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Antoine Bethea

What are the priorities for the New York Giants heading into December?

December 1, 2019December 1, 2019 by Alexander Wilson
New York Giants, Dexter Lawrence

With the New York Giants sitting at 2-9 on the season and having lost their last nine games, December doesn’t mean much in terms of a playoff push or competitive finish. As players continue to pick up injuries and miss games, Big Blue will be forced to utilize the remainder of the season to develop their young players, similar to what they’ve been doing since the beginning of the 2019 campaign.

Head coach Pat Shurmur needs to focus on his youthful players that are progressing into potential starters. Making the shift from Antoine Bethea at free safety to Julian Love was the beginning of that transition. Love enjoyed a positive first game with the Giants, finishing with an overall grade of 80.1, per PFF. He recorded an interception and zero coverage receptions in the defensive backfield, far better than Bethea has shown this season.

The veteran free safety has been a liability in coverage but solid against the run. When defensive coordinator James Bettcher features Bethea in a strong-safety style, closer to the line of scrimmage, he has been effective. The secondary for the Giants will be a priority moving forward in December, with a focus on cornerback and free safety.

Corners DeAndre Baker and Sam Beal are two players who Shurmur will want to gain more film on. Baker has had an up-and-down season, showing promise at times but vulnerability at others. Last week against the Chicago Bears, Baker played 46 snaps compared to Beal’s 27. The latter has worked his way back from numerous injuries, the latest being a hamstring that kept him sidelined for a majority of the season.

When asked about his style compared to Beal’s, Baker stated (NY Post):

“Beal’s style is different than mine, and we’ve got two different skill sets,” Baker said. “You always stay prepared for when your number is called. I was watching everything as if I was in the game, still making the calls.”

The Giants will continue to rotate Baker and Beal in coverage, with the eventual idea to split reps 50/50. This will give Shurmur plenty of tape on Beal, who the Giants will need to factor into their plans next offseason.

The New York Giants must also iron out the defensive line:

One of the most significant moves for the Giants this season was the trade for Leonard Williams. The former Jet has the physical traits to be a great interior lineman, but his lack of consistency has plagued his career up to this point. Williams logged just one combined tackle in week 12, highlighting a disappointing performance for the former first-round pick.

GM Dave Gettleman giving up ample draft capital for the defender is looking like a wrong move and considering he’s a free agent after this season, the Giants have minimal leverage in contract talks. I estimate he will earn somewhere in the $12-14 million range.

Dexter Lawrence is another defender that will be prioritized in December. Allowing him to mesh with Williams and develop a chemistry with the former Jet is essential. Lawrence, who is ranked as one of the best interior defenders this season, has shown significant growth in his rookie campaign.

PFF wrote …

Lawrence once again put forth a very commendable performance from the middle of the Giants’ defensive front, and he ended the game with the seventh 70.0-plus overall game grade of his young career. His best work came in the run game, where he didn’t manage to record a run stop on the day, but he was a constant menace at the point of attack. He also added a hit and hurry from his 36 snaps as a pass-rusher. Through 12 weeks of action, Lawrence ranks 11th among 128 qualifying interior defensive linemen in overall grade, while his 88.8 run-defense grade ranks fifth among that same group of players.

The Giants have a great building block in Lawrence, who’s quickly becoming a dominant force in the trenches. Another solid contributor has been Oshane Ximines. The third-round selection has logged two sacks, and four QB hits in his rookie year, so far. While those numbers don’t jump off the screen, he has been a rotational piece behind Markus Golden. He has averaged less than 50% of defensive snaps this season, but he has been more prominent on special teams.

 

Categories New York Giants Tags Antoine Bethea, DeAndre Baker, Dexter Lawrence, Giants, Julian Love, New York Giants, NYG, Sam Beal Leave a comment

New York Giants news, 11/28 – Is Julian Love the future at free safety?

November 28, 2019 by Alexander Wilson

Good Morning, New York Giants Fans!

The New York Giants’ mentality towards the 2019 season was to develop their youth and provide them with essential live-action experience. Rookies, such has DeAndre Baker, Corey Ballentine, Dexter Lawrence, and Oshane Ximines, have all been utilized frequently this season on defense.

However, Julian Love, cornerback out of Notre Dame, has been absent the entire season, as a precaution for his transition from cornerback to free safety. The Giants have kept him protected from live-action, allowing him to learn from Antoine Bethea and progress mentality within the position. In week 12, though, he was given the green light to enjoy some time on the field with the first team.

Love earned 55% of defensive snaps against the Chicago Bears, coming down with an interception on an errant Mitchell Trubisky throw. He finished the day with an 80.1 grade, according to PFF. He did not allow a reception in coverage during his 42 snaps, which is stellar, considering how porous Bethea has been in coverage this season.

Reading what Julian Love went through before this game made this INT that much better. Hopefully it’s the first of many as our starting FS. Hopefully he’ll get more chances this year. pic.twitter.com/BVOCnh718e

— Danny King (@DannyKingNFL) November 26, 2019

Bethea is currently the 24th ranked safety, per PFF. His 71.9 rating tells the story in regards to his coverage abilities, but his 79.8 grade against the run is what has made him effective at times. Defensive coordinator James Bettcher has utilized him closer to the line of scrimmage in recent weeks to supplement his weak coverage skills. He recorded an interception on the first play of the game against the Dallas Cowboys in week 9, lined up about five yards off the LOS.

WOW! Antoine Bethea with the interception on the first play from scrimmage!@Giants | #GiantsPride

📺: #DALvsNYG on ESPN
📱: NFL app // Yahoo Sports App
Watch free on mobile: https://t.co/ZpxWpD9DPm pic.twitter.com/cAhooWUrGv

— NFL (@NFL) November 5, 2019

I expect to see Love in an expanded role moving forward, as the New York Giants seem ready to instill their confidence in the rookie defensive back. He has undoubtedly earned the opportunity to see more reps in coverage, and his development should be a priority for head coach Pat Shurmur and James Bettcher.

Nonetheless–

Your top news of the day:

Steve Serby – Giants’ receiver shuffle continues with Da’Mari Scott signing

Alexander Wilson – New York Giants: Who’s to blame for Saquon Barkley’s struggles?

John Fennelly – Giants’ Daniel Jones quietly moving up list for TD passes to start career

Mark Schofield – Daniel Jones: Game vs. Bears filled with missed opportunities

Michael Eisen – Notebook: Jones, Barkley leading short-handed offense

Categories New York Giants Tags Antoine Bethea, Giants, James Bettcher, Julian Love, New York Giants, NYG, Pat Shurmur Leave a comment

New York Giants news, 11/27 – 3 defenders to stay and 3 to hit the road in 2020

November 27, 2019 by Alexander Wilson
New York Giants, Alec Ogletree

Good Morning, New York Giants Fans!

The 2020 offseason will be full of turnover for the New York Giants, again. The defense is in dire need of support at numerous positions, especially at the inside and outside linebacker positions.

Let’s take a look at three players that will stay, and three that will go:

1.) Markus Golden – STAY

The only productive pass-rusher for the Giants this season has been Markus Golden, who has logged 7.5 sacks through 12 weeks. The Giants are still in need of a premium pass-rusher, but Golden is more than capable and should be retained. He won’t be paid like one of the best in the league, but he will garner a healthy contract nonetheless. The Giants have the money to invest, and if they’re keen on pairing him with another top-end outside linebacker, retaining him should be an easy decision.

2.) Alec Ogletree – GO

Ogletree’s contract takes a significant dip in dead-cap next season ($3.5 million), making him expendable. If Big Blue keeps him on the roster, he will count a whopping $11.75 million in dead-cap, an amount they shouldn’t be willing to pay for his incapable services.

Not only has Ogletree been absent against the run for a majority of his tenure with the Giants, but his coverage skills are abysmal. The $8.25 million in cap-space the Giants save can be allocated towards a variety of different positions, which seems to be the likely scenario.

3.) Michael Thomas – STAY

Thomas, who’s a special team maestro, will be a free agent after this season. The New York Giants must make it a priority to re-sign him and retain his stellar abilities. Thomas isn’t a defensive threat by any means, but his value on special teams is worth the investment 100x over.

4.) Leonard Williams – GO

In three games with the Giants, Williams has been mostly absent. Against the Bears, he finished with one total tackle and one QB hit. Against the Jets, he logged four QB hits and three combined tackles. For the most part, Williams hasn’t earned the 3rd round value GM Dave Gettleman placed on his head when he traded for him.

The Jets were begging to get rid of him, and Gettleman gave up far too much value, dropping a fifth and third-round pick (if he re-signs before the new league year). Considering the valuable players Gettleman has hit on later in the draft; he might have missed big on this deal.

5.)  Janoris Jenkins – STAY

Jenkins is the only trustworthy cornerback on the team, and his contract is relatively friendly considering the market-value of top corners in the NFL. If the Giants were keen on getting rid of Jenkins, they would have traded him before the deadline, which indicates he will likely remain with the team for at least one more season.

The veteran corner has displayed a lack of effort at times, but can you blame him for the lack of quality the Giants have surrounded him with in recent years? Big Blue needs a top corner, and Jenkins fits the bill perfectly for one more season.

6.) Antoine Bethea – GO

Bethea was signed to supplement the free safety position with Curtis Riley, leaving in free agency. So far, I miss Riley, who was known for taking bad angles at ball-carriers. Bethea is an absolute liability in the secondary but is solid closer to the line of scrimmage in a strong safety role.

The Giants don’t have a use for him as Julian Love secured an interception in Sunday’s loss to the Bears, seeing his highest snap-count this season. The Giants seem him as a potential long-term solution at the position.

Nonetheless–

Your top news of the day:

Chris Pflum – Carl Banks named semi-finalist for Pro Football Hall of Fame

John Fennelly – Dave Gettleman has one more offseason to turn Giants around

John Fennelly – Lawrence Tynes is right: There’s nothing exciting about these Giants

Mike Vaccaro – Pat Shurmur can’t keep testing John’s Mara’s patience

Matt Lombardo – Was DeAndre Baker benched vs. Chicago Bears? Why Giants switched to Sam Beal at outside CB
Categories New York Giants Tags Alec Ogletree, Antoine Bethea, Giants, janoris jenkins, Leonard Williams, markus golden, michael thomas, New York Giants, NYG Leave a comment

New York Giants news, 11/15 – Ranking the weakest positions on defense

November 15, 2019November 15, 2019 by Alexander Wilson
New York Jets, Markus Golden

Good Morning, New York Giants Fans!

The New York Giants have taken the word “rebuild” and turned it into an everlasting event that has no end. The better phrase would be “eternal rebuild,” considering their current state at 2-8 on the season.

Head coach Pat Shurmur has failed to show he can be a leader and disciplinary, especially in the secondary where a lack of effort has plagued the unit through the first 10 weeks of the season.

However, let’s take a peek at the weakest positions on the defensive side of the ball:

1.) Linebacker

With rookie Ryan Connelly suffering a torn ACL in the waning moments of a week four win over the Washington Redskins, every bit of quality the team had at the position was thrown out the window. Connelly managed to secure the top spot on the team in just four games, overtaking Alec Ogletree with little resistance.

The reality is, Connelly will have to regain his form and develop as if he were a rookie. General manager Dave Gettleman believes he has a solid piece to the puzzle in the Wisconsin product, but he must pair him with another solid linebacker. The only other quality option is Shaq Thompson in free agency, meaning he could look to the draft once again.

2.) Free safety

Antoine Bethea has to go. The glorified strong safety has been an absolute liability in the defensive backfield, but he serves a purpose closer to the line of scrimmage. His astronomical tackle totals are a bad sign for the defense, as it tells a story of missed tackles and bad coverage.

The New York Giants need a better cover safety to lock of deep balls and act as a ball-hawk. HaHa Clinton-Dix could be a solid target.

3.) Slot corner

With Corey Ballentine being chewed up as the Giants’ current slot corner, they must invest in the position further. Grant Haley is great against the run but is a liability in coverage as well, putting the Giants defense at a severe disadvantage against teams with superior slot-receivers.

4.) Pass rushers

Markus Golden has been the only serviceable option for Big Blue at outside linebacker. Logging 6.5 sacks, 15 QB hits and seven tackles for a loss, he has been reliable, but a one-year contract will force the Giants to make a decision on his future. Do they pay big money and retain him or let him walk and allocate the investment elsewhere? They could look to the draft to solidify the position with a player like Chase Young and sign another option to complement him, but if they choose to bring Golden back, I would be satisfied.

Nonetheless–

Your top news of the day:

Jordan Raanan – Giants’ Daniel Jones looks to trademark ‘Danny Dimes’ nickname

Alexander Wilson – New York Giants: Daniel Jones is keeping Pat Shurmur’s job safe

Paul Schwartz – It’s time for Giants to be seriously concerned about DeAndre Baker
Ed Valentine – 9 New York Giants players to watch over the final six games

Ralph Vacchiano – NFL scouts weigh in on Giants’ building blocks for the future

Categories New York Giants Tags Alec Ogletree, Antoine Bethea, Giants, markus golden, New York Giants, NYG, ryan connelly Leave a comment

New York Giants: 3 things we learned from loss to Cowboys on Monday

November 5, 2019 by Alexander Wilson
New York Giants, Antoine Bethea

Falling 37-18 on a Monday night to the Dallas Cowboys is a nightmare for any New York Giants fan, and that nightmare became a reality at MetLife in week nine. As the Cowboys fans overwhelmed a somber crowd, or what was left of a Giants fan-base caked in defensive torment and offensive turmoil, it struck me. This season was never meant to be a successful one.

The 2019 campaign held one purpose, and that was to develop the rookies to the point of self-sufficiency. Quarterback Daniel Jones is the priority for the Giants brass, ensuring he has all of the tools to build and adapt to the NFL. He has certainly experienced his fair amount of struggles, notably his 18 total turnovers on the season. However, he has also experienced success and dominance in specific moments. Putting all of his new skills together to achieve consistency is the ultimate goal.

Here are the three things we realized from the New York Giants loss to the Cowboys:

1.) Dave Gettleman might have made a mistake with DeAndre Baker

With the game winding down and the Giants forcing the Cowboys into a third-and-long situation, the hopes were that the defense could stop Dak Prescott and the Cowboys offense in time to attempt a comeback in the fourth quarter. If not for Baker’s inability to recognize his defensive scheme, they might have had a chance at scoring down one possession.

Prescott threw a dart across the middle to Amari Cooper, who was running free. Baker, who was supposed to be trailing Cooper, thought was supposed to be in zone-coverage, when, in fact, he was expected to be man-marking Dallas’ best receiver. Cooper took the pass 44-yards to the house to provide the dagger in a tight game.

Here’s the Amari Cooper TD. pic.twitter.com/oUZ4w2H8pC

— Bill Barnwell (@billbarnwell) November 5, 2019

While it’s Baker’s rookie season, there hasn’t been much success for him to lean on. There’s no question his confidence is hurting. Gettleman might have invested too much in Baker, but it’s still too soon to call him a bust.

2.) The Giants can be efficient

The first half of the game for Big Blue was adequate. Leading 12-3 in the second quarter, the Giants had a firm grip on the game before giving up 10 points in the final minute of the first half. This only proves they are capable of being a good team and playing up to the competition.

While the loss undoubtedly stings, there are things to be excited about, such as Golden Tate making fantastic one-handed catches and the Giants being the first team this season to convert a third-and-long against the Cowboys. Hurdles accompany youth, and it’s important to remind yourself that this team is only in year two of an entire roster overhaul.

3.) Free safety is a concern

Despite free safety Antoine Bethea intercepting Prescott on the very first play of the game and later recovering a fumble, his coverage abilities are abysmal. Finding a replacement for Bethea must be a priority for the Giants next offseason. Lacking a true ball-hawk in the secondary has hurt them in the deep passing game at times, especially on plays where the cornerbacks make significant mental mistakes. An excellent free safety can sometimes cover up those minor mishaps on the outside.

One important stat to consider is Bethea’s tackle totals (67 combined). When your free safety has the most combined tackles on the team, that’s often a good indicator that running backs are bursting through the initial wave or receivers are working the middle of the field well. As we have seen, it’s a combination of both.

Categories New York Giants Tags Antoine Bethea, Daniel Jones, DeAndre Baker, Giants, New York Giants, NYG Leave a comment

New York Giants news, 10/27 – Antoine Bethea to the bench? offensive line, more

October 27, 2019 by Alexander Wilson
New York Giants, Antoine Bethea

Good Morning, New York Giants Fans!

The New York Giants signed veteran safety Antoine Bethea to hold down the deep portion of the secondary, and he’s done all but that in his first season with Big Blue. Logging 55 combined tackles through five weeks, Bethea has just one pass defended, an astounding number for a player whose primary job is to defend the deep-ball.

Bethea has been playing more of a strong safety role after further investigation, running up to stop the run, and clean up missed tackles. Jabrill Peppers leads the team with 11. However, the Giants have been torched deep down the field on numerous occasions; just ask Janoris Jenkins, who allowed Mike Evans to trample the secondary for 190 yards and three scores in week three.

The New York Giants could look to move on from Bethea and star Michael Thomas instead. Thomas is a physical player that has an unstoppable motor. He’s a special team maestro which has forced the Giants to utilize him less on defense. He blocked a punt against the Arizona Cardinals last weekend, swinging the momentum in favor of the Giants for a portion of the game.

I would love to see more of Thomas in the secondary moving forward, as Bethea has been a none factor. Making a change is necessary, especially since the defense has given up 90 points in the past three weeks.

What unit needs to step up against the Detroit Lions:

The offensive line needs to come together and produce a solid game against a weak Detroit Lions team. With one of the worst defenses in the NFL, the Giants offensive should theoretically be unstoppable, but we said the same thing against the Cardinals.

Left tackle Nate Solder must elevate his game, and Mike Remmers has to lock down Jones’ vision side. Giving him ample time in the pocket will see Jones’ production sky-rocket, considering his tendency to hold onto the ball for too long. This will be a statement game for the New York Giants offensive front, who’s in dire need of a firm/confidence-inducing performance.

Nonetheless–

Your top news of the day:

John Fennelly – Giants’ B.J. Hill experiencing a sophomore slump in 2019

Paul Schwartz – Giants’ painful rookie woes go well beyond Daniel Jones

Charles Vitolo – New York Giants: Is the Antoine Bethea experiment finally over?
Mark Schofield – Fixing an ailing Daniel Jones: A prescription for helping the Giants’ rookie quarterback
Alexander Wilson – New York Giants: What must happen for Janoris Jenkins to be traded
Categories New York Giants Tags Antoine Bethea, Giants, michael thomas, Mike Remmers, Nate Solder, New York Giants, NYG Leave a comment

New York Giants: What’s Going On With DeAndre Baker?

September 22, 2019 by Anthony Rivardo
New York Giants, DeAndre Baker

The New York Giants‘ secondary has been one of the league’s worst over the past two years. In 2017, the Giants’ secondary allowed 252.4 passing yards per game (ranked 31st in the NFL). In 2018, the Giants’ secondary allowed 252.8 passing yards (ranked 23rd in the NFL), showing minimal to no improvement. Through the first two weeks of the 2019 season, the Giants’ pass defense somehow looks even worse.

DeAndre Baker is a first-round rookie corner back that has struggled immensley transitioning to the NFL these first two weeks. He needs to improve in a hurry if the Giantss want to win games this season. But is DeAndre Baker fully to blame for his poor performance or are there other factors involved?

How Bad Has He Been?

DeAndre Baker was a strong prospect coming out of college. He was well worth the first-round pick that the Giants spent on him and could have easily been picked higher. Unfortunately, that impact has not been seen yet on the field for Big Blue.

Through two games, DeAndre Baker has allowed 11 receptions on 13 targets, 272 yards, 2 TD’s, and a 158.3 passer rating to opposing to QB’s. Opposing quarterbacks have been simply picking on Baker and his inexperience.

DeAndre Baker has been a huge liability on the Giants’ defense so far. For a rookie that had so much promise coming out of college, it sure has been disappointing to watch him fail to live up to the hype so far. But maybe his poor performance is not all his fault.

Is James Bettcher To Blame?

Many will make the case that DeAndre Baker’s recent struggles are not to his own fault. Some will argue that defensive coordinator James Bettcher is truly to blame. It is likely that both Baker’s and Bettcher’s performances are working hand in hand.

The Giants’ defense has been caught making numerous mistakes that demonstrate an overarching issue from the coaching position. Multiple times per game, the Giants’ defense is seen making a miscommunication that leads to a huge gain for the opposing offense.

Below is an animated clip from the Giants’ week two loss against the Buffalo Bills. On the play being animated, the Giants were completely confused while running a basic cover three defense, causing them to let up a 51-yard gain to Cole Beasley.

51-yard pass to Cole Beasley.

Looks to me like cover-3 and both Deandre Baker (27) and Antoine Bethea (41) mark the wrong receiver.

Animation via @NextGenStats pic.twitter.com/KCcKeiijaO

— Seth Walder (@SethWalder) September 15, 2019

DeAndre Baker made a mistake on this play. But so did Antoine Bethea. Bethea is a fourteen-year, 35 year-old veteran safety that has played in James Bettcher’s system before as a member of the Arizona Cardinals. So why is it that both Baker and Bethea made a mistake on this play?

Both players, the veteran and the rookie, made a mistake and mixed up the coverage assignments on this play. These mistakes occur far too frequently for the blame to be placed solely on one rookie cornerback. Granted, Baker has a lot to improve on, but he is not the only one struggling to find their place in this defense.

Here is another play to demonstrate the bigger issue on defense (James Bettcher). This is a crucial 3rd-and-4 early in the first quarter. The Bills had receiver Cole Beasley out wide to the left, matched up against him was DeAndre Baker. In this third and short situation, one would expect the Giants’ cornerbacks to be in press coverage to keep the Bills from gaining the short four yards underneath. Instead, Bettcher calls a play that puts DeAndre Baker six yards away from the line of scrimmage.

The #Giants traded into the 1st round to select DeAndre Baker. The best man coverage corner in the draft. Great at pressing at the line. Here is where he lines up in this secondary. Why doesn’t Bettcher play to strengths? pic.twitter.com/vlRJSPURyg

— Jimmy Coppa (@jimmy_coppa) September 16, 2019

The Bills picked up this first down on a slant route to Cole Beasley. Because DeAndre Baker was playing so far off of Beasley, he was allowed to run this slant with a free release and no cornerback guarding him as he cut towards the middle of the field.

This is poor situational play-calling. Simple pitch and catch for the Buffalo Bills. Sure, this is technically DeAndre Baker’s fault for allowing his matchup to make the catch and gain the first down. But why is James Bettcher not calling plays that require DeAndre Baker to be playing press coverage in this situation.

The tweet also points out something very important to consider when breaking down this play: DeAndre Baker is a press-man cornerback. That is what he was good at in college. That is what he will be good at in the NFL. Baker is physical at the line of scrimmage. James Bettcher needs to be aware of this and needs to scheme his defense according to his players’ strengths and weaknesses.

Categories New York Giants Tags Antoine Bethea, DeAndre Baker, Giants, James Bettcher, New York Giants, NYG Leave a comment

Former New York Giants star comments on DeAndre Baker’s poor performance

September 16, 2019 by Alexander Wilson
New York Giants, Jabrill Peppers, Buffalo Bills, Cole Beasley

After two weeks of regular season play, the New York Giants defense has allowed 882 yards and nine touchdowns (NFL.com). Most of this production has come at the expense of rookie cornerback DeAndre Baker and the secondary. Baker, one of college’s dominant press cornerbacks in 2018, has been slaughtered in the defensive backfield.

Note a specific about Baker mentioned above — he’s a press-corner. Defensive coordinator James Bettcher’s scheme has forced Baker to play off-ball coverage, a weakness in his game and a skill he’s attempting to learn during consequential competition. This preseason, Baker looked excellent in coverage and locked down Giants receivers in practice, but those successes haven’t translated against actual opponents. His confidence seems to be degrading at an astronomical rate.

Former New York Giants legend Carl Banks gave his opinion on the matter over twitter:

I haven’t spoken to Deandre Baker but I assure you his head is spinning and overloaded with information.. how do I know? He did something that defies the basic instincts of playing CB Exhibit A.. Beasley 51yd completion, Baker turned and followed the wr up the seam

The basic instinct of any corner should be to cover the boundary route and not favor the seam where the safety should be present. Baker bit on the seam route and allowed a 51-yard completion to Cole Beasley.

51-yard pass to Cole Beasley.

Looks to me like cover-3 and both Deandre Baker (27) and Antoine Bethea (41) mark the wrong receiver.

Animation via @NextGenStats pic.twitter.com/KCcKeiijaO

— Seth Walder (@SethWalder) September 15, 2019

Not only does Baker follow the wrong man, but it seems as if he reacted to Antoine Bethea double-teaming No. 16 with Janoris Jenkins running step by step beside him. Bethea, a veteran in the secondary and a supposed leader, cannot make mental mistakes that force Baker to make decisions like this. If it weren’t Beasley making the catch, it would have been No. 88 streaking down the middle for a score.

Moving forward, Baker needs to be given the autonomy to press-cover, his strength. It’s possible the Giants are testing him and giving him the time to refine his off-ball coverage skills, but they’re now 0-2 with a vast majority of the blame on Baker and the secondary.

Bettcher’s scheme might not fit the style of the players on the roster. I’m a fan of the 3-4 defense, especially with Dexter Lawrence and B.J. Hill upfront, but the outside linebacker/pass rushers aren’t producing enough, which ultimately hurts the secondary.

Categories New York Giants Tags Antoine Bethea, DeAndre Baker, Dexter Lawrence, Giants, New York Giants, NYG Leave a comment

New York Giants Practice Report, 7/31

August 1, 2019 by Christian Morell
New York Giants, Julian Love, DeAndre Baker, Julian Love

The New York Giants held their second consecutive practice indoors yesterday due to extreme heat and thunder, 7/31.

Players who stood out:

As much as many are craving a QB competition this is Eli’s best camp in years, maybe ever. His arm has looked fine and his consistency is sharp. He had a nice connection with Golden Tate in the intermediate areas of the field yesterday.

Alonzo Russell continues to work with the second-team offense and certainly makes enough plays to get first-team reps. So far he looks like he might actually make the team considering he is the pass catcher Daniel Jones is most in sync with early on. Today the two connected for a touchdown in the red zone during a 2-minute drill.

Oshane Ximines hasn’t gotten to the quarterback a whole lot but he gets into the backfield and batted down a Daniel Jones pass which has been a trend for 3 straight practices. His quickness looks like a handful for offensive linemen.

Antoine Bethea doesn’t seem to get beat very often leading to some quiet stretches of practice but today he intercepted a pass from Manning intended for Barkley on a wheel route. Check it out:

Terribly underthrown ball by Eli Manning, picked off by Antoine Bethea. #Giants #NFL pic.twitter.com/WA9p6WHw77

— Matt Lombardo (@MattLombardoNFL) July 31, 2019

First and Second team cornerbacks have been active since camp opened. Jenkins and Baker are expected to produce but guys like Julian Love, Grant Haley, Sam Beal, and Corey Ballentine make a lot of plays every day. Whether it’s interceptions or deflections they have all done more good than bad in camp so far. This will be a strong unit for the first time in a while.

Golden Tate has a hard time doing much deep down the field but he’s establishing a good connection with Eli in the intermediate areas of the field. Today he made some nice grabs in tight coverage.

Lorenzo Carter looks like he’s progressed again since the pads came on a few practices ago. He got into the backfield a little more than he has in the last few days. He was potentially in range for a couple of sacks but hard to tell until there’s a quarterback he can actually hit.

Camp Battles:

Oshane Ximines might be locked into pass rusher number four duties by default. There’s not much behind him and with Markus Golden on light duty, he saw a lot of time against the first-team offense. The good news is he’s more polished than your typical 3rd round pass rusher.

Alonzo Russell continues to work with the second-team but he looks worthy of a camp battle with Bennie Fowler. He’s routinely made plays with Daniel Jones in every practice and caught a touchdown pass from Jones during a two-minute drill. Keeping a receiver that connects well with your future quarterback always sounds like a smart move.

This is a *perfect* back-shoulder throw by Daniel Jones to Alonzo Russell for a touchdown. #Giants pic.twitter.com/88LFCqyv0T

— Matt Lombardo (@MattLombardoNFL) July 31, 2019

Tae Davis seems to have a lead on BJ Goodson at this point at inside linebacker but Ryan Connelly seems like he’s determined to make this a three-way battle. Connelly was active with the second-team defense with a pass deflection and a would-be sack on Jones.

Wayne Gallman remains ahead of Rod Smith in the race for the third running back spot. Paul Perkins seems like he’s already claimed the second spot.

Bumps and Bruises:

Sterling Shepard participated in team drills, he looks like he’s playing week 1 of the regular season barring a setback.

Sam Beal worked his way back into practice and had a nice performance with a pass deflection and excellent coverage against second-team receivers. Beal looks like one of the best reserve cornerbacks in the league.

Amba Etta-Tawo couldn’t practice due to an illness.

Markus Golden isn’t injured but had an easy day to manage his workload.

Significant injuries:

Big George is still in under the concussion protocol with hopes of being cleared before the first preseason game next week.

Mark McLaurin could potentially miss the entire season with a foot fracture.

Final Thoughts:

The secondary continues to be one of the main standouts from practice every day whether it’s the first-team or second-team. James Bettcher should have all of the pieces he needs on the backend to support an aggressive defense in 2019.

Categories New York Giants Tags Alonzo Russell, Antoine Bethea, Daniel Jones, DeAndre Baker, Eli Manning, Giants, Giants Training Camp, Julian Love, New York Giants, NYG, Oshane Ximines Leave a comment

New York Giants to bring veteran safety Tre Boston for a visit

July 22, 2019 by Alexander Wilson
New York Giants bring in Tre Boston for a visit.

Prior to the start of training camp, the New York Giants will bring in veteran safety Tre Boston for a visit. The seasoned defender could be a good grab for a team that’s relying heavily on Antoine Bethea to sure up the defensive backfield.

Finishing 2018 on a one-year, $1.5 million contract with the Arizona Cardinals, Boston put together a solid season. Ranking as the 24th highest-graded-safety as per PFF with a 74.1 overall grade, he proved he can still be a capable starter. Allowing just 18 receptions on 30 targets for 189 yards and two scores, Boston would be a cheap signing that can act as a quality reserve option.

Right before training camp, the #Giants are bringing in FA safety Tre Boston for a visit today, source said. A potential signing.

— Ian Rapoport (@RapSheet) July 22, 2019

One thing I like about Boston is his injury history, playing in 72 of a possible 80 games in five seasons. He’s collected 17 passes defended in the past two seasons alone.

Going into a new situation last season, he forced an incompletion percentage of (26.7%) which ranked fourth among safeties with at least 10 targets. Additionally, his 61.0 passer rating was the sixth-best among safeties. In all likelihood, Boston would be the backup to Bethea who’s a sure tackler.

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What would Boston offer the New York Giants?

I do like Tre’s versatility, however, as he can play free safety and strong safety, giving the Giants a utility option to interchange between the two in case Jabrill Peppers misses any time.

Keep an eye on this development as the Giants could very well sign him to a cheap deal.

Categories New York Giants Tags Antoine Bethea, Giants, New York Giants, NYG, Tre Boston Leave a comment
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