55,000 donation in their name to a charity of their choice. The winner, announced during the annual NFL Honors program in February, will receive an additional $265,000 donation in their name.
Slayton has helped raise over $2 million for families in the New York metro area and was the Giants’ United Way of New York City "Hometown Hero" award winner, presented at the organization’s annual Gridiron Gala.
Eli Manning is the only member of the Giants to win the Walter Payton Man of the Year award, splitting the honor with receiver Larry Fitzgerald of the Arizona Cardinals in 2016.
Former Giants running back Saquon Barkley was the Giants’ nominee the previous two seasons.
The Walter Payton MOTY Award, presented by Nationwide, honors a player for his excellence on and off the field. Established in 1970, the award was renamed in 1999 after Hall of Fame running back Walter Payton of the Chicago Bears, who passed away that year after battling an illness.
Nominees will get to wear a special WPMOY trophy silhouette helmet decal for the rest of the season. Winners of the award get to wear a special patch on the game day uniforms.
DEC. 4. GIANTS’ WEEK 15 OPPONENT MAKES BOLD DECISION AHEAD OF THE GAME. The New York Giants aren’t slated to host the Baltimore Ravens until Week 15, but already the Ravens have made a bold decision regarding one of their offensive weapons.
The Ravens announced that they have suspended wide receiver Diontae Johnson for one game on Wednesday for conduct detrimental to the team resulting from the receiver’s refusal to enter the Raven’s game against the Philadelphia Eagles.
The Ravens released a statement from general manager Eric DeCosta on Wednesday stating, "We have made the difficult decision to suspend Diontae Johnson for our upcoming game against the New York Giants for conduct detrimental to the team. We will have no further comments on this matter going forward."
Per FOX Sports insider Jordan Schultz, Johnson is reportedly frustrated by his lack of deployment since being traded to the Ravens by the Panthers, which likely led to his insubordination.
DEC. 3. TOM COUGHLIN’S HOF JOURNEY ENDS FOR THIS COMING YEAR. Retired New York Giants head coach Tom Coughlin, who has been in consideration for the Pro Football Hall of Fame, has seen his chance to be included in the Class of 2025 come to an end.
Coughlin, the Giants head coach from 2004 to 2015 and also an assistant coach on Bill Parcells’s Giants staff from 1988-1990, won three Super Bowl championships during his time with the Giants, two as a head coach.
Prior to being named the Giants head coach in 2004, Coughlin was the first-ever head coach of the expansion Jacksonville Jaguars, from 1995 to 2002. He was named the NFL Coach of the Year in 1996, and guided the Jaguars to two AFC Central championships (1998 and 1999).
Coughlin missed out on being named a finalist to Mike Holmgren, who served as the head coach of the Green Bay Packers and the Seattle Seahawks, and who was also the quarterbacks coach and offensive coordinator of the San Francisco 49ers during his years of activity.
Holmgren, who was named a Hall of Fame finalist for the first time since he became eligible for inclusion, has been to five Super Bowls as either a head coach or assistant coach/coordinator throughout his career. With the Packers, he went to two Super Bowls, winning one.
He also won two Super Bowls with the 49ers as their quarterbacks coach and offensive coordinator. And in five playoff appearances with Seattle, Holmgren took the franchise to Super Bowl XL, which they lost to the Pittsburgh Steelers.
Besides Holmgren, who falls into the coach category, the rest of the finalists include Ralph Hay (Contributor), and Maxie Baughan, Sterling Sharpe and Jim Tyrer (Seniors).
The remaining five candidates require approval from at least 80% of the members of the full Selection Committee, who will vote on the Class of 2025 at Super Bowl LIX media week in New Orleans.
Meanwhile, retired Giants quarterback Eli Manning remains in consideration for the Hall’s Class of 2025, as he is one of 25 semi finalists awaiting word on whether he makes the cut down to 15 finalists which will be announced on Dec. 28.
DEC. 2: NO DECISION YET ON STARTING QUARTERBACK FOR WEEK 14. New York Giants head coach Brian Daboll has either not decided which of Drew Lock or Tommy DeVito will start as quarterback for the team on Sunday when they host the New Orleans Saints, or he is keeping his decision under wraps for now.
According to wide receiver Darius Slayton, the team had both quarterbacks participating in a walkthrough practice on Monday. Still, they have not yet been told which quarterback will be the one they’ll be catching passes from on Sunday.
“Yeah, they haven't decided that yet, but we'll find out on Wednesday or some point,” Slayton told reporters during a video call.
Slayton confirmed that both quarterbacks took part in the practice on Monday. "Yeah, they both threw today," he said. "We did some drills and ran some routes, but both of them threw passes today. So, we'll see, I guess later in the week, whatever decision they make."
Daboll is believed to be considering several factors, including DeVito’s recovery from a forearm injury that kept him out of last week’s game against Dallas on Thanksgiving.
But even if DeVito is healthy–and again, it's not known how much he did during the walkthrough on Monday–that doesn’t necessarily mean that he will get the start ahead of Lock, who, other than for two turnovers against the Cowboys, had a respectable 21-of-32 for 178 yards showing and who also finished as the team’s rushing yardage leader with 57 yards on four carries, including a touchdown.
Daboll was not available to speak to the media on Monday, so it’s unclear if he has made a decision or if he has and is just keeping it under wraps for as long as possible to not give the Saints a head start on game planning.
DEC. 1. GIANTS SLIP IN 2025 NFL DRAFT ORDER. Even when the New York Giants aren’t playing, they still seem to lose, at least regarding placement in the 2025 NFL Draft order.
Following their 27-20 loss to the Dallas Cowboys on Thanksgiving, the Giants moved to the top of the 2025 draft order and fell to the third spot at the conclusion of Sunday’s games, thanks to losses by the Jaguars and Raiders.
All three teams are tied with 2-10 records, but thanks to the strength of schedule (SOS) tiebreaker, the Giants, who have the “toughest” SOS at .541, are behind the Jaguars, who lost 23-20 to the Texans, and the Raiders, who lost 19-17 to the Chiefs on Friday.
The good news is that if the Jaguars finish first, chances are they won’t be looking for a quarterback. However, there is always the possibility of them trading down in the order with a team that does need a quarterback, such as the Jets, who currently sit sixth in the order, or the Saints, who are ninth. But if the Jaguars sit tight, that would leave the Raiders, a team that desperately needs a quarterback, ahead of the Giants, barring anything changing over these last few weeks.
The Raiders have the league’s longest losing streak (eight games), followed by the Giants (seven games). The Jaguars have lost five straight, but the Bears are on a six-game losing streak.
The Giants’ remaining games include the Saints, Ravens, Falcons, Colts, and Eagles. Giants head coach Brian Daboll has not announced which of Drew Lock or Tommy DeVito will start when the team hosts the Saints next weekend.
NOV. 30. GIANTS-COWBOYS THANKSGIVING GAME DRAWS SURPRISING NUMBERS. Despite their respective disappointing seasons, the Thanksgiving Day game between the Dallas Cowboys and New York Giants still drew one of the highest ratings for any NFL Thanksgiving contest ever.
FOX Sports, the network that broadcast the Cowboys’ 27-20 win over the Giants during the 4:30 p.m. time slot, reported that the program drew 38.5 million viewers. The peak period came between 6-6:15 p.m., at which time there were 41.283 million viewers.
Those numbers project that Giants-Cowboys game as the most-watched broadcast of the 2024 NFL season and one that generated the fourth-highest ratings for a Thanksgiving Day NFL broadcast.
The number also projects the game as the most-watched telecast on any single network since Super Bowl LVIII. It represents a 14% increase from FOX’s 2023 Thanksgiving broadcast between the Detroit Lions and Green Bay Packers, which aired during the 12:30 p.m. window and drew 33.7 million viewers.
The Cowboys have played in a Thanksgiving game every year since 1966, with two exceptions in 1975 and 1977. Regardless of their record, they still draw well on the national stage, as do the Giants, who reside in the nation’s largest media market.
The Giants, who last won a Thanksgiving Day game in 1982 when they faced the Detroit Lions, the other annual host of the holiday’s triple header, are now 7-7-3 in games played on the holiday, with all of their Thanksgiving Day games played on the road.
The Giants are also now 16-17-3 on games played on a Thursday.
NOV. 27. GIANTS ROSTER MOVES. The New York Giants have signed outside linebacker Tomon Fox to their 53-man roster from their practice squad and have placed defensive lineman Armon Watts on injured reserve.
Fox will give the Giants depth at outside linebacker after the team placed Azeez Ojulari on IR this week with a toe injury.
The Giants have used up their three allotted practice squad elevations for Fox, which is why he’s being signed instead of being elevated. Fox has appeared in five games this season and has recorded seven tackles and one sack.
Watts suffered a shoulder injury in last week’s game against the Bucs. He had been playing well in a reserve role after being promoted from the practice squad to the 53-man roster.
His promotion meant reduced snaps for Jordon Riley, who has been a healthy scratch in three games so far this season and limited snap count wise in the others.
The Giants have also elevated tackle Joshua Miles and cornerback Greg Stroman from their practice squad for this week’s game. Miles will serve as depth due to Jermaine Eluemuor having been declared out.
And Stroman will also serve as depth in the event Deonte Banks, listed as questionable on the team’s injury report, is unable to play.
NOV. 26: GIANTS AWARDED TE GREG DULCICH VIA WAIVERS; AZEEZ OJULARI TO IR. The New York Giants have been awarded the contract for tight end Greg Dulcich off waivers via the Broncos.
Dulcich was drafted out of UCLA in the third round of the 2022 NFL draft, the third tight end chosen that year. But his rookie campaign got off on the wrong foot when he landed on injured reserve with a hamstring ailment that he dealt with for most of training camp.
The following year, Ducich was back on injured reserve, again with a hamstring injury that he suffered in Week 1 of the regular season. He was activated in October but re-injured his hamstring and was back on IR.
This year, the 6-4, 245-pound Dulcich was a healthy scratch in eight of the Broncos games. He was waived on Monday after having appeared in 16 games with ten starts for the Broncos, in which he had 41 receptions for 464 yards and two touchdowns.
Because the Giants are inheriting Dulcich’s contract, he will cost them just $417,566 this year and $1.183 million next year if he’s on the roster.
To make room for Dulich, the Giants placed outside linebacker Azeez Ojulari on injured reserve with a toe injury he suffered in Sunday’s 30-7 loss to the Bucs. Ojulari’s injury is not believed to be serious enough to warrant surgery, but he is in a walking boot as a precaution.
This is the third year in a row that Ojulari, the Giants’ second-round pick in 2021, is spending part of a season on injured reserve. He has appeared in 11 games this season with five starts and six sacks.
NOV. 25: EX-GIANTS QB DANIEL JONES IS A FREE AGENT. Former New York Giants quarterback Daniel Jones cleared waivers on Monday afternoon, and is now free to sign with any NFL team that makes him an offer he can’t refuse.
The significance of Jones clearing waivers is noteworthy for the Giants, as had some team claimed his contract during the waiver period, the Giants would have been off the hook as far as the remaining $11 million in salary they owe him for this season.
Because he cleared waivers, Jones’s previous four-year, $160 million contract with the Giants now goes away.
The Giants can potentially still benefit cap-wise though if Jones signs with another team this season because he reportedly has off-set language in his contract.
Simply put, his new salary will be deducted from what the Giants still owe him for this year, his 2024 base salary fully guaranteed regardless of whether he was on the roster or not. Such a move would represent a low savings but it would no doubt be welcomed by a Giants team that, per Over the Cap, has $3.646 million in cap space left this year.
Jones, per multiple reports, is believed to be planning to sign with a new team this year after weighing his options.
He will most likely sign to a practice squad to start before being elevated to a roster. Among the teams that are thought to be a fit for him include the 49ers, Ravens, Lions, and Vikings.
NFL insider Jordan Schultz of FOX Sports reported that Jones has elimianted the Raiders, who are in dire need of a quarterback, from consideration.
NOV. 23: DREW LOCK HAD THIS FINAL REQUEST OF DANIEL JONES. New York Giants backup quarterback Drew Lock, saddened by the pending departure of one-time starter Daniel Jones, spoke very openly and appreciatively of all the help Jones offered him when he signed with the Giants as a free agent.
But Lock told reporters there was one last thing he was hoping Jones would do for him before he packed up and left the team’s East Rutherford, New Jersey facility for good.
"If he leaves here without doing a jersey swap, we're going to have a problem, because I really want a Daniel Jones jersey,” Lock told reporters on Friday.
“Me and (new starter) Tommy (DeVito) both said, ‘We better be your one and two on the list.’ And if he doesn’t, then I’m going to have to go find him wherever he’s at,” Lock added with a chuckle.
Jones was benched by the Giants on Monday. On Thursday, after delivering an emotional and heartfelt farewell to the organization and to the fan base, he requested his release from team president John Mara, who granted it.
Jones, who will be available to sign with another team assuming he clears waivers on Monday, leaves the Giants with a 22-44-1 career record, his best season being in 2022 when he went 9-7-1 to lead the Giants to their first playoff berth since 2016 and their first postseason win since 2011.
NOV. 21: DANIEL JONES DOING WHAT HE CAN TO HELP TEAM. Say whatever you want about New York Giants quarterback Daniel Jones, but never accuse him of not being a team player.
Jones, who lost his starting job this week to Tommy DeVito, has been a true professional since head coach Brian Daboll and general manager Joe Schoen informed him.
While some guys would have demanded their release or gone home to train for their next opportunity, Jones has shown up to work at the team’s facility, doing all he can to help his teammates prepare for their next game on Sunday against the Bucs.
That includes lining up as a safety, as Jones did during Thursday’s practice, which took place during the media’s viewing period.
If anyone is wondering if Jones is contemplating a position switch, that’s not the case. During what can best be described as a walk-through, he simply stood at the safety spot and moved to another spot as per the play.
"I got the injury guarantee, so that's that, and I understand it," Jones told reporters after practice. "They don't want to take any risks. So yeah, at that point, it's do as you're told."
Jones has also helped out in practices by throwing to receivers and handing off the ball during the individual drills, which are open to the media for viewing.
Jones, who is completing Year 2 of his four-year contract, is all but certain to be cut after this year before the fifth day of the 2025 league year when $12 million of his $30 million base salary becomes guaranteed.
By benching him for the rest of the way, the Giants also drastically reduced the odds of Jones suffering an injury which, if he were to do so on their property and could not pass a physical next spring, he’d be owed $23 million of his $30 million base salary.
NOV. 20: GIANTS ADD TIGHT END TO PRACTICE SQUAD. The New York Giants have signed tight end Jordan Murray to their practice squad.
Murray, who is repped by agent Sean Stallato, the agent of new Giants starting quarterback Tommy Devito, is 6-5 and 240 pounds. He went undrafted out of Hawaii in 2023, first signing with the Texans before moving to the Colts for part of 2023 and part of 2024 before moving to the Cardinals.
Murray, a first-team FCS All-American in 2018 when he was with Missouri State, has not appeared in any NFL games.
NOV. 15: EAGLES FANS TROLL GIANTS AFTER SAQUON BARKLEY’S BIG NIGHT. The New York Giants are never far from the minds or hearts of the Philadelphia Eagles fan base.
The latest instance of this came following Philadelphia's huge 26-18 win over the Washington Commanders, putting the Eagles, now 8-2, in first place in the NFC East.
Barkley finished the evening with 146 yards on 26 carries, which put him over the 1,000-yard mark for the fourth time in his career and the first time since 2022, his last Pro Bowl season with the Giants.
Following the game, the crowd started chanting, “Thank you, Giants!” as Barkley was interviewed during the postgame program.
Barkley, who contributed two touchdowns and 198 yards from scrimmage in the win, did his best to stay focused during the interview, but he couldn’t help but smile as the crowd’s chant intensified.
“I love it here,” Barkley told NFL Network’s Mike Garafolo following the game. “The city’s great. Culture here is amazing. But most importantly, we got the win. There’s a lot of stuff we can clean up. I can be better at a lot, too, but at the end of the day, NFC East divisional rival opponent, come in here on Thursday night and get a win; it’s big time.”
NOV. 13: GIANTS TWEAK PRACTICE SQUAD. The New York Giants released punter Matt Haack from their practice squad and signed offensive tackle Joshua Miles to take his place.
Haack filled in for Jamie Gillan, who missed four games with a hamstring strain. He was cut front he 53-man roster last week and then signed to the practice squad as insurance what with Gillan returning after a four-week absence due to a hamstring strain.
Gillan punted in the Giants’ 20-17 overtime loss to the Carolina Panthers last week and didn’t have ay setbacks, which likely led to the team’s decision to let Haack pursue an opportunity elsewhere.
Miles was originally signed by the Giants last year from the Falcons practice squad. He has since been mostly part of the Giants practice squad, including earlier this year when he did not make the 53-man roster coming out of training camp.
NOV. 12: BRIAN DABOLL EXPLAINS DEONTE BANKS’S ABSENCE FROM THE FINAL SERIES OF THE FIRST HALF VS. CAROLINA. In case you missed it–and you probably did, consider all the talk about the New York Giants quarterback’ struggles–second-year cornerback Deonte Banks appeared to be benched again during the team’s 20-17 overtime loss to the Carolina Panthers on Sunday.
The benching, a blink-and-you’ll-miss-it moment, came toward the end of the first half when Adoree’ Jackson was in the game at cornerback for the Giatns final defensive series.
So what gives? Was Banks benched again or was it strategic?
As usual, head coach Brian Daboll downplayed the move if it was a benching, telling reporters, “I'd say there's a rotation based on situations with some of the players that we have in the defensive backfield.
“Different situations come up, there's different packages, and that's all it was.”
NOV. 11: EX-GIANTS CORNERBACK NICK MCCLOUD LANDS WITH 49ERS. Cornerback/special teams ace Nick McCloud, who was cut by the Giants last week after he refused to accept a pay cut, is signing with the 49ers practice squad.
McCloud was with the Giants since 2022 as a reserve corner and special teams core staple, where he developed into one of their solid gunners. He appeared in 38 games with 16 starts for the Giants and recorded 85 tackles and one interception.
On defense, McCloud was versatile enough to play both outside corner and inside the slot. This past summer, he competed with Cor’Dale Flott for the starting cornerback spot opposite Deonte Banks.
The Giants signed the 26-year-old McCloud to an original RFA tender worth $2.97 million. The Giants, wrestling with cap issues again this season, approached McCloud to take a pay cut, but he refused and was let go by the team. This move didn’t go over well with a few teammates in the locker room.
NOV. 9: GIANTS ACTIVATE K GRAHAM GANO. The New York Giants have activated kicker Graham Gano from injured reserve following a seven-week absence due to a strained hamstring suffered in Week 2 against the Washington Commanders on the opening kickoff.
Gano's 21-day window opened this week, hoping he would be ready by Sunday. During his absence, the Giants had Greg Joseph (now on IR with an abdominal strain) and rookie Jude McAtamney handle the place-kicking duties.
The two kickers combined with 14 of 17 field goals made (82.3%) and 2 of 2 on PATs during Gano’s absence.
The Giants also made two standard practice squad elevations: receiver Isaiah Hodgins, who will provide depth at receiver with Darius Slayton (concussion) having been ruled out, and linebacker Curtis Bolton, who will work on special teams where the Giants, after cutting Nick McCloud and with linebacker Matt Adams ailing, will give them some depth.
This is Hodgins’s third elevation front on the practice squad this season. He was activated for Week 5 against Seattle and Week 6 against the Bengals, the latter against whom he caught his lone pass target for five yards.
This is Bolton's first practice squad elevation. Bolton is a 6-0 228-pound linebacker in his fourth NFL season and on his third NFL team (Detroit and Las Vegas are the other two).
The moves also mean that punter Jamie Gillan, who has been sidelined with a hamstring strain to his kick leg, will be available to punt on Sunday. Matt Haack, who had been on the roster while Gillan rehabbed his injury, was added to the Giants’ practice squad this week.
NOV. 6: GIANTS SIGN OL BRYAN HUDSON TO PRACTICE SQUAD. The New York Giants have signed offensive lineman Bryan Hudson to their practice squad.
Hudson, 6-5 and 305 pounds, originally signed as an undrafted free agent with the Detroit Lions after completing his college career at Louisville, where he played for three seasons after spending his first two at Virginia Tech.
He played the majority of his college snaps (2,696) at center, but also gained experience at right guard (715 snaps) and left guard (21 snaps).
After landing with Detroit, Hudson played 114 snaps at center this past summer, including 35 against the Giants in the Lions’ Week 1 preseason game. He allowed two pressures and zero sacks in his preseason snaps with Detroit but was still unable to crack into their lineup, given the depth the Lions had at the position.
Hudson, who is the third undrafted rookie offensive lineman signed by the Giants to the practice squad this week, was most recently on the Patriots practice squad.
NOV. 5. GIANTS TERMINATE P MATT HAACK’S CONTRACT. The New York Giants have terminated punter Matt Haack's contract.
The 30-year-old Haack was signed on October 12 after Jamie Gillan developed a late-week hamstring injury. In four games, Haack punted 21 times for 988 yards, a 47.0 gross average, with a net average of 39.0. He also had one touchback and put nine kicks inside the 20-yard line.
He also served as the holder on place-kicks during his short stint with the Giants.
Haack’s removal from the roster means that Gillan is, as head coach Brian Daboll said on Monday might be the case, ready to return to his punting duties. Gillan was never placed on injured reserve by the Giants, so the team doesn’t have to open a window on him.
NOV. 4: QB DANIEL JONES REMAINS GIANTS' STARTER. New York Giants quarterback Daniel Jones, part of a team that is 2-7 after nine games and that is stuck in a four-game losing streak, will remain the starting quarterback for the team’s Week 10 game against the Carolina Panthers in Munich, Germany this weekend, head coach Brian Daboll confirmed on Monday.
Jones, per Pro Football Focus, recorded a season-high 91.5 overall grade in the 27-22 loss to the Washington Commanders. He also completed a season high 76.9% of his pass attempts (20-of-26), threw for two touchdowns for the fourth time this season, and had an average depth of target (ADOT) of 10.3, also a season high.
In addition to his contributions in the passing game, Jones put his toughness on display during a fourth-quarter touchdown run in which his 2-yard score made it a 24-16 game at the time, the ensuing 2-point conversion failing.
Questions regarding Jones’s future continue to intensify with each loss the team racks up, mainly due to the $23 million injury guarantee that Jones has in his contract next year. Jones will be guaranteed $12 million of his $30 million base salary if he is on the roster as of March 15; if he is unable to pass a physical, that number jumps up to $23 million, which would be a hefty amount for the team to swallow if it plans to move on from Jones in the off-season.
Jones, who is in a make-or-break campaign, has had an up-and-down season where at times he’s played just fine and then at others, he’s failed to step up and make the plays that an upper echelon quarterback needs to make on a consistent basis, such as what was the case in the team’s loss to the Pittsburgh Steelers last Monday.
But there are on-going concerns given Jones’s injury history, which has included two neck injuries over a three-year period (the first of which ended his season early) and the torn ACL that ended his season early last year.
That plus Jones’s penchant for showing off his toughness whenever he can and the fact that the Giants’ 2024 season has all but slid down the drain have sharply divided opinion as to when (if at all) the Giants should bench Jones for the rest of the season to avoid further risk of triggering that injury guarantee.
Jones is set to count for $41.605 million against the cap next season if he remains on the roster and if the team doesn’t adjust his contract to gain more space.
OCT. 30: GIANTS SIGN OT GARRET GREENFIELD TO PRACTICE SQUAD. The Giants have signed offensive tackle Garret Greenfied to their practice squad. Greenfield fills the opening that became available when the team cut former seventh-round draft pick Gervarrius Owens from the practice squad on Tuesday.
Greenfield originally signed with Seattle as an undrafted rookie free agent out of South Dakota State. While in college, he participated in two FCS National Championships (2022 and 2023) and was named a three-time first-team FCS All-American and a First-team All-MVFC.
Greenfield, 6-7 and 320 pounds, played 1,809 career snaps at left tackle and 1,450 at right tackle for the Jackrabbits. During his six-season college career, he allowed eight sacks as part of the 62 pressures surrendered for a 97.6 pass-blocking efficiency rating.
In other practice squad moves, the Giants signed offensive lineman Marcellus Johnson to the practice squad and released fullback Jakob Johnson from the practice squad. Johnson was with the Giants practice squad earlier in the year, but was let go.
Jakob Johnson is expected to be back after some additional shuffling.
OCT. 29: GIANTS CUT 2023 DRAFT PICK FROM PRACTICE SQUAD. Per the daily league transaction wire, the New York Giants cut safety Gervarrius Owens from their practice squad.
Owens was a seventh-round draft pick in 2023 out of the University of Houston. The 6-0, 200-pound defensive back appeared in three games last season, all on special teams, where he played in 37 snaps.
Owens was in camp this past summer, but a knee injury cut into his practice reps. He was cut from the 90-man training camp roster on August 29.
OCT. 25: CB DEONTE BANKS WILL NOT BE BENCHED. On Friday, New York Giants head coach Brian Daboll told reporters he doesn’t intend to bench second-year cornerback Deonte Banks for even a part of Monday’s game against the Pittsburgh Steelers.
Banks has come under fire of late for his lackadaisical play this season. He was first called out by Giants passing game coordinator/defensive backs coach Jerome Henderson for his lack of a full effort against Cowboys receiver CeeDee Lamb on a 55-yard touchdown reception.
Then last week against the Eagles, there were at least two instances where Banks turned into a spectator rather than an aggressor on a play, the most notable of one being on a long third-down scramble by Eagles quarterback Jalen Hurts that went for a first down and drew a visibly ticked off Henderson down the Giants sideline to chew out the young defender.
The Giants’ injury report lists three corners – Adoree Jackson, Cor’Dale Flott, and Tre Hawkins–with ailments. Jackson missed last week with a neck issue. Flott, who is dealing with a groin injury, is a longshot of being ready, and Hawkins, who has an ankle issue, will likely be questionable for Monday night.
Without mentioning Banks by name, Giants defensive lineman and team co-captain Dexter Lawrence II told reporters on Thursday that a lack of effort on every play won’t be tolerated and that the veterans had addressed the matter.
Defensive coordinator Shane Bowen also expressed disappointment in Banks's effort.
"We expect these guys every snap to play full speed to the tackle. Making sure they're running the ball and doing all those things. That's the expectation," he said Friday.
"That's the standard we want to have here across the board. Something we got to continue to coach. We've addressed it as a coaching staff and with the unit and everybody else. Hopefully, moving forward, we can continue to see some progress and some growth in that regard from all our guys, too."
OCT. 24: GIANTS SIGN OLB BOOGIE BASHAM TO PRACTICE SQUAD. The New York Giants signed outside linebacker Boogie Basham to their practice squad on Thursday.
Basham had been waived on Wednesday to make room for the team’s signing of defensive lineman Armon Watts, who had been on their practice squad. Watts had reportedly drawn interest from another team, and with the Giants apparently not wanting to lose him, they made the move to add him to the 53-man roster at the expense of Basham, who has been a regular name on the weekly inactive list.
Basham was originally a second-round draft pick by the Buffalo Bills in 2021. The Giants acquired him along with Buffao’s 7th-round pick in 2025 in exchange for the Giants’ sixth-round pick in 2025 but never did find a steady role for him.
OCT. 23: GIANTS AGM BRANDON BROWN DELIVERS SPECIAL MESSAGE TO COLORADO BUFFALOES. New York Giants assistant general manager Brandon Brown is looking for new talent for the team. His most recent travels have taken him to Boulder, Colorado, where he was set to scout the Colorado Buffaloes.
Brown, who, per our Colorado Buffaloes On SI colleague Jeff Hauser, was joined by Giants Director of Player Personnel Tim McDonald and one other unidentified Giants scout, delivered a pep talk to the student-athletes
Brown shared some insight into what NFL executives prioritize during the draft process and conveyed to the players how they should best approach every aspect of their preparation, noting that scouts see everything, even when it looks like they’re not paying attention.
Brown also shared the nuances that go into scouting beyond practices and games, such as drill work, special teams, how they conduct themselves on and off the field, and how they handle adversity.
According to Reach the People Media, which had a video compilation of Brown’s speech and that of other NFL executives, "When you think nobody's watching, somebody's watching," Brown said.
"We take inventory of who you are at every step," Brown added, revealing that scouts keep notes on every player from the first time they set foot on campus until they leave.
He concluded his pep talk by urging the players to “never waste a day or a rep.”
The Giants are currently slated to draft ninth in next year’s draft, thanks to their 2-5 record. Barring a turnaround the rest of the way, the Giants seem destined to have their third top-10 draft pick under general manager Joe Schoen in the last four years.
The Giants’ emerging needs are quarterback, receiver, interior defensive line, and cornerback.
Colorado’s quarterback, Shedeur Sanders, has received some pre-draft buzz as a potential top-10 pick who could be one of, if not the first quarterbacks off the board next spring.
Travis Hunter, a two-way player for the Buffaloes at receiver and cornerback, is also projected to be a first-round prospect.
OCT. 22: GIANTS WAIVE OLB BOOGIE BASHAM. The New York Giants have waived outside linebacker Boogie Basham. Basham was scouted by current Giants general manager Joe Schoen while he was in Buffalo and was a second-round draft pick by the Bills in 2021.
Basham was acquired via trade with the Bills along with Buffao’s 7th-round pick in 2025 in exchange for the Giants’ sixth-round pick in 2025.
Basham never quite seemed to fit in with either defense as run by Wink Martindale and Shane Bowen. Basham appeared in just 14 games for the Giants–one this season–and logged 12 tackles and one pass breakup in that span.
The Giants filled the open roster spot by signing DT Armon Watts from their practice squad.
OCT. 19: GIANTS ELEVATE TOMON FOX FOR WEEK 7 CLASH WITH EAGLES. The New York Giants have elevated outside linebacker Tomon Fox ahead of Sunda’s Week 7 game against the Philadelphia Eagles.
Fo, who is being elevated for the second time, gives the Giants some reinforcement at outside linebacker, with starter Brian Burns (groin) ailing. Burns, who has been dealing with a groin issue since Week 3, is listed as Questionable on the team’s injury report, but it’s expected that he will be able to play against the Eagles.
Fox was last elevated from the practice squad for the team’s Week 2 game at Washington. He appeared in 19 snaps, all on special teams, and didn’t record any stats.
OCT. 18: SHANE BOWEN TAKES RESPONSIBILITY FOR LONG JOE BURROW TD-RUN
New York Giants defensive coordinator Shane Bowen took full responsibility for making an errant call on quarterback Joe Burrow's 47-yard touchdown run in last week’s loss to the Bengals.
Bowen called for man coverage on the 3rd-and-18 play with the ball spotted at the Giants’ 47-yard line. Cincinnati recognized it and ran their receivers to one side of the field which opened up all sorts of territory for Burrow, operating out of the shotgun, to find daylight and score the game’s opening points.
When the Giants realized what happened, it was too late for anyone to catch up to Burrow.
“Yeah, I shouldn't have called it. It's on me,” Bowen said on Thursday. “I should have made a better play call there, third and long. Kind of that fringe field goal territory. Tough call. He got ran 47 yards. We didn't catch him before he got to the end zone.”
The Giants would eventually tie the game in the third quarter on a 1-yard touchdown run by Tyrone Tracy, Jr., but that was the extent of the Giatns’ scoring on the night, as Cincinnati took the lead for good with 41 seconds left in the third quarter on a 37-yard field goal by Evan McPherson.
OCT. 17: GIANTS “COULD” ADD VET TACKLE. By all accounts, the New York Giants are pleased with the development of young offensive linemen Joshua Ezeudu, who is expected to fill in for Andrew Thomas at left tackle for the foreseeable future and Evan Neal. But that won’t stop the team from potentially adding another veteran for insurance.
Head coach Brian Daoll told reporters prior to the team’s Thursday practice that the team could potentially add a veteran tackle.
It’s unclear if a signing is imminent or if the Giants have someone in mind, but adding a veteran to the group to fill Thomas’s roster spot would make all kinds of sense if the coaches believe that Evan Neal isn’t fully ready to take snaps on offense after only six weeks of practicing following his return to full health from ankle surgery.
A veteran would give the Giants added insurance in the event that Ezeudu struggles or if there is an injury to either Ezeudu or right tackle Jermaine Eluemunor.
OCT 15: GIANTS SIGN FORMER VIKINGS DRAFT PICK TO PRACTICE SQUAD. The New York Giants signed defensive tackle Armon Watts to their practice squad. Watts, a six-year pro, played his college ball at Arkansas. He was a sixth-round draft pick by the Minnesota Vikings in 2019, where he was groomed by Andre Patterson, currently the Giants defensive line coach.
Watts spent three seasons with the Vikings before moving on to the Bears in 2022 and then splitting last year with the Steelers and the Patriots. He landed on IR late in his rookie season, and then again at the end of training camp this year with the Patriots for an undisclosed injury. He was waived with an injury settlement on October 1.
Watts, 6-5 and 307 pounds, has appeared in 72 career games with 22 starts and has 140 tackles, 7 tackles for loss, 18 quarterback hits, and 8.5 sacks.
New York released cornerback Duke Shelley from its practice squad to create an opening for Watts.
OCT. 10: GIANTS ELEVATE HODGINS, MILLER FROM PRACTICE SQUAD. The New York Giants have elevated running back Dante Miller and receiver Isaiah Hodgins from their practice squad ahead of Sunday’s Week 5 game against the Cincinnati Bengals.
Miller and Hodgins were elevated last week and will fill in for running back Devin Singletary (groin) and receiver Malik Nabers (concussion) again this week. Singletary, who had been listed as questionable for Sunday’s game, was downgraded to out.
OCT. 9: PANTHERS POACH IOL CADE MAYS OFF GIANTS PRACTICE SQUAD. The Carolina Panthers signed offensive lineman Cade Mays of the NEw York Giants practice squad earlier this week.
Mays was originally a sixth-round draft pick by the Panthers in the 2022 NFL draft out of Tennessee, where he was for the 2020-21 seasons after beginning his college career at Georgia.
The 25-year-old Mays appeared in 27 games with seven starts for the Panthers over the 2022-23 seasons. Carolina released him on Aug. 28, 2024, and signed with the Giants practice squad on Sept. 10.
OCT. 8: GIANTS SIGN OLB BENTON WHITLEY TO PRACTICE SQUAD. The New York Giants have signed outside linebacker Benton Whitley to their practice squad. Whitley had been cut from the 53-man roster last week when the Giants activated linebacker Matthew Adams off injured reserve before their Week 5 game against Seattle.
Before being cut from the 53-man roster, Whitley appeared in just two defensive snaps and 42 snaps for the Giants. He didn't record any tackles on either unit.
SEPT. 30: GIANTS WORK OUT QUARTERBACK C.J. BEATHARD. According to NFL Network reporter Tom Pelissero, the New York Giants hosted veteran quarterback C.J. Beathard for a workout on Monday.
Beathard, the grandson of longtime NFL general manager Bobby Beathard (Washington and San Diego), is a six-year veteran who spent the first three years of his career with the San Francisco 49ers, who selected him in the third round of the 2017 draft out of Iowa.
He spent the last three seasons with the Jacksonville Jaguars. He has appeared in 32 games with 13 starts and has completed 340 of 563 pass attempts for 3,886 yards and 19 touchdowns to 14 interceptions.
While Beathard’s workout is sure to raise some eyebrows, it is our understanding that it was just a routine workout to help with working out pass catchers and to determine if there might be further interest on the part of the club to add him to the team’s shortlist of candidates in the event of an emergency or at the end of the year, when the Giants typically sign a slew of free agents to reserve/futures contracts.
Aaron Wilson also reported that the Giants worked out wide receivers Kearis Jackson, Joseph Ngata, Joseph Scates, Bryan Thompson, and Seth Williams, and defensive backs Lamar Jackson and Greg Stroman.
SEPT. 29: GIANTS, JETS MAKE WRONG KIND OF HISTORY IN WEEK 4. Week 4 of the NFL season wasn’t kind to the New York Giants or the New York Jets. Both teams not only lost their respective games but did so without either offense scoring a touchdown, which is believed to be the first time that has happened to each team at home.
The Giants lost a 20-15 decision to the Dallas Cowboys on Thursday night, their scoring coming thanks to kicker Greg Joseph’s five field goals.
Meanwhile, the Jets lost a heartbreaker of their own on Sunday to the Denver Broncos by a score of 10-9, their points coming thanks to three field goals by kicker Greg Zuerlein.
The Giants fell to 1-3 on the season, while the Jets fell to 2-2. Next week, both teams will be taking long plane rides for their respective Week 5 games.
The Giants will head to Seattle for a Week 5 date with the currently undefeated Seahawks, and the Jets will head to London, England, where they will face the red-hot Minnesota, who, with ex-Jets quarterback Sam Darnold at the helm, is 4-0.
SEPT. 28: DEXTER LAWRENCE II DISPUTES PFF’S ASSESSMENT OF HIS PLAY. New York Giants defensive lineman Dexter Lawrence II wanted to set the record straight about Pro Football Focus's assessment of how his game against Dallas Cowboys center Cooper Beebee went.
According to the popular analytics site, Beebee, a rookie, yielded zero pressures to Lawrence in 22 pass-blocking snaps.
Ah, but looks can be deceiving. According to NextGen Stats, Lawrence, who finished with two tackles and one quarterback hit against Cowboys quarterback Dak Prescott, was double-teamed on 20 of his 25 pass rushes (80.0%) on Thursday night, tied for the highest double-team rate in a single game since at least 2018 (min. 25 pass rushes).
Lawrence is highly regarded around the league as one of the top interior defensive linemen in the league.
NextGen Stats also noted that Lawrence has generated just one pressure (6.3% pressure rate) when aligned from the zero technique (nose tackle) spot this season after leading the NFL with 24 pressures from such alignments in 2023.
However, Lawrence also has faced a higher double team rate this season (56%) when aligned as a zero technique compared to last year (44%), a clear sign that opponents’ respect for his play has greatly increased to where they prioritize sending additional resources against him to slow down his pass rush.
SEPT. 27: MALIK NABERS SAYS HE’S “ALL GOOD.” New York Giants receiver Malik Nabers gave Giants fans everywhere quite the scare Thursday night when, with 3:30 left in the game, he suffered what was eventually announced as a concussion and was declared out for the remainder of the game.
Afterward, Nabers was seen in the locker room speaking with teammates in what was considered a positive sign. He did not appear to be woozy in any way, though when teammate Brian Burns yelled across the locker room to see how Nabers was, he said at that time he wasn’t okay.
After the game, Nabers offered a more positive update on his condition.
Nabers and the Giants have ten days before their next game, a West Coast trip to Seattle. He will be in of the league’s protocol for the coming week, but there was some early optimism that he would be cleared in time for that next game.
SEPT. 24: RETIRED GIANTS DE OSI UMENYIORA TO RECEIVE SPECIAL CAREER HONOR. The NFL announced that retired New York Giants defensive end Osi Umenyiora will be part of a two-man class inducted into the league’s inaugural London Games Ring of Honor next month.
Umenyiora, who ranked 32nd on the Giants’ Top 100 players in franchise history, is one of two members of the initial class who will be inducted during halftime during the New York Jets-Minnesota Vikings game on October 6 at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium. He will be joined by retired Minnesota Vikings defensive end Jared Allen.
The NFL London Games Ring of Honour ceremony recognizes those who have contributed to the growth and development of football in the U.K. and Ireland, both on and off the field.
Honorees will make brief remarks on-field and will be recognized with banners paying homage to their careers. The banners will be displayed at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium throughout the 2024 NFL London Games, and in future NFL seasons.
The London-born Umenyiora was drafted in the second round of the 2003 NFL Draft. He spent 12 seasons with the Giants and was among the founders of the league’s International Player Pathway (IPP) program. He has also sought to expand the league’s reach for talent in Africa, where he spent part of his childhood in Nigeria.
SEPT. 22: OLB BRIAN BURNS GOOD TO GO FOR WEEK 3 GAME VS. BROWNS. New York Giants outside linebacker Brian Burns is expected to be active for Sunday’s Week 3 game against the Cleveland Browns.
Burns was added to the Giants injury report on Friday after being limited in that practice. He was given a “questionable” injury designation, raising concerns about his availability.
It’s unknown whether Burns’s injury will put him on a pitch count, but his presence in the lineup is a plus, given that the Giants are facing a banged-up Cleveland Browns offensive line.
SEPT. 21: GIANTS DEFENSE CATCHING BREAK VS. BROWNS? If ever there was a week for the New York Giants' defensive pass rush to come alive, it was Week 3.
The Cleveland Browns, who host the Giants on Sunday, will be without offensive tackle Jack Conklin for a third straight week. Conklin, listed as questionable on Friday’s injury report, has been downgraded to “out” for Sunday’s game.
Jedrick Wills, the Browns’ other offensive tackle, remains listed as questionable for Sunday’s game. Wills is dealing with a knee injury.
Outside linebackers Kayvon Thibodeaux and Brian Burns are both looking for their first sacks of 2024.
Through two weeks of play, they have combined for 11 tackles, three quarterback hits, two tackles for a loss, and zero sacks against offenses that have chipped them to slow them down.
SEPT. 20: EVAN NEAL A FORGOTTEN MAN. First, it was losing his starting right tackle job in the summer to veteran Jermaine Eluemunor. More recently–and lost in the shuggle of last week’s loss to the Washington commanders–New York Giants offensive tackle Evan Neal has lost his spot on special teams.
Neal, the Giants’ first-round pick in 2022, has twice now dressed for games but has not seen the field, this after getting some preseason work on the Giants' PAT and field goal teams. Instead, the team has turned to Joshua Ezeudu for that role.
This week, special teams coordinator Michael Ghobrial was asked about this decision to by-pass Neal, who played 21 snaps on special teams in the preseason, for a role.
“We train multiple players at different positions. Evan (Neal) is certainly a guy who can play all those positions, but certainly so is (Joshua) Ezeudu. We're going to put out what we feel is going to give us the best chance to be able to connect on these kicks with our best 11 (men).”
It’s been a rough road for Neal, the seventh overall pick in the 2022 draft. Injuries and a lack of consistency have derailed what was hoped to be a promising career, leaving his future with the team in doubt.
Offensive line coach Carmen Bricillo was asked about Neal’s progress and if there might be a role for him as an extra blocker.
“Evan definitely excels in run blocking, and he's doing a good job of working himself back into this mix and getting the rust off,” Bricillo said.
“It's been a long hiatus in those injuries, and he's doing a good job. Given an opportunity, I'm sure he'll be able to help us.”
SEPT. 18: ELI MANNING ONE STEP CLOSER TO PRO FOOTBALL HALL OF FAME -- Retired New York Giants quarterback Eli Manning was among one of 167 modern-era players nominated for the Class of 2025, and one of 16 among those in their first year of eligibility
The two-time Super Bowl MVP ranks in the top 10 in career passing yards, completions and touchdown passes. He is one of seven other Giants who made the cut, including running back Tiki Barber, tight end Jeremy Shockey, guard Chris Snee, defensive end Justin Tuck, linebacker Jessie Armstead, and punters Jeff Feagles and Sean Landeta.
The next step for Manning and the rest of the legacy Giants will be to make the cut to 50, as selected by a Screening Committee, the results of which will be announced in mid-October.
After that, the full 50-person Hall of Fame Selection Committee will reduce the list of 50 to 25 semifinalists. Then, the list will be reduced to 15 finalists from whom the Class of 2025 will be selected.
SEPT. 17: GIANTS-COWBOYS TRADE A DONE DEAL. The New York Giants trade made toward the end of training camp that sent defensive lineman Jordan Phillips and a 2026 seventh-round draft pick to the Dallas Cowboys in exchange for the Cowboys’ 2026 sixth-round pick is now official.
The trade was based on Phillips's being on the Cowboys’ 46-man roster for two games. With that condition being met, the rare trade between division rivals is in the books.
Sept. 15: GIANTS WEEK 2 INACTIVE LIST-- The New York Giants have scratched offensive lineman Jake Kubas, outside linebacker Boogie Basham, and safety Anthony Johnson for this week’s game against the Washington Commanders.
Tommy DeVito will be the emergency quarterback. Cornerback Nick McCloud (knee) and inside linebacker Darius Muasau (knee), who were scratched on Friday.
Cornerback Cor’dale Flott will get the start at cornerbak opposite Deonte Banks. McCloud made the start there last week, but he’s inactive today due to a knee injury.
Washington's inactives are cornerback Emmanuel Forbes Jr., safety Darrick Forrest, linebacker Dominque Hampton, defensive end Jamin Davis, guard Chris Paul, and receiver Jamison Crowder. Sam Hartman is the emergency quarterback.
Sept. 14: TWO GIANTS FINED FROM WEEK 1--The NFL fined New York Giants cornrback Adoree' Jackson $9,804 for unnecessary roughness on a play occuring with 1:09 remaining in last Sunday’s secnd quarter loss to the Minnesota Vikings.
Rookie LB Darius Muasau was also fined $4,696 for a hip-drop tackle in the third quarter of that game, a play that wasn't flagged by the officials.
Sept. 11: BARKLEY EARNS NFC OFFENSIVE POTW--As if New York Giants co-owner John Mara doesn’t have enough worries with his own team’s issues to cause sleepless nights, now comes word that running back Saquon Barkley, now with the Philadelphia Eagles, has been named NFC Offensive Player of the Week for his three-touchdown performance in the Eagles’ Week 1 regular-season win against the Green Bay Packers in Brazil.
Mara, who on the Hard Knocks series famously told general manager Joe Schoen that he would have trouble sleeping at night if Barkley were to sign with the Eagles in free agency, has likely been having some restless nights even before this news hit after seeing the Giants, on the day in which they honored the franchise’s 100 best players at halftime, lay an egg against the Minnesota Vikings.
That performance raised even more questions about the long-term future of quarterback Daniel Jones, who in his first game back from a torn ACL since Week 9 of last year, picked up where he left off in terms of shoddy play. Jones threw two interceptions, including a Pick-6, and finished 22 of 42 for 186 yards, taking five sacks, three of which a case could be made he walked himself into.
Head coach Brian Daboll is sticking with Jones for the team’s upcoming game against the Washington Commanders, but clearly if Jones continues to flop his way through games, the team is going to have to decide sooner than later whether to stay with him or move on to backup Drew Lock.
Sept. 10: GIANTS TWEAK PRACTICE SQUAD—The New York Giants dropped offensive tackle Marcellus Johnson from their practice squad and replaced him with interior offensive lineman Cade Mays.
Mays, 6-6 and 325 pounds was originally a sixth-round pick by the Panthers in the 2022 draft (pick 199) out of Tennessee. He appeared in 11 games with two starts as a rookie.
Last season, Mays appeared in 16 games with five starts for the Panthers. He was with Carolina this summer but was part of their final roster cuts to get down to the 53-man limit on August 28,2024.
Sept. 10: GIANTS LEGENDS REVEAL THOUGHTS ABOUT SUNDAY'S EMBARRASSING LOSS TO VIKINGS—The New York Giants might be on to Washington. Still, the stench of their 28-6 opening game loss to the Minnesota Vikings on a day in which the franchise’s all-time legends were being honored still resonated strongly with the legacy players.
The New York Giants might be on to Washington. Still, the stench of their 28-6 opening game loss to the Minnesota Vikings that took place on a day in which the franchise’s all-time legends were being honored still seemed to resonate strongly with the legacy players.
Former linebacker Carl Banks, who was among the 100 legends honored at halftime during Sunday’s debacle, shared part of his conversation with the great hall of Fame linebacker Lawrence Taylor, voted the No. 1 overall best player in franchise history, as the Giants were getting walloped by the Vikings en route to an embarrassing 28-6 loss.
Banks spoke of how Taylor, known to legions of Giants fans by his initials “LT” doesn’t watch many football games these days, but he was horrified by what he saw in the first half of the Giants’ Week 1 game.
“He looked at me–and this is a true story, folks–if you wanna know what we were thinking at halftime,” Banks said. “He looked at me and he said, ‘Carl, I can pick 22 of us right now and go out and play better than these guys.’ And the youngest guy in that line was probably 50 years old.”
Banks. A member of the Giants broadcast team, is a two-time Super Bowl champion (XXI and XXV), a first-team All-Pro (1987) a Pro Bowler (19870 and a member of the NFL 1980s All-Decade Team.
Banks has never been shy about sharing his opinions on what he sees from the current group of players, and at times has been flat-out blunt with his perspectives.
He was at a loss for words over the product that the Giants put out there on the field Sunday.
“To start your season looking the way you did..when you’re playing a team in your weight class and they look like they took the next step and you’re still stuck in 2023…” he said, shaking his head in disbelief.
The Giants get a chance to make things right on Sunday against the Washington Commanders, a team they have had success against over the last five years.
Sept. 8: GUNNER OLSZEWSKI SUFFERS SETBACK IN PRE-GAME WARMUPS. New York Giants punt returner Gunner Olszewski, who has been slowed down this summer due to a groin injury, suffered a setback during pre-game warmups and was declared out of Sunday’s regular-season opener against the Minnesota Vikings.
The Giants didn’t announce who will replace Olszewski as punt returner, but among the candidates are cornerback Adoree’ Jackson, receiver Darius Slayton, and receiver Wan’Dale Robinson. Jackson is the most likely candidate to get the role.
Sept. 6: JAKOB JOHNSON RELEASED FROM PRACTICE SQUAD. Fullback/tight end Jakob Johnson is probably starting to feel like a human yo-yo when it comes to his tenure with the New York Giants.
Johnson was released from the team's practice squad to make room for the signing of inside linebacker Carter Coughlin, who was dropped from the 53-man roster on Thursday.
Johnson, originally signed by the Giants on August 16, did not make the initial 53 man roster when cuts were announced on August 27, but he was one of the vested veterans added to the team's practice squad the next day.
Then on August 29, he was promoted to the 53-man roster after offensive lineman Austin Schlottman landed on injured reserve with a broken leg. Schlottman's stay on the roster was short-lived as his contract was terminated two days later, on August 31.
He was then re-signed to the practice squad on September 2, lasting just four days until the latest transaction.
The Giants have been engaging in roster gymnastics this week so it's certainly possible that Johnson will be back at some point.