New York Giants: Louis Riddick speaks on Daniel Jones turnover problem

New York Giants, Daniel Jones

This season will be a big deal for the evaluation of New York Giants QB Daniel Jones. The team might have a new GM next year and one of the big questions will revolve around what Jones’ future with the franchise is. That means that even if the games later this year end up being meaningless, there’s still a huge incentive for Daniel Jones and other members of the offense to perform.

The takes about Jones vary greatly depending on who you talk to, but one of the main narratives is that the Giants have to wait and see. After all, the supporting cast around Jones isn’t a good one right now. The offensive line has blocked poorly all season and top weapon Saquon Barkley is out for the year, forcing more work onto Jones’ shoulders.

One person who supports the ‘wait and see’ narrative is Louis Riddick, who was considered himself for the General Manager position in the past. But instead, it went to Dave Gettleman and everyone is familiar on how the results have been from that.

Daniel Jones and the turnover problem

A problem that has plagued Jones specifically is turning the ball over. He’s done it almost as much as any other player in the league this season.

“If he doesn’t correct it and it becomes a bigger problem, then you go to the next phase of the evaluation: Is this his surroundings or is this who he is now? They are not at that point yet — and I don’t think anybody needs to be at that point until you get a more stable supporting cast, and you keep a coaching staff in place for more than one year,” Riddick told the New York Post.

“You can’t make sweeping decisions about what kind of player he is going to be because there are too many things around him that are uncertain,” Riddick continued on the subject. “The one thing he does need to cut down is turning over the football because then you have no shot of winning. If he keeps doing that, you are not going to win games. If you don’t win games, people look to replace you.”

Jones has 19 career interceptions and 20 career games with a number of fumbles too for added measure. His turnover problem has hardly been exaggerated by critics, and against a good defense like Tampa Bay, we’ll get a chance to see if Jones can take a step forward or if he’ll fall further backwards in that regard.

New York Giants: One stat illustrates how bad NFC East QBs have been

New York Giants, Daniel Jones

This isn’t a good year to be any one of the teams in the NFC East. The New York Giants have their own problems, but so does every other team in the division. And it looks like the team that eventually makes it out of the NFC East and into the playoffs will be one of the worst teams in history to pull off the accomplishment.

It’s not surprising, then, that a lot of this bad play starts with the position that’s widely considered the most important in football – quarterback. The QB play in this division just hasn’t been good. It’s been bad enough, in fact, that three out of the four passing leaders in the league are lagging behind a player that hasn’t played since week five.

Dak Prescott is still the NFC East leader

Dwayne Haskins, the fourth leading passer in the division, has found his way to the bench in Washington and rumors are swirling that he’ll end up traded. Daniel Jones of the Giants, on the other hand, is the team’s only starting option but is third on the list.

It’s not entirely Jones’ fault, however. One could argue that it’s not even mostly his fault. The tackle that the Giants selected to protect Jones on the left side hasn’t panned out, many passes have been dropped by receivers, and Jones overall has some of the worst protection in the league.

But even if it isn’t Jones’ fault entirely, it’s unclear what the Giants intend to do if they have a chance to restart their rebuild by taking Trevor Lawrence in the Draft. That’s still a hypothetical. And it depends on the team not repeating last year’s problem of winning too many meaningless games near the end of the year and falling in draft position.

The silver lining, though, is that no other team in the division is in a good spot quarterback wise either. The Giants aren’t exactly in a unique spot here, but it remains to be seen how each team intends on fixing their problems.

New York Giants: Pros and cons of a potential Kevin Zeitler trade

The 2020 NFL trade deadline is right around the corner. The New York Giants have already gotten active, trading away edge rusher Markus Golden to the Arizona Cardinals for a sixth-round draft pick. The Giants have had a few other players’ names come up in trade discussions, too. Veteran wide receiver Golden Tate is a trade candidate whose value is increasing. Offensive guard Kevin Zeitler is another name that teams have called about.

Kevin Zeitler was traded to the Giants in 2019. Since then, he has started in all but one game for the Giants. Zeitler has been one of the team’s best players since his arrival in New Jersey. But with the Giants sitting at the bottom of the NFC East with a lowly 1-6 record, there is a chance they start to sell off their best players to the highest bidders. How would the Giants benefit from a potential Kevin Zeitler trade?

Pros

The Giants are a young, rebuilding football team. They invested heavily into their offensive line this offseason, particularly through the 2020 NFL Draft. New York drafted two offensive tackles and one interior offensive lineman in this year’s draft. That interior offensive lineman is Shane Lemieux out of Oregon, and he would be the new starting right guard if Kevin Zeitler were to be traded.

If Zeitler were to be traded, the Giants would be able to give Lemieux a starting role for the final 8 weeks of the season. This would allow them to have plenty of NFL film on Lemieux going into the offseason before deciding whether or not to sign or draft another offensive lineman.

Best case scenario, Lemieux impresses and instills confidence in the Giants that he can be a long-term starter at offensive guard. Worst case scenario, Lemieux struggles and proves not to be the long-term answer, indicating to the Giants that they need to find a new offensive guard in the offseason.

Regardless, Kevin Zeitler is not a long-term answer at offensive guard. He is 31-years-old and has not been the same player this year that he was the seasons prior. Moving on from Zeitler would also free up $10 million in salary cap for the Giants (Spotrac).

Trading away Kevin Zeitler would likely acquire the Giants a day-two pick in the NFL Draft. He is their best offensive player and most valuable trade asset. The Giants would be able to gain draft capital and give Shane Lemieux valuable game experience. These are great benefits to trading away Kevin Zeitler, but there are drawbacks also.

Cons

If the Giants do trade Kevin Zeitler away, their offensive line will be going from bad to worse. The Giants’ offensive line is one of the worst in the NFL despite having Kevin Zeitler in the starting five. Taking him away would put Daniel Jones in harm’s way.

Additionally, taking Kevin Zeitler out of the starting lineup and thrusting Shane Lemieux in there could be bad for the rookie out of Oregon. Lemieux was a mid-round draft pick that is being developed behind Kevin Zeitler at the moment.

If he is ready to take on a starting role, then the Giants would probably be excited to get him out there in some capacity. But Lemieux has not lined up at offensive guard once this season, just a few snaps at fullback. If he is not ready to play, the Giants might risk stunting his growth by forcing him into the starting lineup to face tough competition.

The Giants have about a week to get a deal done if they plan on trading away Kevin Zeitler. Zeitler is a valuable and talented player, but if Gettleman and the Giants want to play the long game, they might benefit from moving on from the veteran offensive guard.

New York Giants: Daniel Jones is not the problem

New York Giants, Daniel Jones

The New York Giants, once again, suffered a heart-breaking loss last night. The Giants fought valiantly on the road against Philadelphia but came up short to fall to 1-6 on the season. Meanwhile, the Eagles rise to the top of the division as the Giants fall off to the bottom.

The Giants were leading by 11 points last night with under five minutes left to play. The team had a quick meltdown that saw them blow their lead and lose the game 22-21.

It is easy to point fingers and play the blame game after losses like this. Often times, the quarterback gets the bulk of the blame when NFL teams lose close games. But for the Giants, the quarterback is not to blame this week. Daniel Jones is not the problem with the Giants. In fact, after last night, he looks like the solution.

Expanding the Offense

Daniel Jones is providing the Giants’ offense with a versatility that they have never had out of the quarterback position. New York spent the better part of the last twenty years scheming an offense around an immobile quarterback that could only make plays while standing in a clean pocket.

While Daniel Jones does his best work from a clean pocket, he can make plays happen elsewhere. The young quarterback has sneakily elite athleticism. Jones put his athletic ability on full display last night, ripping off an 80-yard run that put the Giants in scoring position.

That was the longest run by a quarterback in New York Giants history. That run was also longer than any rushing attempt by Saquon Barkley since 2018. Jones’s ability to make plays with his legs is special and allows the Giants to expand their offense and open up the playbook. Jones’s running ability should be treated as a real threat from now on and there should be far more designed quarterback-runs called on gamedays.

Coming Up In The Clutch

When the New York Giants needed their quarterback to mak a play last night, Daniel Jones delivered. Unofortunately, the same cannot be said for Jones’s teammates, which is ultimately why the Giants lost this game.

This season, we have seen Daniel Jones make the same mistake on multiple occasions. We have seen him put together long, 14+ play drives to get his team down in the red zone before throwing a heart-breaking interception. This happened in Week One against Pittsburgh, in Week Four against the Rams, and even in the Week Six win against Washington.

In Week Seven, the Giants put together one of those long drives to get in the red zone. This time, Daniel delivered, connecting  with Sterling Shepard on a touchdown pass to finish off a 15-play, 75-yard drivee.

So Daniel Jones passed one test; he proved he can put together long scoring drives. Check. But Jones was faced with a much more difficult and important test later in this game.

In the fourth quarter with a one possession lead with just over two minutes left in the game, the Giants are driving. Their running game is on point but stalls out. The Giants’ offense finds itself in a third and six, must-convert situation. Daniel Jones has to step up and make a play. Daniel Jones delivers with a perfect pass to Evan Engram down the left sideline.

Dropped. Evan Engram dropped it and the Giants had to punt the football. Philadelphia responds with a scoring drive and the Giants fall to 1-6.

This play changed the narrative of the entire game. If Evan Engram catches this football, fans are not talking about the upcoming “fire sale” at the trade deadline. Instead, fans would be talking about how their young, second-year quarterback marched into the belly of the beast and took down the Giants’ biggest division rival with one clutch play after another to thrust the Giants to the top of the NFC East.

Thursday night’s game should have been Daniel Jones’s coming of age. Not the reminder of the Giants’ impending doom. But if fans extract Daniel Jones’s performance from this game and analyze just the way their quarterback played, they might feel a lot more confident in the direction the team is heading. Daniel Jones had a breakout performance last night that will be forgotten due to the ineptitude of the rest of the New York Giants’ roster. The quarterback position is the lone bright spot, despite the contradictory narrative. Daniel Jones is not the problem. In fact, he just might be the solution.

New York Giants: Joe Judge says Daniel Jones “Absolutely” the guy despite 2020 struggles

New York Giants, Daniel Jones

The New York Giants have started the 2020 NFL season with an atrocious 0-5 record. Some fans and analysts believe the Giants are destined to finish the season with the first overall pick in the 2021 NFL Draft. In that scenario, the likely draft selection would be Clemson quarterback Trevor Lawrence. That is unless the Giants think Daniel Jones is better.

Right now, the quarterback of the New York Giants is second-year gunslinger Daniel Jones. Jones was a controversial draft pick out of Duke in the 2019 NFL Draft. “Danny Dimes” flashed potential greatness in his rookie season and has shown similar skills in 2020, but so far this season he has struggled to outweigh the bad with the good.

Daniel Jones has not scored a touchdown since Week One. Additionally, he has turned the ball over in every game this season. Daniel has thrown 2 touchdowns compared to 5 interceptions and 3 lost fumbles. His touchdown to turnover ratios is a horrific 1:4.

Despite this poor start to Daniel Jones’s second season, head coach Joe Judge is still confident in his quarterback. Judge has “absolutely!” told Daniel Jones that he is the guy.

Joe Judge on Daniel Jones

Daniel Jones, according to Joe Judge, is mentally tough and has been responding to the coaching staff well:

“My personality & the personality of this coaching staff is we’re very blunt, open, and honest. I’m not really sitting here trying to sell you a car, we’re not recruiting you to college. I’m going to tell you the truth every day. You have to be mentally tough to handle that, you have to understand the criticism that we’re giving to you, you have to be able to take the coaching & move forward with it. I’ll tell you what, man, No. 8 does that very well for us.” – Joe Judge on Daniel Jones via Tom Rock of Newsday

Judge was quoted today, saying the Giants have “a lot of confidence” in Daniel Jones. This is quite different from the consensus feeling of Giants fans and football analysts. Many are starting to lose confidence and question Daniel Jones’s makeup as a franchise quarterback.

But one thing Judge can see that the fans cannot see is Jones’s work ethic behind the scenes. Judge pointed out today that whatever Daniel’s emotion is after a game, Judge sees him “funnel it into a solid week of work.”

Joe Judge told the media that he has “seen a lot of progress from Daniel.” But, so far, this hard work and progress in practice has not shown up in the win-loss column. If Daniel Jones truly is “the guy,” he has eleven more weeks to prove it to Giants fans.

New York Giants: Is Daniel Jones to blame for offensive struggles?

New York Giants, Daniel Jones

Prior to the start of the 2020 season, New York Giants fans were enamored by the additional nine-pounds quarterback Daniel Jones added during the off-season. With the anticipation that Jones put more velocity behind the football and eliminate his turnover issues, an increase in production was estimated.

Needless to say, through five weeks of the regular season, Jones has taken a significant step backward in his development. Some might blame Daniel Jones for the majority of the offensive struggles, but as we dig deeper into the offense, you’ll see that he is simply overwhelmed with inadequacies at every corner.

Through five weeks, Jones has a 74.5 grade via PFF but saw a consistent drop off for four weeks straight prior to his week five matchup against Dallas. Jones hasn’t thrown a touchdown in over three games, but that isn’t necessarily his fault. The offensive line has been lackluster, and his wide receivers have failed to gain separation. It is no surprise that the offense has struggled, considering they released one of their regularly active wide receivers in Damion Ratley on Tuesday afternoon.

Through five games, though, the second-year quarterback only has 1,111 yards and two touchdowns to show. He has thrown five interceptions and fumbled the ball four times, officially turning the ball over more than he has scored. He’s also been sacked 16 times, which puts him on pace to go down 51 times in 2020.

To put that number into perspective, even during Eli Manning’s worst years regarding his inept OL, he only went down 47 times. That means Jones, who has more athleticism and mobility, is actually on pace to surpass that number.

That should give you an idea of how poor this unit really is. Taking a deeper dive into the offensive line, specifically from week five, both tackles were virtually useless in pass blocking. Andrew Thomas graded out at 31.7 and Cam Fleming at 24. They allowed 18 pressures on Jones, which writes its own story that Daniel simply doesn’t have the time in the pocket to progress through his reads. In addition, the lack of separation from his pass-catchers has made his job even more frivolous.

Pass rushers break through his protection so quickly, and his receivers take so long to get open, Jones is waiting in the pocket frantically to find a moment to throw the ball. That is the issue with the offense right now, both the OL and wide receivers are so inapt and inefficient, it is forcing Jones into problematic situations. That is why he currently leads the team with 130 yards on the ground, as he’s tried to take things into his own hands when his receivers are bottled up, and his line is as good as Swiss cheese.

It is also important to note that his top slot option Sterling Shepard has been out the past few weeks, and the lack of consistency for Shep has been detrimental to his lack of productivity. Having him healthy and developing chemistry with Jones is essential for the offense’s success. With Darius Slayton essentially representing his only reliable option, teams can easily scheme him out of the game.

The New York Giants saw some success, but not enough:

However, in week five, the Giants found a way to activate Slayton in the passing game. He hauled in eight receptions for 129 yards, which would have been more if not for Ratley’s offensive pass interference penalty that negated a touchdown.

That leads me to my next point, Jason Garrett’s scheme. If you watched the last four weeks, you’ve noticed the receivers’ lack of pre-snap motion and basic route concepts. Not to mention tight end Evan Engram, who stated that he is running more curl routes than working out of the seam in 2020.

His primary usage should be centralized around his speed, but forcing him to run short routes is against his strengths. Engram is not a refined route runner and is often best running down the middle of the field in a straight line or mesh/drag concepts. He can be used to extend the defense and push players into the secondary, but Garrett has completely taken that factor away.

It is also important to mention that Engram’s run-blocking grade averages out at 36.5, which is borderline malpractice for the offense. They need to be utilizing Kaden Smith more predominantly, but Evan has been decent in pass blocking, chipping, and then running out to receive passes in the flat. The problem, Garrett has not schemed that way and created mismatches with linebackers in space.

Back to Daniel Jones. The turnovers and bad decisions have undoubtedly played a part in his regression, but there’s only so much he can do with the lackluster talent around him. The offensive line has put him in poor positions, and his receivers haven’t given him any slack.

The entire scheme and unit is a work in progress, but without Sterling Shepard and another big-bodied wide receiver, Jones is going to have a difficult time finding his reads in the passing game. Garrett needs to give him more control of the offense and the ability to make decisions at the line of scrimmage. We saw a flash of that against Dallas, with Jones audibling into an outside zone run after spotting man coverage with Jalyn Smith and Golden Tate. The audible worked perfectly and was reminiscent of Eli Manning and his intelligence pre-snap.

Overall, I think plenty of blame falls on Jones, but much more of it results from the offensive line, Jason Garrett’s scheme, and lack of separation from the wide receivers.

All of these individual things need to improve, as it is making Jones look worse than he is. There’s only so much you can do and “wow” plays he can make to hold over the fan base, as most have already pointed their focus towards Trevor Lawrence in the 2021 NFL draft.

New York Giants: Daniel Jones throwing with great efficiency over the middle of the field

New York Giants, Daniel Jones

The New York Giants‘ offense has been pitiful in 2020. The Giants’ attack is averaging only 11.8 points per game and has not scored a touchdown in over two weeks. Second-year quarterback Daniel Jones has received plenty of criticism for the team’s poor offensive play this year.

Daniel Jones has had his struggles, particularly with ball security. Jones has turned the ball over seven times in four games. But, there has been quite a lot of good mixed in with the bad, despite the current narrative indicating otherwise. In particular, Daniel Jones has been excellent when throwing down the middle of the field.

Daniel Jones’s Stats Down The Middle

Daniel Jones has excelled when throwing down the middle of the field. Next Gen Stats has charted every Daniel Jones throw this season and noted how he has done in each section of the field. Week One was especially impressive for Jones.

In that Week One loss to Pittsburgh, Jones threw the ball down the middle of the field 16 times. He completed 13 of those passes for 182 yards, 2 touchdowns, and 1 interception.

Daniel followed that up with another great outing down the middle of the field in Week Two. Against the Bears, Jones completed 13 of his 15 attempts down the middle for 172 yards and 1 touchdown.

The Giants’ offense struggled to do anything impressive in Week Three, and that includes Daniel Jones. This was definitely his worst performance of the season so far, and he was not efficient throwing in any direction. In this game, Jones threw 12 passes down the middle of the field and completed only 5 of them for 45 yards and 1 interception.

While the offense remained stagnant and struggled in Week Four, Jones did bounce back in some way. Throwing down the middle of the field, Jones completed 8 of his 11 attempts for 101 yards and 0 interceptions. This accounts for over fifty percent of Jones’s passing yards in this game.

Overall, it is hard not to recognize how efficient Daniel Jones has been while throwing down the middle of the field. In total through four weeks, Daniel Jones has completed 39 passes down the middle of the field on 54 attempts, a completion percentage of 72%. Without that pitiful Week Three performance, Jones’s completion percentage down the middle would be about 81%.

In total, Daniel Jones has thrown for 500 passing yards down the middle of the field in four weeks. This accounts for 56% of Jones’s 889 passing yards this season. Considering just how efficient Daniel Jones has been while throwing in this direction, it would be wise to see the Giants incorporate more throws down the middle of the field in their offensive game plan. New York is going against a struggling Dallas Cowboys defense this week. Expect to see some Danny Dimes delivered between the hashes.

New York Giants go for Trevor Lawrence in new Draft Wire mock

New York Jets, Trevor Lawrence

It’s the time of the year again when we’re talking about what player the New York Giants might select. But unfortunately, we’re only on week five right now. The Giants have quickly fallen out of contention for the division and as they languish near the back of the standings, talk is turning towards what the team may do in the offseason. Once again, that shift is happening while the season is still young and other teams are still in contention.

The Giants have a number of moves they can make. Firing Dave Gettleman looks like one of the likely ones barring an amazing comeback in the standings. Another, more controversial option? Going backwards in the rebuilding process to draft Trevor Lawrence.

The team already has their quarterback now, but it’s hard to be patient with Daniel Jones given the current state of the franchise. And Lawrence is the kind of college prospect that’s comparable to Andrew Luck or Joe Burrow in terms of hype.

Trevor Lawrence mocked to Giants

There’s already talks about Lawrence to the Giants, as Lawrence was mocked to the team recently by Draft Wire.

Yes, the Giants just spent a top-10 pick on Daniel Jones in 2019, and the team definitely has bigger problems on both sides of the ball. But nothing he’s done so far, nor his potential ceiling, are anywhere near enough for the Giants to pass on a prospect like Lawrence. Last year, the Arizona Cardinals proved that moving on from a young quarterback for a better one can be the best decision a team ever makes. If they can get a massive haul to trade down, that would be ideal, but if they stay here, it’s gotta be Lawrence.

This works under the assumption the Giants will draft number one overall. That’s not an unreasonable assumption given their winless start, but there is time to improve – or for another team to take their spot near the bottom.

Drafting Lawrence would be a controversial move given how the Giants already spent a high draft pick to get Daniel Jones. But if they do get rid of Dave Gettleman, they may find themselves in an awkward spot where Jones is the previous regime’s quarterback and the new administration has other ideas.

Unless his rough start is patched up, there’s no guarantee a future GM would want to build the offense around Jones in the future. Lawrence may be seen as a better long term piece, especially now that Saquon Barkley has had multiple seasons disrupted by injury. The Giants need to rely more on their quarterback to win. But whether that future quarterback is Jones or someone else may just depend on where the Giants end up drafting.

It’s no guarantee right now – but if they do end up with the number one pick, don’t be surprised if the controversial move of taking a QB is the one that’s chosen.

New York Giants: Week four stock report, ups and downs

New York Giants, Austin Johnson

The New York Giants lost to the Los Angeles Rams in a defensive slugfest on Sunday.

The final score of the game was 17-9, and practically the whole game was a defensive battle. Even with the loss, there were still many positives as the Giants bounced back from a week three blowout defeat.

Here’s how this defeat affected the stock of various aspects of New York’s team.

Stock up for the New York Giants: 

Blake Martinez, LB

Martinez had a monster game once again on Sunday. He recorded 13 tackles (8 solo) and one tackle for loss as he was a menace all over the field. His performance boosted his Pro Football Focus (PFF) grade to 79.4 which is 5th out of all linebackers in the league. His run defensive grade of 90.8 is also first in the NFL among linebackers. These first four games have firmly shown that the Giants were wise in singing Blake Martinez this offseason.

Kyler Fackrell, LB

Kyler Fackrell, another Giants linebacker signed from Green Bay, also showed out in Los Angeles. The EDGE defender recorded four solo tackles, three tackles for loss, and one sack. This was a strong outing for Fackrell and definitely boosted his stock on this team.

Giants Run Game

Big Blue’s run game was able to have the best game of the season against a solid Rams defense. The Giants were able to rush for a season-high 136 yards on an average of 5.4 yards per tote. Daniel Jones added 45 of these yards as he showed off his athleticism in the run game. This was a good sign as the lack of run game has been severely detrimental to the Giants offensive attack. If the Giants can run effectively going forward then they will have a chance to maybe put up more than 20 points against a very bad Cowboys defense.

Austin Johnson, DT

Austin Johnson had the best game of his short career in week four. In this game, Johnson recorded two solo tackles, one sack, and one forced fumble. This was the first forced fumble of the Penn State graduate’s career and the third sack of his career. He likely will not play a big factor in the future of the Giants but this one performance definitely increased his stock.

Patrick Graham, Defensive Coordinator

As you can see with three defensive players on this stock up list, the Giants defense vastly overperformed expectations on Sunday. They were able to have their best game of the season holding a potent Rams offense to next to nothing. Much of this is due to the elaborate and successful scheme by Patrick Graham which kept Sean McVay (arguably the best offensive mind in football) offense in check. The Rams only threw for 200 yards and rushed for 58 more—both season lows. 

This defensive masterpiece by Graham with one of the league’s worst defenses, talent-wise at least, was truly impressive. If the Giants can keep him long term and give him some playmakers Big Blue could have a very scary defense.

Stock Down

Daniel Jones, QB

Once again, Daniel Jones’ stock dropped.

Jones did not do much right in week four as he only threw for 190 yards and recorded a season-low QBR of 42.6. Daniel Jones also threw a game-ending interception that crushed the heart of Giants’ fans. However, this interception was stereotypical of Jones as he has yet to be able to take care of the ball throughout his whole career.

Julian Love, FS

Love has not been great this whole season but on Sunday was definitely not his day. He was not really active in many plays. Love also let up the game losing touchdown in man-to-man coverage with Cooper Kupp. Julian Love got burnt overtop for 55 yards making the Giants need a touchdown to tie instead of a field goal to win.
Jason Garrett, Offensive Coordinator

Jason Garrett proved a lot of his doubters right against the Rams as he once again was unable to get the Giants to do anything offensively. The offense looked putrid as they were not able to convert any of their four red-zone trips into touchdowns. 

The lack of touchdowns for Garrett’s team is a very serious concern as they have yet to score one in two straight games. Over these two games, they have also only averaged nine points which are obviously not even close enough to get by in the NFL.

Golden Tate, WR

Golden Tate was very quiet on Sunday as he only recorded 20 yards on four catches. Golden Tate also dropped his only other two targets, one which was a high throw from Daniel Jones would have made a crucial first down. Tate has yet to produce for the Giants and his lack of numbers brings concerns to his long-term spot in East Rutherford.

New York Giants’ Daniel Jones offers insight into his poor play

New York Giants, Daniel Jones

The pressure is on for New York Giants‘ quarterback Daniel Jones through four weeks of the regular season. Having only thrown two touchdowns this year, the turnovers are beginning to bubble and pose a significant problem. Over the past four weeks, Jones has made three significant mistakes that have played a part in the team’s 0-4 record.

Against the Pittsburgh Steelers, Jones waited too long to get rid of the ball and was hit by Bud Dupree, throwing an unfortunate interception which ended the game prematurely. In week 2, he marched downfield and threw a poor pass to Golden Tate before the enzone with the game on the line. Against the Rams in week 4, Jones tossed a pass on the move to Damien Ratley that was intercepted when he had daylight ahead of him to take off running.

These mistakes cannot continue to linger, as Jones has the tangible talent to become an effective quarterback in the NFL. Of course, blame can be put on the pieces around him, as the offensive line ranks near dead last in pass protection and Jones is currently the team’s leading rusher.

However, he does understand the improvement is necessary and nothing is given in the NFL.

Daniel Jones quotes, via Dan Salomone:

“I realize that this is my second year and I do have a lot to learn … but I don’t think you ever use that as an excuse. I’m expected to play well.”

“I’m expected to play well, to understand what we’re trying to do, and execute it.”

“I think the offense has the capability of being explosive.”

The New York Giants need to see more from Daniel Jones:

Jones is right, this is his second year and he has plenty to learn, but his progression must start to shine through soon. With GM Dave Gettleman undoubtedly on the hot seat, Jones could also be a casualty of war if Gettleman is replaced. Similar to what we saw with the Arizona Cardinals and Kyler Murray, new management can shake things up and go in different directions.

The Dallas Cowboys in week 5 offer a weaker defense, as they currently have the worst unit in franchise history through the first four games of a regular season. They’re allowing an averaged 36.5 points per game, providing Jones with a stellar opportunity to erase the bad juju from the fan-base.