Amid all the hubbub — and it is unprecedented, really — swirling around the NFL and the most important and marquee spot on the field, quarterback, the Giants are holding their ground and standing pat.
Daniel Jones will be back, and the Giants have not had wandering eyes, as far as glancing around to as much as contemplate a replacement.
“We have confidence in Daniel. He’s a player we want to work with going forward with this team,’’ head coach Joe Judge said Tuesday. “He showed us a lot of improvements, a lot of things. I can go on and on about how much we respect him and like him and how the locker room responds to him.”
So, was there not even a momentary thought about seeing what else is available?
“The simple answer to that is ‘No,’ ” Judge said.
There was a whole heck of a lot out there.
Matthew Stafford and Jared Goff changed teams. So did Carson Wentz. Mitchell Trubisky is headed toward free agency. So is Cam Newton. Drew Brees has not declared whether he will return to the Saints or retire. The Jets are accepting calls about Sam Darnold. And, the biggest one of them all, Deshaun Watson, seems to be done with the Texans and wants out of Houston.
It is a time of strong quarterback empowerment. Teams are not hanging with players who, not long ago, were thought to be established starters.
Giants quarterback Daniel Jones N.Y. Post: Charles WenzelbergGiants general manager Dave Gettleman studied Jones heading into the 2019 draft and then made the Duke product the No. 6-overall selection. Now, Gettleman and his staff have studied Jones after year No. 2 and determined there is no reason to look elsewhere, despite what from the outside looks like alarming trends developing with Jones.
“You do your evaluation,” Gettleman said. “We’ve had Daniel for two years, we’ve done the evaluation on him and we really believe he’s the guy. So there’s no reason to go look. What we’re doing isn’t fantasy football. We’re not doing that. We’ve got a conviction on him. He’s everything we want. He’s got all the physical skills.
“Again, I say this all the time, the kid just finished his second year of NFL football. How many of us, after two years at our new job, were great? We all start at point ‘A’ and we all hopefully get to point ‘Z,’ but the one common denominator is it takes time. Everybody’s got to understand that. We believe in Daniel, and that’s where it is.”
Jones, 23, missed time with injuries his first two seasons. As a rookie, he had 24 touchdown passes and 12 interceptions, and compiled a passer rating of 87.7. In 2020, Jones regressed, with just 11 touchdown passes and 10 interceptions, for a passer rating of 80.4. He reduced his fumbles (from 18 in 2019 to 11 in 2020) and increased his rushing stats. The Giants won four games in 2019 and six in 2020.
Jones is entering the third year of his salary cap-friendly rookie deal, and it behooves the Giants to start winning before they have to ante up with a new contract.
“I’m not a window-theory guy. I never have been and never will be,” Gettleman said. “So we’re gonna keep working the process and keep getting better and we’ll get there.”







