The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Giants looking to salvage a win in last two games

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EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — Joe Judge had better hope New York Giants co-owners John Mara and Steve Tisch have decided to bring him back as coach for a third season.

If they haven’t, the way the Giants (4-11) are playing since quarterbac­k Daniel Jones was hurt late last month is not going to help his cause. He has a 10-21 record with two games left this season. The team is riding a four-game losing streak without Jones and the losses have gotten uglier and uglier.

The worst was the 34-10 setback at Philadelph­ia on Sunday. The Giants were competitiv­e on one side of the ball for a half because Pat Graham’s unit held the Eagles to three points. The second half was a blowout, thanks in part to mistakes by the offense and special teams, and failures by the tired defense.

It’s hard to say whether Judge deserves a third year. Like most coaches he works very hard. He has added good people on the roster and eliminated issues within the locker room. He just hasn’t won enough. Injuries in 2021, especially on the offensive line, didn’t help.

The Giants can’t keep turning over head coaches, though. They now have had five straight losing seasons. Ben McAdoo got thems to the playoffs in 2016 and was fired the next year. Pat Shurmur lasted two seasons. Judge is finishing up his second.

Hired in late 2017, general manager Dave Gettleman is likely going to take a fall after this season. Judge is question mark — and he is not talking about it.

“I think you come back every week and you go to work, and that doesn’t mean it’s not frustratio­ns within it, whether you’re winning or losing,” Judge said.

He said the addiction to coaching is working with the players and finding ways to have success. It involves showing players their mistakes and teaching them how to correct them. He insists it’s a building process.

“Actually, the adrenaline, the kick you really have as a coach is that high you get from working with the team and being able to share in their success,“the 39-year-old said. “That’s really what you live for, what a coach lives for.”

The question is can Mara and Tisch live

with it another year? WHAT’S WORKING

Despite the score, the defense was outstandin­g, especially in the first half which ended 3-3. In the second half, the Eagles got a touchdown on an intercepti­on return. Another TD was set up by an intercepti­on, and a big punt return led to a field goal. Philadelph­ia had one long drive, a 10-play, 75-yard series capped by the trick play TD pass to tackle Lane Johnson.

Another kudo for the Giants’ defense was it held the Eagles to 130 yards rushing, snapping Philadelph­ia’s streak of seven straight games at 175 yards or more.

WHAT NEEDS HELP

With Jones out for the season with a neck injury, the Giants have no offense. In the past four weeks, they have scored a combined 46 points. They were held to a season-low 192 yards by the Eagles and their lone touchdown came late with Philadelph­ia leading 34-3. Neither veteran Mike Glennon nor second-year QB Jake Fromm can lead this offense with the line playing poorly. There are no holes for runs. There is no time to throw. New York’s longest play was 11 yards. The Giants averaged 2.6 yards on 73 plays. That’s pathetic.

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 ?? Matt Rourke / Associated Press ?? Giants coach Joe Judge yells during the first half against the Eagles on Sunday in Philadelph­ia.
Matt Rourke / Associated Press Giants coach Joe Judge yells during the first half against the Eagles on Sunday in Philadelph­ia.

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