Giants’ Michael Ghobrial ‘excited’ to adjust to kickoff rule change

The New York Giants turned the page on the Thomas McGaughey era when they replaced him with a former Bill Walsh Diversity Fellow, 36-year-old Michael Ghobrial, who was an assistant with the Jets for the past three seasons.

On Monday, Ghobrial met with the Giants’ media as the team opened their voluntary offseason workouts. The main topic, of course, was the major change in the kickoff rule which takes effect this season.

Ghobrial was very forthcoming in his take on the change.

“This game is ever-evolving, and as a coordinator, there’s an instance where you have to try and stay ahead of all the rule changes and find out what are all the intricacies of what those provide, and this obviously is going to be some foreign territory, but for everybody across the league,” he said.

“And I think the NFL has done a hell of a job in terms of taking out the speed and space of this play in terms of kickoff to keep guys healthier, which is a big deal, but ultimately bringing a play that was almost dissolving with all the touchbacks and the fair catches that you were seeing.

“So it’s exciting to see. It’s exciting to game plan. It’s exciting to kind of find the little nuances when it comes to that specific rule change. But when it comes down to it, I’ve always felt that every special teams play requires a certain level of effort, a certain level of technique and a certain level of violence. So those will be the foundational pieces of that rule change. And then obviously figuring out what is our best foot forward in terms of attacking that. We’ll do that this spring.”

Ghobrial is more in line with what head coach Brian Daboll was looking for in an assistant. McGaughey was a veteran coach set in his ways, much like defensive coordinator Wink Martindale was. Both were replaced by Daboll this season by younger men whom Daboll can mold into coaches who can execute his vision for this team.

Ghobrial said he is excited to be part of the New York ‘Football’ Giants and plans on bringing his style to the special teams with an approach that deploys the “best 11 players on the roster on  special teams”

He explained what he’s looking for in his players and what he sees in the roster thus far.

“Some of the things that I look for, you know, when I look at special teams players are instincts, toughness and football IQ,” he said. “Those are three things that you kind of evaluate, whether it’s different schemes or anything, you’re trying to figure out, again, it goes back to putting your personnel in the best situation for them to have success.

“So those are three things that I kind of look at and you start to categorize guys, players, into two special teams categories. That, to me, is interior core players and outer core players, if you just look at like interior punt, your guard tackle slots and PP, and then your outer core players are your gunners, your speed guys.

“When I evaluated this roster, it was kind of like deciphering where guys fit in that mold, and then you start to look at what are guys’ strengths, what are guys’ challenges, how do we improve that, and also figure out what were the technique differences to where we can get guys acclimated to a new scheme, new technique and then ultimately be able to play at a high level.”

It’s a new day for the Giants and their special teams. On Tuesday, Ghobrial will meet with the entire team, an idea that Daboll is behind 100 percent.

“Ghobs will meet with the guys,” Daboll said on Monday. “The whole team, he wanted to meet with the whole team to talk about special teams so that will be tomorrow for him.”

And we’re off…

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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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New York Giants hire Michael Ghobrial as special teams coordinator

The New York Giants have announced the hire of Michael Ghobrial as their special teams coordinator.

Ghobrial had been with the New York Jets as their assistant special teams coach since 2021. Before that, he served as a special teams coordinator at three different college programs, including Washington State (2020), Hawaii (2018-19) and Tarleton State (2016-17).

In 2017, Ghobrial also spent time with the Detroit Lions as part of the Bill Walsh Diversity Coaching Fellowship.

More on Ghobrial’s football career:

Ghobrial began his coaching career at his alma mater, UCLA, first as an undergrad assistant (2009-10), then a quality control coach (2011) and finally as a graduate assistant (2012-13). Following his time with the Bruins, he coached at Syracuse (2014) and Colorado Mesa (2015), serving as the team’s co-special teams coordinator in addition to coaching the defensive line and outside linebackers.

Ghobrial spent two seasons as a defensive end with UCLA, where he earned his bachelor’s degree in history and a master’s degree in social science and comparative education.

For Ghobrial, who is replacing Thomas McGaughey, this will be his first special teams coordinator job at the NFL level.

In addition to Ghobrial, the Giants also interviewed Matt Harper (49ers assistant special teams coach), Carlos Polk (Bears assistant special teams coach), and Larry Izzo (Seahawks special teams coordinator).

New York had also requested interviews with Ryan Ficken (Chargers), Chris Tabor (Panthers), and Marquice Williams (Falcons) but were denied.

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Giants interview Jets’ Michael Ghobrial for ST coordinator, per report

The New York Giants have a new candidate for their special teams coordinator vacancy and he already works in the same state.

According to ESPN’s Jordan Raanan, the Giants interviewed New York Jets assistant special teams coach Michael Ghobrial for their special teams coordinator job.

Ghobrial has been with the Jets since 2021. Prior to that, he served as a special teams coordinator at three different college programs, including Washington State (2020), Hawaii (2018-19) and Tarleton State (2016-17).

Here’s a bit more on Ghobrial, per the Jets’ official site:

Ghobrial began his coaching career at his alma mater, UCLA, first as an undergrad assistant (2009-10), then a quality control coach (2011) and finally as a graduate assistant (2012-13). Following his time with the Bruins, he coached at Syracuse (2014) and Colorado Mesa (2015), serving as the team’s co-special teams coordinator in addition to coaching the defensive line and outside linebackers.

Spent two seasons as a defensive end with UCLA, where he earned his bachelor’s degree in history and a master’s degree in social science and comparative education.

This is the third interview the Giants have reportedly conducted with a special teams coordinator candidate in recent days after Big Blue spoke with Chicago Bears assistant special teams coach Carlos Polk on Thursday and San Francisco 49ers assistant special teams coach Matt Harper earlier in the week.



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