What Brian Daboll has done with the New York Giants this season is
being labeled as a performance worthy of coach-of-the-year honors.
In
the New York City metropolitan area, Daboll is being compared to Bill
Parcells, the coach who turned around the Giants in the 1980s and led
them to their first two Super Bowl triumphs.
“Big Tuna.” “Little Tuna.”
Super
Bowl hopes have resurfaced in region. The Giants (10-7-1) have gone
from a team that posted five straight losing seasons to one that made
the playoffs in Daboll's first year and then won a postseason game for
the first time since its Super Bowl victory under Tom Coughlin 11 years
ago.
The Giants beat the Minnesota Vikings 31-24 Sunday to advance
to the NFC divisional round and a matchup with the top-seeded Eagles
(14-3) in Philadelphia on Saturday night. The NFC East champion Eagles
have already beaten the division rival Giants twice, 48-22 on Dec. 11 at
MetLife Stadium and 22-16 on Jan. 8 in the regular-season finale in
Philly.
Daboll said those results mean little.
“It’s how we
go about our business this week, how we prepare, how we practice and
then ultimately how we play on Sunday — or Saturday in this case,”
Daboll said Monday. “Every game’s a new game.”
The Giants were
competitive in the last game, particularly considering it was
meaningless for them and they rested many starters. The Eagles played
their starters since they needed a win to clinch the No. 1 seed.
The
bottom line is the Giants can win if they play well and avoid
turnovers, penalties and blown assignments. That's something New York
did after the 2007 season as the No. 6 seed, beating Tampa Bay, Dallas
and Green Bay en route to a Super Bowl win over New England, which came
in at 18-0.
The division rival Cowboys had beaten the Giants twice that year before New York won in the playoffs.
Can it happen again? Sure.
If
the Giants are to win, they will need the same discipline and
consistent execution they showed against Minnesota. A lucky bounce or
two wouldn't hurt, either.
WHAT’S WORKING
Running back
Saquon Barkley and quarterback Daniel Jones have taken turns carrying
the offense this season. Both got it going on Sunday. Jones was 24 of 35
for 301 yards and two touchdowns. He also ran for 78 yards, a
postseason franchise record for a QB. Barkley ran for 53 yards and two
TDs and caught five passes for 56 yards. New York had 28 first downs,
its second most in a playoff game.
WHAT NEEDS HELP
The
defensive backs blew a lot of coverages, especially on tight end T.J.
Hockenson, who had 10 catches for 129 yards. He caught passes on
third-and-9, second-and-12, third-and-7 and fourth-and-2 — all for first
downs. There also were blown coverages on the TD passes to Irv Smith
and K.J. Osborn.
STOCK UP
Defensive tackle Dexter Lawrence.
The second-team All Pro had six tackles, including one for a loss, and a
team-high four of the Giants' 11 quarterback hits. He played 51 of 57
defensive snaps, was double-teamed frequently and was a big reason the
Vikings were held to 61 yards rushing.
STOCK DOWN
GM Joe
Schoen has done just about everything right in his first season for a
team with limited talent and many injuries. One thing he got wrong was
not signing Barkley and Jones to long-term deals after they played so
well in the first half of the season. It's going to cost the Giants a
ton of money.
INJURED
Outside linebacker Azeez Ojuari
re-injured a calf muscle that cost him games earlier this season. Safety
Jason Pinnock took an abdominal hit late and was checked out at a
hospital in Minnesota. He returned home with the team. Daboll
characterized them as day-to-day, which doesn't necessarily mean their
injuries are minor.
KEY NUMBER
30 — After going 43 games
without scoring at least 30 points, the Giants have done it twice in
three games. They beat Indianapolis 38-10 on Jan. 1 to clinch a playoff
spot and they did it again against the NFC North champion Vikings and
their suspect defense.
NEXT STEPS
While the Giants are 7 1/2-point underdogs at Philadelphia according to FanDuel Sportsbook, Daboll won't alter his approach. He wants his team to prepare and then
be consistent. And New York is playing some of its best football.