What is going on with you guys? You are off to a historically bad start. I should actually congratulate you... you are the first team in the history of the NFL to lose two games while having a ten point lead in the fourth quarter. It takes a special brand of stink to achieve that milestone. Looking at the past, though, I shouldn’t be surprised about this awful start.
Do you know the Facebook feature where you can look at posts from a certain date from years past? Well, using that feature, I see nothing but me expressing my misery about watching the Giants’ terrible starts from years past. It’s like the Groundhog Day of being disappointed by your favorite team.
What are the causes of these two losses? I say “causes”, because in order to have two meltdowns like this you have to stink more than the inside of a tauntaun. Here are some of the things that I find to be responsible for your terrible losses.
It makes for a great sleeping bag on a cold night on Hoth, but boy does it smell! |
Lack of a pass rush
Granted, the pass rush looked much better against the Falcons. Ayers looked especially good. Even though it looked better, it was still very lackluster. There is nobody on your front seven that scares anybody. Your best defensive lineman isn’t even on your team right now. He’s in Florida, carefully taking Instagram pictures where you can’t see his mangled tree of a hand.
Defense can’t play big in big spots
This happened last week, too. When the defense needed to make big spots to keep your lead intact, they fell apart faster than a house of cards during a hurricane.
Zero running game
You know your team is in trouble when the quarterback has the second most rushing yards when you have three rotating running backs. It’s not like were talking about Cam Newton, or Mike Vick circa 2006. We’re talking about Eli “quicksand” Manning here.
Against the Cowboys, your running game looked better, but it’s nothing to hang your hat on. Especially when your running back is told NOT to score. We’ll touch on that one in a bit.
Dropsies
Other than Odell Beckham, the receivers aren’t reliable at all. Counting on them to make catches in big spots is like relying on a subtle acting performance from Nicolas Cage. Preston Parker was the biggest offender of this. After starting off the season with back-to-back games with big drops, you guys decided to cut him. Now, some people think that if Parker was cut, this would alleviate most, if not all, of your woes. I know better, but it does send a message to your team, and your fan base, that you are taking this season seriously. Preston Parker was used as a scapegoat of your team. Don’t get me wrong, he deserved to get cut. Not only was he a scapegoat, but his hands were like goat hooves, as in everything bounced off of them. Come to think of it, he kind of resembles a goat, too.
If a goat was turning into a human, but the spell was stopped at like 97% completion. |
The biggest issue that you guys have is the lack of overall game awareness. Sometimes, it’s Landon Collins not touching a player when he’s on the ground, or missing Jason Witten when he goes in motion. Other times, it’s Eli Manning scrambling in the red zone, not seeing a wide open Beckham in the end zone, only to get stripped sacked. Or it’s your coaches choosing to pass the ball when you can simply run the clock out, or it’s Eli Manning snapping the ball when he could’ve milked the clock more. Or it’s generally Eli having the same concept of time and clocks as a Beagle does.
Here's Eli (far right), too busy running for his life to see the wide open Beckham. |
This Thursday, you have another NFC East match up against the Washington Redskins. It’s only September, but this is a must win for you guys. Going winless in the first three games is not an option. However, you caught a huge break this season. The Cowboys are so banged up that they are looking to Matt Cassell as their savior, the Chip Kelly experiment looks like it hit a wall, and the Redskins are the Redskins.
Hopefully soon, some of the injured players will be coming back. Cruz is out this week, but it’s not out of the realm of possibility to see him in week four. Jon Beason, the leader of the defense, is now probable for Thursday’s matchup. I’d like to see how the defense responds to him calling the shots.
Even though your team played like hot garbage in the first two weeks, you can still win this division. You can do this. Your team used to be known, not all that long ago, to excel in the face of adversity. Your team, your players, need to find that spirit that propelled them to greatness, harness it, and make a run to the playoffs.
In other words, get your shit together.
Sincerely,
Frustrated (yet hopeful) in New York