Giants can make playoff scenario real simple by beating Colts

The Giants are in the only place you want to be in Week 17 of a football season. They have the gift of crystal-clear clarity. They don’t have to look around the league, the way the Jets and a half-dozen other teams do, and figure out what help they need elsewhere; relying on the kindness of strangers is a terrible place to be this deep in the season.

And there is the other end of the spectrum too: The Giants don’t have to concern themselves with how much their starters should play, how badly they need the game, the risk-reward of winning a regular-season game. It’s easy. Easiest formula possible.

Win the game.

That’s all. That’s it. Beat the Colts on Sunday at MetLife Stadium, get a ticket punched for the playoffs, play a what-the-hell game the following week in which there will likely be no stakes on the table for either them or for the Eagles.

Beat the Colts, and let the cards fall where they may.

“I think we just try to control our own destiny each week by trying to win a game,” Giants coach Brian Daboll said. “The goal is always to try to go 1-0, and that’ll be no different this week.”

Give Daboll this: The same kind of discipline and self-awareness he demands of his players? He expects that from himself, too. No fewer than four different times Monday afternoon, as he met reporters for the first time since his team’s heartbreaking 27-24 loss to the Vikings on Christmas Eve, he was eased by interrogators toward a path of discussing the playoffs.

He took the Fifth on all of it.

Giants
Daniel Jones, Saquon Barkley and the Giants just need to beat the Colts this week to make the playoffs.
Charles Wenzelberg/New York Post

“I think everybody knows what you just said,” Daboll said, and what had been asked was if his message to the team was at all different this week because a victory stamps them good to go for the postseason. He wasn’t biting. He wasn’t even nibbling. “Making sure we’re prepared, ready to go and go out there and put our best foot forward.”

The Giants and Colts aren’t exactly ancient rivals, and in the 72 years since their first encounter — Giants 55, Colts 20 at Baltimore’s old Memorial Stadium — they’ve faced each other only 19 times, the Colts winning 12. The most famous, of course, was one day less than 64 years ago, Dec. 28, 1958, when Alan Ameche’s touchdown won the first NFL overtime game ever played, delivering the NFL championship to Baltimore.

And it has been a few days longer than 20 years ago since the Giants most recently beat the Colts (only the Chargers, whom the Giants haven’t beaten since 1998, have a longer run); the Colts have won four straight (including two Manning Bowls) since.

That final three weeks of the 2002 season are a bit more relevant than you’d think. The Giants were 8-6 and needing to win their final two regular-season games of the year — at Indianapolis, and home to Philadelphia — the same two teams they close the season against this year — and beat the Colts at RCA Dome 44-27 thanks to a career day from Amani Toomer, who caught 10 balls for 204 yards and touchdowns of 82, 21 and 27 yards from Kerry Collins.

NY Post illustration

They clinched a week later when they outlasted the Eagles in overtime at Giants Stadium.

(And for their troubles the Giants drew the 49ers in the first round of the playoffs, which is the likely scenario for them this time around, as well. If you’re a Giants fan, you’ll be happy to know we won’t be talking about that game in this column at all)

The Giants ought to be a significant favorite over the Colts, who will be without Jonathan Taylor and will likely be quarterbacked by Nick Foles (who made his season debut Monday night against the Chargers). There ought to be a playoff-worthy atmosphere at MetLife Stadium, the one consolation prize to not clinching a spot in the tournament in Minneapolis.

Michael Pittman Jr. of the Colts is tackled as his helmet comes off by Derwin James Jr. #3 of the Los Angeles Chargers and Drue Tranquill.
Getty Images

And Daboll, as we have seen, will neither encourage nor permit his players’ imaginations to get too carried away.

“We’re not in it yet,” he said, effortlessly flicking aside one last gnat of a question. “I’m not going to look too far down the road, and we’re going to try to beat the Colts.”

Simple answer. Simple equation. Simple truth. Simple task. Beat the Colts, and nothing else matters.

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Giants can deliver Christmas gift earlier than expected

MINNEAPOLIS — Five years. Five years spent wondering where it had all gone wrong. Five years agonizing over why the latest new head coach turned out to be the latest wrong head coach, why the general manager wasn’t any savior. Why this, why that. 

Five years that reminded you of the dark wilderness years when your fans were in revolt, and your father and uncle needed to be separated by NFL commissioner Pete Rozelle, and George Young was summoned to rescue the franchise. 

No one deserved a season like this one more than John Mara, the biggest Giants fan of them all. 

’Tis the day before what could be an improbable and exhilarating Mara Christmas, for the devoted owner, for Giants fans everywhere. 

Back up from Rock Bottom, here come the New York Football Giants, hungering for a win over the Vikings on Saturday that could … with help … secure their first playoff berth since 2016. 

Here comes Brian Daboll, the competent, culture-changing head coach Mara couldn’t find until he blew it all up and trusted rookie general manager Joe Schoen to find one for him. 

Here comes Daniel Jones, bloodied, but unbowed, following three years of Quarterbacking 101 negligence, an ugly duckling blossoming into a beautiful swan before our eyes under Daboll’s guidance. 

Brian Daboll’s Giants are on the verge of clinching a playoff berth.
Bill Kostroun/New York Post
NY Post Illustration

Here comes Pro Bowler Saquon Barkley, running to daylight on two healthy knees again. 

Here comes Kayvon Thibodeaux, who had himself a Lawrence Taylor night against the Commanders and isn’t interested in being any one-hit wonder. Alongside will be Pro Bowler Dexter Lawrence and what will need to be a Big Blue Wrecking Crew to keep Kirk Cousins from playing catch with otherworldly Justin Jefferson, or perhaps leading another comeback for the ages. 

Here comes defensive coordinator Wink Martindale, with his infectious swagger, keeping the Giants in virtually every game with half his secondary on the sideline. 

Here comes Graham “The Toe” Gano, automatic weapon. 

From 2018-21, Mara watched his Giants play 65 games. He watched them lose 46 of those games. 

Barkley was filled with hope and optimism before his first NFL game. He and Odell Beckham Jr. were going to be a dynamic duo. Eli Manning was years away from the Manningcast. 

New York Post

“I believe that this team has a great chance to be a great team,” Barkley said at the time. 

It didn’t. It wasn’t. From 2018-21, Barkley was 19-46 as a Giant, too. 

Now? Now he is 8-5-1 this season. The playoffs aren’t fourth-and-long. The playoffs are first-and-goal. 

“I can feel it. I’m hungry for him,” Thibodeaux told The Post. “He’s brought out the beast in me, in just seeing we really do have a chance, and this is something that doesn’t come by easy.” 

From 2019-21, Jones was 14-35. 

“He doesn’t even know if he’s getting a contract next year,” Thibodeaux said, “and that’s none of my business. I don’t know whatever goes into it. But it’s just like the relentlessness to continue to play with all of these pressures being the quarterback in New York City, hats off to him ’cause he’s just been delivering week in and week out.” 

Daniel Jones, left, and Saquon Barkley jog off the field after the Giants’ win over the Commanders on Dec. 18.
USA TODAY Sports

It should be a no-brainer that the twin faces of the franchise, Jones and Barkley, deserve to keep delivering for the 2023 Giants and beyond. 

“We gotta keep good things going,” Thibodeaux said. “You don’t need to fix something that’s not broken.” 

Mara’s Giants are no longer broken. 

“If I had a voice,” Thibodeaux said, “I’d say those are our leaders, and I love being on the team with ’em, and I feel like they’re gonna lead us to greatness.” 

It’s Year 1 of the rebuilding, and here come the New York Football Giants anyway, ready, willing and Daboll to gift themselves their first Mara Christmas in what seems like an eternity. 

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Giants leave no doubt as they continue all-business approach

This could have gone differently. This could have gone sideways. The Giants had 14 days to stew about their last game, a disappointing showing in Seattle. During the bye week they’d lost an essential part of their emotional DNA when safety Xavier McKinney had an ATV accident

And the opponent … well, you’re not human if you don’t notice they aren’t very good. 

All of these things could have been in play on a windy day at MetLife Stadium, the first day when you had to admit to yourself that autumn had finally arrived, that winter is definitely on deck. All of these things could have conspired to sabotage the Giants, to impair their grinding journey toward the playoffs. All of these things could’ve been like stepping on a hidden mousetrap. 

None of those things happened. The Giants started the game as efficiently as you can: three-and-out on defense, touchdown on offense. The rest of the game may have been a grim slog, and it may even have been hard for the Giants to keep their home audience the whole way since the other 1 o’clock TV game in market was the extraordinary Bills-Vikings game. 

The Giants didn’t care. They took care of business. They beat the 1-7-1 Texans 24-16, they improved to 7-2 and they made sure there would be little mystery to the proceedings by leading wire-to-wire for the first time all year. 

“We did a lot of things well,” Giants coach Brian Daboll said. “Guys played hard, played physically, we had some timely turnovers. It was a good team win.” 

Brian Daboll reacts after the Giants’ win over the Texans.
Bill Kostroun/New York Post

Daboll had some extra motivation since his youngest daughter, Avery, was celebrating a birthday and had requested as her present a victorious game ball. 

“Talk about pressure,” he said. 

The Giants’ motivation came in simply playing a pitch-perfect game, which is what they did. Daniel Jones achieved the highest passer rating of his career — 153.3 — and he did that by completing 13 of his 17 passes (two for touchdowns) and turning around to hand the ball off 42 times. Thirty-five of those hand-offs went into the ultra-reliable hands of Saquon Barkley, who work-horsed his way to 152 yards and a touchdown. 

“It was fun,” Jones said of his afternoon. “To watch the guys upfront, they did a great job, controlled the line of scrimmage. We had a great plan coming in, and Saquon did a great job running it.” 

Daboll blanched a little bit when someone offered up the word “conservative” to describe the game plan he put together for Houston. 

“We tried to do what we thought we could do,” Daboll said. “Each week we do what we think we need to do for that particular game. If it’s 60 passes, it’s 60 passes. I wouldn’t give it a label, we just do the best we can to formulate a plan.” 

Daniel Jones hands the ball off to Saquon Barkley during the fourth quarter.
Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post

The truth is, it was exactly what the Giants needed to do against a Texans team that is every bit the reflection of their record. The Giants were good enough to overwhelm them on the defensive side of the ball, strong enough to overpower them on offense. So why risk mistakes, on either side, that would allow the Texans to stay in the game? 

So if it was a vanilla plan … well, vanilla can also be delicious, no? 

“We’ve got a lot of players with chips on their shoulders,” Giants defensive end Kayvon Thibodeaux said. “We have a lot of players who like to play with their backs to the walls.” 

They are also an interesting mix of veterans who’ve known nothing but failure with the Giants and newcomers who know nothing but success across this season’s first nine games. But even in tasting success they know how fragile it is. 

This was the first game in which they didn’t trail at some point. And even though there wasn’t one moment after Jones found Lawrence Cager for the touchdown that gave them a 7-0 lead that the Giants felt in any peril of losing, this wound up yet another one-score victory — same as all six of the ones that came before. 

Cager, the ex-Jet, represents another element of the Giants that has become a source of real strength: guys who seize opportunities when given them. Isaiah Hodgins, a recent pickup from Buffalo, was another (two catches, 41 yards), as was Dane Belton, subbing for McKinney, who picked off Houston quarterback Davis Mills — snuffing the Texans’ last legitimate hope of a miracle. 

The Giants? They need no miracles. They show up every week and they compete. Not every week will merit preservation by the historical society. At 7-2, there isn’t a soul clad in blue who cares about that. Not even a little.

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Why the Giants decided it was time to trade Kadarius Toney

With each passing week, it became obvious to the Giants coaching staff and front office that Kadarius Toney was lacking in at least two of the three tenets of the new regime. Brian Daboll insists his players are smart, tough and dependable and “tough’’ and “dependable’’ were never part of Toney’s brief stay.

The end came Thursday, when general manager Joe Schoen traded Toney to the Chiefs for a compensatory third-round pick and a sixth-round pick in the 2023 draft. There were disagreements between the player and the team that did not exactly trigger this deal but that did make it more sensible that he be sent away.

It is likely Toney, who has missed the past five games with two separate hamstring injuries, passes his physical in Kansas City. The plan for him with the Giants was to practice on Thursday and, if all went well, perhaps play Sunday in Seattle.

The Giants, though, actually preferred Toney sit out this game and rest up during the following bye week to be healthy for the second half of the season. The NFL trade deadline is Tuesday and the Giants were not committed to keeping him around. If he played and re-injured himself, his trade value would be diminished. If he played and was productive, his marketability in a trade would increase. Given his history with the Giants ever since becoming a 2021 first-round pick, the feeling was it was more likely Toney would hurt his trade value.

The new Giants regime didn’t seem to have much trust in Kadarius Toney.
Corey Sipkin for the NY POST

Toney, according to a source, was not happy that he was held out of practice Wednesday. He believed he was ready to go. The offer from the Chiefs came early Thursday and that was that.

It is believed Daboll’s plan is for the injured players to stay in town during the bye week and continue their rehab at the team facility. If Toney was held out of Sunday’s game he would have been considered an injured player and required to stay — which he would not want to do. There were concerns that Toney, if deemed healthy, would leave the area and compromise some of his conditioning during the bye week, making him more susceptible to injury upon his return. Clearly, Toney did not build up any trust equity with the new coaching staff or front office.

Brian Daboll’s expectations of injured Giants players were a source of concern when it came to Toney.
Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post

This regime did not draft Toney and would not have drafted Toney, a player who was not on the draft boards of several NFL teams because of concerns with his attitude and durability. The Giants are 6-1 with Toney playing only 35 snaps, catching two passes for zero yards and rushing twice for 23 yards. Daboll is squeezing everything he can out of a feisty but flawed roster, and every day Toney was not available was detrimental to the environment Daboll and Schoen are trying to create.

Toney did not do himself any favors by missing the first two voluntary weeks in the spring. He got hurt upon his return and needed an arthroscopic knee procedure that set him back. He missed two games with a strained hamstring, declared himself ready and pulled his other hamstring in his first practice back on the field. There were bouts of immaturity and lack of communication. On a team that is certainly wide receiver-needy, the Giants decided they did not need Toney.

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Giants’ Sterling Shepard not about to retire: ‘I’m a fighter’

Sterling Shepard, on Wednesday speaking publicly for the first time since he tore the ACL in his left knee with 1:11 remaining in the Giants’ Monday night loss to the Cowboys on Sept. 26, vowed to return to the field.

“Dang right,’’ the 29-year-old receiver said. “I’m a fighter. I want to go out on my own terms. I don’t want something like this to make me go out. So, I’m going to fight to get my body back to where I can perform and get this thing good.

“There is a grieving period and you have a lot of stuff flying through your head, but when you get time to settle down and what you really want, the next day it hit me. I was like, ‘You know what? I’m not going to let this get me down. I’m going to fight through it. I’ve done it once; I can do it again.’ ’’

Shepard, the longest-tenured player on the Giants, missed last year with a ruptured Achilles and made it all the way back to play only to lose yet another season.

“Obviously, just coming off my Achilles and having to deal with the ACL is no fun,’’ Shepard said. “But I just try to come in with a positive attitude. I feel like that helps the recovery process. You take a day of grieving, and it’s time to move forward.’’

Sterling Shepard, who suffered a season-ending left knee injury in Week 3, watches the action during the Giants’ Wee 4 win over the Bears.
Corey Sipkin

Shepard revealed that he believes he tore the ACL a couple plays before he fell to the turf simply jogging away from the play.

“It was really weird,’’ he said. “I think I actually partially tore it probably like two plays before that. I think I partially tore it. I kind of got up, and my knee did something funny. I was just like, ‘Forget about it,’ and keep on pushing.

“The next play actually got blown dead, which in hindsight I’m kind of happy about because I was about to have to stick off my left and hard cut. And the next play I was literally just jogging. It just slid on me and popped.’’

When Shepard, whose contract is up at the end of this season after seven seasons with the Giants, was asked if he wonders whether he’ll be playing somewhere else in 2023, he said: “I’ll let that take care of itself. All I can do is focus on every day that I have and each day coming up. So, that’s what I’m going to focus on — just putting one foot in front of the other and focusing on the small wins right now. So, I don’t want to get too far ahead of myself.’’

He said, though, that he obviously feels an allegiance to the Giants.

“They didn’t have to give me another shot to come back off that Achilles, and they did,’’ he said. “And I can’t thank this staff and ownership enough for the opportunities that they’ve given me. I feel like I owe so much to them. I want to give them my all. I don’t want to go out like this. I’m going to fight. I’m a fighter. So, that’s what I’m going to do.’’


The following Giants players didn’t practice Wednesday: QB Tyrod Taylor (concussion), WR Kenny Golladay (knee), LB Azeez Ojulari (calf), DB Cor’Dale Flott (calf), WR Richie James (ankle), DB Julian Love (concussion) and DL Henry Mondeaux (ankle).

The following players practiced on a limited basis: QB Daniel Jones (ankle), DL Leonard Williams (knee), WR Kadarius Toney (hamstring), G Evan Neal (neck), WR Wan’Dale Robinson (knee), DB Fabian Moreau (foot) and DB Nick McCloud (hamstring).

Coach Brian Daboll said Toney, who the Giants need on the field for his big-play ability, “is making progress.’’


Daboll called having to face Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers “challenging.’’

“He’s one of the best to ever do it,’’ Daboll said. “He’s fun to watch when you’re not getting ready to play him. I’ll be watching their offense and naturally you’re just watching [number] 12 and the things he does, how he moves people, the accuracy, off-schedule plays, and checks and things he does.

“He’s as good as it gets and he’s a hard quarterback to defend. He’s impressive.’’

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Brian Daboll’s Giants not afraid of failure

Are the Giants succeeding because they are not afraid to fail? 

This might be too deep of a thought a day or two after the second game of the season and could be the basis for the introductory lecture in the class entitled “Overthinking 101.” But there might be something to this. 

The Giants are 2-0 and a fast start is already secured. It is too soon to stamp this as anything other than the byproduct of two inelegant wins over the Titans (21-20) and Panthers (19-16), but it is not too early to notice the way new head coach Brian Daboll is building his first Giants team

He is determined to get as many players involved as possible, regardless of age, salary, NFL pedigree, name, rank or serial number. He is pressuring the team to prepare the right way while refusing to harp on the final result. He said he was absolutely at peace with going for the two-point conversion in Nashville even if it failed. 

Daboll knows this is not the roster that will lead the Giants to big things in what he hopes is a prolonged stay as the man in charge. He likes his first team but understands the limitations. He is setting up the program to reflect his priorities and beliefs. He knows about the losing aura that hovered over the franchise he stepped into. Through two games, he has coached loose, not tight, coached to win, rather than not to lose. There is a difference. 

“The guys we have on our team aren’t afraid of failure,” safety Xavier McKinney said. “We’ve been at the bottom, we’ve experienced all that so we’re not worried about messing up. We know we’re gonna have a breakthrough at some point.” 

Brian Daboll and his Giants are enjoying their 2-0 start.
USA TODAY Sports

Is 2-0 a breakthrough

“I don’t know, I guess,” McKinney said. “We got to keep working. I’ve learned in this league things can go south really fast.” 

Adversity will hit at some point and when it does another line will be added to the Daboll résumé, referring to how he handles a loss, or two, or five. He has kept his ledger clean heading into Week 3, which is quite a feat. 

The way Daboll has rotated his wide receivers is further proof he is unafraid of the consequences of going against the grain. Richie James gets 42 snaps on offense in the opener and only seven for Kadarius Toney? David Sills gets 67 snaps against the Panthers and only two for Kenny Golladay? This is a head coach unencumbered by whatever criticism may come his way. 

True to the form he has shown, Daboll entrusted his defense to Wink Martindale, a grizzled veteran Daboll says “is not afraid of failure.” On cue, Martindale in Week 2 started rookie Dane Belton, making his NFL debut, on the back end of the defense, playing deep safety for 46 of the 58 snaps. The last line of defense, literally. Trepidation has no place at the table with Daboll and his staff. 

Unafraid to fail? Here’s one definition: 

“For a team, you just want guys to send it,” safety Julian Love said Monday. “You want guys to play fast, play free without worrying about being perfect. That’s something guys might have fallen victim to in recent years. Now, it’s just from top down, and it’s coaches too, being open and willing to send it and make mistakes.” 

Love played as a rookie for Pat Shurmur and then for Joe Judge. He did not say it but he certainly implied that there was a fear of failure the past two years. He thought of a play he made — eventually — in the first quarter, as he tracked down Christian McCaffrey on a screen pass after a 6-yard gain. Love, in pursuit, slipped and fell to the turf. He ended up making the tackle

“You just get up, you just play free,” he said. “Maybe in the past I might have thought, ‘My gosh, they’re gonna hate that on film,’ but there is none of that. You get up and you make a play because the team is depending on you to play loose and to play free.” 

Daboll wants his players to know he has their backs, as long as they adhere to his three tenets of being smart, tough and dependable. 

“You can get bogged down in this league pretty quick,” he said, “by making a mistake and letting it linger into the next play and the next play.” 

The only feeling Daboll hopes will linger is a familiarity with winning. Through two games, it is all these Giants know. 

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Giants look to add to momentum with Week 2 win over Panthers

The Empire State Building will illuminate its world-famous tower lights in Giants blue Saturday night, leading into the first home game of the 2022 regular season Sunday. The Giants are 1-0 for the first time in six years as they take the field at MetLife Stadium for a 1 p.m. kickoff, and that means about three hours later we will all know if the brightness shining at the start of Brian Daboll’s head-coaching career will continue to glow or has been dimmed.

There is no doubt Daboll’s bold decision in Week 1 to go for the 2-point conversion and the win, rather than play for overtime, won over Giants fans and fostered a belief in his players that their boss has their back. Upsetting the Titans, 21-20, in Nashville — especially the way it unfolded — was a scenario beyond anyone’s imagination, as far as crafting a Daboll storybook debut.

A renewed sense of hope is sure to permeate Daboll’s first game in front of loyalists who have grown weary of wondering what their favorite team will do this week to embarrass the franchise. The last time the Giants played a home game that mattered, they became meme-generated laughingstocks in a desultory 2021 season-ending loss to Washington, lowlighted by two consecutive quarterback kneel-downs, an unfortunate coda to the Joe Judge coaching tenure.

Saquon Barkley and Brian Daboll
Getty Images; Noah K. Murray

That was then. The vibe heading into the Week 2 game against the Panthers is far more jump-up than kneel-down. One game does not wipe away the past five years of sorry football, but there is no doubt Daboll is off to a flying start. The reaction should be rousing, right?

“That’s a great question,’’ said Saquon Barkley, who did more than anyone to make sure the Giants won their opener. “I can’t really tell, I guess I’ll probably know that answer a little better on Sunday when I get out there and see everyone that comes out.

“One thing that I can say about the Giants’ fans: Win, loss, or draw they’re going to show up, you’re going to hear them. Whether it’s ‘boos’ or whether it’s ‘hoorays’ or whatever you want to call it. They’ve been great fans, they’ve been showing out since I’ve been here. Hopefully this year we can go out there and give them something to be proud about.’’

Daboll arrives as a conquering hero, based on his unblemished record one week into his Giants coaching tenure. He dutifully honed in on his first home game by playing to the crowd — “I love our fan base’’ — as he anticipated a packed house.

“They’re pretty smart fans up here, so the more we can get in there, the better it’ll be,’’ Daboll said.

Wink Martindale, Daboll’s hand-picked defensive coordinator, implored Giants fans to make life miserable for the Panthers when they have the ball.

“If you want to be part of changing this culture here with the Giants, be loud and have that place rocking where people don’t want to come to our stadium,’’ he said.

There is nothing wrong with any of that, other than the need to say it. When the Giants were contending for postseason berths and forging winning records, there was no requirement to cajole the fans to show up and to believe. Times have changed. Home can be where the heart is, and home can also be where the hostility is.

This is the first of three consecutive home games for the Giants. The Panthers are 0-1. Next, on “Monday Night Football” on Sept. 26, it will be the Cowboys, a team that lost its opener and quarterback, Dak Prescott. The Bears, who will come in on Oct. 2, are no one’s pick to have a big year. There is an opportunity for a winning record after four games for the first time since 2011. The caveat is that success one week often has nothing to do with what happens the next week, especially with a program in its nascent stages.

“A win just basically boosts your confidence,’’ receiver Kadarius Toney said. “It just lets you know that the hard work that you are putting in is working. It means a lot around here because we’ve come a long way from having hard times. This year, I just feel like we are overcoming our adversity, we are learning how to deal with it in different ways.’’

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Three Giants’ things to watch for in preseason finale vs. Jets

Three Giants’ things to watch for in their preseason-finale battle vs. the Jets:

Slim pickings

Brian Daboll does not need a whole bunch of tight ends for his offense. He does need some of them, though, and the pickings are slim. This is why newly-signed Tanner Hudson has a real shot and why this game is important to him. Hudson has five career NFL receptions, and the other tight ends on the roster have a total of three.

Safety first

The back end of the defense is coming into greater clarity — the move is to youth at safety. Undrafted rookie Trenton Thompson (San Diego State) is a strong contender, and another rookie, Yusuf Corker (Kentucky) is making a push. Yet another rookie, fourth-round pick Dane Belton (Iowa), made a strong impression and will be on the field as soon as his broken collarbone heals.

Special skills

Darius Slayton
Bill Kostroun

Once again, it is impossible to ignore the competition going on at the back end of the wide receiver depth chart. Figure that Kenny Golladay, Kadarius Toney, Sterling Shepard and Wan’Dale Robinson are locks. Figure that just two stick from the next group — Darius Slayton, David Sills, Richie James and Alex Bachman. Something to consider: James and Bachman offer the most special teams value.

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