The Giants had the No. 1 pick in their grasp heading into Week 17 but then they beat the Colts, which dropped them out of the top spot, making it far more difficult to land quarterback Shedeur Sanders. There was no thought in Mara’s mind that his team should lose in order to retain that top pick.
Fans who wanted sweeping change as a result of the Giants going 3-14 in the 100th season in franchise history will be disappointed by this.
Say this for New York Giants fans: The team’s dreadful season hasn’t dampened your interest in the team. The first mailbag of the offseason is overflowing. There were so many questions that I divided my responses into two parts. Today, I’ll tackle the ownership, general manager and coaching queries. On Friday, I’ll address questions on the roster.
After making the baffling decision to retain the failed third-year regime of general manager Joe Schoen and coach Brian Daboll, Giants co-owner John Mara tried to explain himself. Mara — though not co-owner Steve Tisch — spoke to reporters Monday morning,
In the weeks prior to the end of the 2024 NFL season, as planes flew over MetLife Stadium with messages from unhappy fans and discussion swirled about the futures of New York Giants head coach Brian Daboll and GM Joe Schoen,
The Giants finished off one of the worst seasons in franchise history against the Philadelphia Eagles on Sunday.
Joe Schoen and Brian Daboll are returning for a fourth year with the New York Giants to complete the job they were hired to do.
Mara was lost in a sea of contradictions Monday as he tried to defend the indefensible decision of retaining Brian Daboll and Joe Schoen.
Schoen and Daboll just concluded an historically bad 3-14 campaign in the Giants’ 100th season as a franchise. It was the most losses by a Giants team in the club’s 100 years.