Giants are a GM-centric organization and ‘Joe Schoen is in charge’

Did New York Giants co-owner John Mara force quarterback Daniel Jones on general manager Joe Schoen and head coach Brian Daboll?

That is a popular theory among fans who are dismayed with Jones and struggle to understand how he’s survived multiple GMs and coaches, but it may not be one steeped in reality.

Well, at least not entirely.

Pat Leonard of the New York Daily News reports that despite Mara’s constant presence in the building, Schoen has been given near complete autonomy as the general manager. He makes the calls and is rarely, if ever, overruled.

“Joe Schoen is in charge,” one team source told Leonard. “It’s not like Rex Ryan and Mike Tannenbaum were with the Jets. No one questions who is in charge in the building. It’s a GM-centric organization. It’s not like Brian Daboll is Bill Belichick, where he’s drafting the players.”

Both Schoen and Daboll have endeared themselves to fans but after an underwhelming 2023 campaign and an ugly offseason of exodus, it’s fair to say they are on thin ice. Continued failure will almost certainly lead to change.

But the pair still have an opportunity to turn things around. And by all accounts, Schoen will have free reign to do exactly that — with Mara and Steve Tisch watching on closely.

“This is still John Mara’s team,” another team source said. “Never forget that. John Mara runs the Giants.”

To save his job, Schoen must fix the offensive line once and for all. He must also find a long-awaited solution to the team’s relentless injury issues.

Maybe a new quarterback is also in his future. Schoen appears to have whiffed after signing Jones to a four-year, $160 million deal that came one year after declining the quarterback’s fifth-year option.

Ultimately, the pressure is on and Schoen’s rope is slowly running out.

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Could Giants target Mitchell Trubisky as Tyrod Taylor’s replacement?

New York Giants general manager Joe Schoen has been very clear that he will address the quarterback position this offseason, whether that comes by way of free agency or the 2024 NFL draft.

Expectations remain that Daniel Jones will start under center once he’s healthy enough to do so, but questions about his backup remain.

Veteran Tyrod Taylor is an impending free agent and the only other quarterback under contract is Tommy DeVito.

“I think we’re going to have to do something (at) quarterback, whether it’s free agency or the draft,” Schoen said at his year-end press conference. “Tyrod’s contract is up, DeVito is obviously under contract and Daniel, we don’t know when he’s going to be ready.

“Just from an offseason program standpoint, that will be a position we’ll have to look at. Again, there are different avenues, free agency or the draft, but we’ll have to address it at some point.”

Schoen has left the door open for a Taylor return but should that not come to pass, an intriguing option just hit the open market.

On Monday, NFL Network’s Mike Garafolo reported that the Pittsburgh Steelers and veteran quarterback Mitchell Trubisky had agreed to mutually part ways.

Schoen and Giants head coach Brian Daboll are no strangers to Trubisky, who spent a year with the Buffalo Bills in 2021.

Although that was the only season of his seven-year career that Trubisky didn’t start a game, he became familiar with Daboll, who was offensive coordinator at the time, and his system — much of which has carried over with the Giants.

Trubisky is likely to seek a starting job but could view the Giants as a backup destination given the injury issues that plague Jones and his familiarity with those in charge.

Before signing with the Steelers in 2022, Trubisky to the Giants was a hot topic and a union many believed would happen. Perhaps both sides will circle back given their respective needs.



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Giants nearly bottom out in ESPN’s way-too-early 2024 power rankings

The New York Giants finished the 2023 regular season with a record of 6-11, accurately representing their underwhelming year.

They were among the worst teams in the league based on most measures and metrics, and oddsmakers aren’t optimistic that will change in 2024. The Giants have been given some of the worst Super Bowl LIX odds and many believe they are years off from competing.

Accordingly, ESPN recently listed the Giants near the very bottom of their way-too-early 2024 power rankings.

The Giants are at a crossroads with impending free agent running back Saquon Barkley. It’s either now or never in terms of committing to their running back long-term. New York also needs to decide if it’s willing to build the team around quarterback Daniel Jones in a year where it has the No. 6 overall pick and plenty of draft capital. Drafting a quarterback is clearly an option with Jones’ injury history now including two neck injuries and a torn ACL.

Three separate regimes have attempted to compete while rebuilding and it’s cost the franchise a decade. Save for a single playoff win in 2022, the Giants have been largely uncompetitive and sport the NFC’s worst record since 2013.

Entering Year 3 of the Joe Schoen-Brian Daboll tandem, pessimism remains the word of the day. This offseason has already been highlighted by an ugly Wink Martindale divorce, significant coaching staff turnover, and lingering issues at nearly every position.

Frankly, ESPN may have ranked the Giants too high.

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New York Giants have some of the worst odds to win Super Bowl LIX

The 2023 NFL season may be over but that doesn’t mean bookmakers are closed for business when it comes to football wagers. The futures market is always hot.

BetMGM has come out with their official Super Bowl LIX odds. The two-time reigning Super Bowl champion Kansas City Chiefs are the early favorites at 5-1 followed by the San Francisco 49ers (7.5-1) and the Baltimore Ravens (8.5-1).

The New York Giants are way down the list at 150-1 along with the Tennessee Titans and Washington Commanders and ahead of only the New England Patriots (200-1) and Carolina Panthers (250-1).

What do all of those other teams mentioned (other than the Giants) have in common? They’ll all be playing under new head coaches in 2025. The Giants will be in Year 3 of the Brian Daboll era.

Super Bowl LIX will be played on February 9, 2025 at the Caesars Superdome in New Orleans.

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Ex-New York Giant unsurprised by Brian Daboll-Wink Martindale fallout

Jon Feliciano, who was the New York Giants starting center last season, isn’t at all shocked by the breakup of his former head coach, Brian Daboll, and defensive coordinator Wink Martindale.

“I think it was unfortunate how that Wink and Dabes thing ended up,”  Feliciano told reporters this week, via the New York Post.

Feliciano will be the starting right guard for the San Francisco 49ers in this Sunday’s Super Bowl showdown against the Kansas City Chiefs. His time with the Giants was short but he forged bonds with both men.

“I love both of them as coaches. I mean, once you get to know Wink and once you get to know Dabes it could be magic or it could end up how it ended up,” he said.

How it ended up was the fodder of many a media post across the league. Martindale and Daboll had a final blowout after the Giants fired two of Martindale’s closest confidants and coaches — brothers Drew and Kevin Wilkens — prompting Martindale to storm out of the facility and eventually leave the Giants’ organization.

“I think they’re both strong personalities and as you’ve seen, Dabes can explode,” Feliciano added. “As a guy that knows him, I know what you’re gonna get, and it’s not like a personal thing, it’s not anything but Dabes wants to win real, real bad. Even in Buffalo, he has more weight on his shoulders now that he’s the head coach. What did he do wrong that’s messing up the moment? And Wink is a strong dude. That’s probably what happened.”

In retrospect, Feliciano — a Long Island native — looks back on his time with the Giants favorably. He was a huge part of the first Giants team to reach the postseason in six years.

“To go with them to a new spot where there’s no expectations, they haven’t played well in a number of years,” Feliciano said. “Going there and being a leader and helping them turn it around, get into the playoffs, we had a playoff win, and doing it in New York it meant a lot more.”

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Should Giants consider Rex Ryan as a potential defensive coordinator?

The New York Giants are still seeking to fill the vacancy at defensive coordinator left by the departure of Wink Martindale after the 2023 season.

They have interviewed several candidates to no avail and have also been shunned, blocked, and rejected by others.

They could turn to defensive backs coach Jerome Henderson, who also interviewed for the job, but they were hoping to land an established name to run their defense.

The hosts over at WFAN’s afternoon show made a suggestion this week — former New York Jets head coach Rex Ryan.

“If you’re not attracting the best. . . are you gonna be able to find someone that gets the most out of this group?” co-host Evan Roberts said.

“I got another guy who is also desperate, and good. And that’s the key. . . you can’t deny this guy is really good at coordinating, and it would allow Brian Daboll to say, ‘You take care of the defense. I’m gonna fix the offense with this quarterback that we’re probably gonna draft. . . His name is Rex Ryan. . . he could be brilliant as a defensive coordinator.”

Ryan, 61, hasn’t been on an NFL sideline since being fired by the Buffalo Bills in December 2016. He’s worked as a television analyst since 2017.

Ryan would be a stretch of a hire and not likely to be high on the Giants’ list. His brash style would surely clash with that of head coach Brian Daboll.

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Mike Kafka expected to return as Giants’ offensive coordinator in 2024

After a coaching cycle that saw him draw interest from multiple teams for the second consecutive season, Mike Kafka is expected to return to the New York Giants in 2024 and reassume his role as the offensive coordinator.

The final domino fell on Wednesday when the Seattle Seahawks hired Mike Macdonald as their next head coach.

There have been multiple reports this offseason suggesting that Kafka is unhappy in East Rutherford due, in part, to a deteriorating relationship with head coach Brian Daboll.

At several points throughout the season, Daboll allegedly took play-calling duties away from Kafka only to give them back later. In addition to Daboll, quarterbacks coach Shea Tierney also reportedly handled play-calling duties at times.

In addition to those reports, it was also reported that Kafka might seek a lateral move if the Giants were to permit him to interview for other offensive coordinator jobs. However, their plan was always to retain Kafka.

Although Kafka is expected back as the OC, it’s unclear if he will continue calling plays or if Daboll will completely take over.



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Must Giants keep Mike Kafka in order to maintain some stability?

The New York Giants’ coaching staff is still in flux. Their coordinator positions are in three different phases.

This week, they hired former Jets assistant Michael Ghobrial as their new special teams coordinator to replace the recently dismissed Thomas McGaughey.

They are still seeking a replacement for defensive coordinator Wink Martindale, who left amid philosophical differences with head coach Brian Daboll.

That could also happen with offensive coordinator Mike Kafka, who is being considered for the head coaching gig in Seattle. Currently, Kafka’s star is rising. He is scheduled to coach the West squad in the upcoming East-West Shrine Bowl.

In a recent article, long-time New York Post Giants columnist Paul Schwartz points out that keeping Kafka would go a long way to helping Daboll from avoiding complete coordinator ‘chaos’.

They are the endangered species known as NFL offensive coordinators. The Giants still have theirs and, at the moment, Mike Kafka appears set to return for a third year on Brian Daboll’s staff. If that actually happens, it will represent stability in the most unstable of environs.

Pairing “stability’” and most anything that went down with the Giants’ offense in 2023 is risky business, but this is where we are.

Kafka is a low-key guy and has repeatedly deferred to Daboll’s leadership, especially when it comes to the playcalling. At 36, he is right in the wheelhouse of where NFL owners want their new head coaching hires to be.

More from Schwartz:

Behind closed doors, he works well with players, is smart and prepared and at a young age is already well-versed in walking into rooms for head coach interviews, having met with four different teams last year and being requested this cycle by the Titans and Seahawks.

Should the Giants lose Kafka to another team — whether the move be promotional or lateral — it would be a severe blow to Daboll given all that’s been reported about his volatile management style.

We saw this year how losing both coordinators can affect a team. The Philadelphia Eagles may have seemed functional without Jonathan Gannon and Shane Steichen coming off a Super Bowl appearance — opening the season 11-1 — but then could not sustain the success. They crumbled down the stretch and head coach Nick Sirianni is now on notice.

The Giants are coming off a 6-11 season and new coordinator leadership could very well put them back on a losing treadmill, something Giant fans will have little tolerance for.

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Volatility issues cost Brian Daboll coaching jobs prior to Giants hire

The big offseason headline plaguing the New York Giants has been the volatility of head coach Brian Daboll.

Reports surfaced in October that the hot-headed Daboll was at odds with defensive coordinator Wink Martindale and that things were beginning to boil over.

There was a belief that Martindale could be shown the door in-season but that ultimately culminated in early January when the two sides “parted ways.” Of course, that came after a major blow-up between Daboll and Martindale, which led to the latter storming out of the building.

Since then, additional reports have surfaced that Daboll’s work environment is “toxic” and his outbursts have become “personal.” Some staffers have even anonymously warned potential assistants to stay away.

There have been rumors that Daboll’s relationship with Buffalo Bills head coach Sean McDermott also reached a breaking point before he was hired as Giants head coach in 2022. And apparently, it goes back even further than that.

During a Friday appearance on WFAN, Connor Hughes of SNY reported that Daboll was passed over for several coaching jobs in recent years because of his volatility and his inability to justify his hot-headed nature.

“I talked to people that knew there were issues in Cleveland, when he was an offensive coordinator there. The same volatility and heatedness in Cleveland,” Hughes said. “Remember, Daboll went through several coaching cycles before he got his job. There were some of those issues that were turned up in those coaching cycles and coaching interviews, and they wanted him to address those. And he didn’t address them overly well in some of those interviews, which is why those teams passed on him despite his success in Buffalo.”

Hughes went on to note that this is something that could continue to “deteriorate” and it may result in offensive coordinator Mike Kafka attempting to leave for a lateral move (if he’s not hired as a head coach).

“There’s not a zero percent chance that he takes a lateral move. That’s not completely incomprehensible — that’s still a situation that could be out there,” Hughes said. “When you have a coach that loses all three coordinators and maybe two of which because they don’t want to work with him anymore, that’s a red flag.”

Like many others, Hughes believes Daboll is a good coach and capable of course-correcting in the same way Tom Coughlin did. And the Giants fully intend to give him that opportunity.

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5 things to know about the STC

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Ghobrial considers himself a very engaged, hands-on coach and he enjoys working side-by-side with his players.

“My coaching style is something to where, if I can’t show a player how to do it then I don’t feel comfortable teaching them that,” he’s said. “I always try to put myself in the mindset of them and if I’m asking them to do something very difficult, I want to know that. And how I can help those guys is actually being able to do it.

“Now, obviously, I can’t do that at the level of some of these guys but it puts me in the mindset of giving the guys the necessary tools to win, you know, having experienced it myself. And also just playing around with schematics and stuff.”



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