Outsider’s View:
First, the obvious: This is a franchise that has been focused on building for the future by hiring “football guys,” those hardened lifers who fit the bill of every coaching platitude meme.
The hiring of General Manager Dave Gettleman sought to recapture the Tom Coughlin era, with a few less wrinkles.
Bending, but not breaking. Establishing the run. Controlling the line of scrimmage. “Affecting” the game on special teams. Winning the possession battle and the “game within the game.”
That often manifests into the most boring football product on the planet. My eyes glazed over just typing it. But it was enough to get by the Raiders and keep a pulse in the N.F.C. wild-card race — a damning indictment on the state of the conference.
Daniel Jones early on appeared to be reverting to the turnover habits that sabotaged the Giants last month when he lost a fumble on a strip sack by Maxx Crosby late in the first quarter with the score tied, 7-7. Jason Garrett, the Giants’ offensive coordinator, has done everything possible to minimize Jones’s all-or-nothing playmaking, which resulted in Jones’s fewest pass attempts of the season (excluding his early exit with a concussion against Dallas). Running back Devontae Booker, 99 yards on 21 carries, nearly matched Jones’s passing yards (110 yards on 20 attempts) with his legs.
The Giants’ defense won the game by forcing key turnovers. Safety Xavier McKinney opened the second half with a 41-yard pick-6 and intercepted another putrid throw from Raiders quarterback Derek Carr midway through the fourth quarter. Outside linebacker Quincy Roche forced a fumble on the Raiders’ final drive with 44 seconds remaining to put the game away.
Now, was a single moment of that entertaining? Of course not!
Coach Joe Judge can take glee at the ugly nature of this victory, but is that truly what anyone wants to watch?
Verdict: Put the ball back in Jones’s hands and let it rip!