Giants add Graham Gano to injury report, expect him to play

New York Giants kicker Graham Gano (groin) has been added to the injury report but is expected to play against the Washington Commanders.

The New York Giants have added kicker Graham Gano to their Week 2 injury report with a groin issue.

That being said, he was not given a designation and the team expects him to play on Sunday against his former team, the Washington Commanders.

The Giants have Jude McAtamney on their practice squad should Gano not be able to go.

Three Giants — linebacker Darius Muasau (knee), kick returner Gunner Olszewski (groin), and cornerback Nick McCloud (knee) — have been ruled out this week.

Other injuries include linebacker Micah McFadden (groin), and wide receivers Darius Slayton (concussion) and Malik Nabers (knee).

All three practiced in full on Friday. McFadden did not play in the Giants’ season opener versus Minnesota last week. He was mainly spelled by Muasau in the game.

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Giants’ Michael Ghobrial: Adoree’ Jackson is ‘dynamic with the ball in his hand’

New York Giants special teams coordinator Michael Ghobrial says veteran cornerback Adoree’ Jackson is a “dynamic” return man.

New York Giants first-year special teams coordinator Michael Ghobrial has a lot on his plate with the 2024 NFL season just days away.

Like every other special teams coach around the league, he’s still toying with the new kickoff rules and alignment but Ghobrial has other issues he is focusing on.

First off, his top returner, Isaiah McKenzie, is out for the season with a foot injury and his No. 2 option, Gunner Olszewski, is recovering from a groin injury.

“He’s back there working at it, doing a great job catching the football,” Ghobrial said of Olszewski, who was limited at Wednesday’s practice.

In this Sunday’s season opener, Ghobrial may have to go with recently signed Adoree’ Jackson to return punts against the Minnesota Vikings.

“I’ll never close the door on getting the ball in the playmaker’s hands,” Ghobrial said while calling Jackson “dynamic.”

“He’s back there working at it, and obviously you guys know we only suit up 48 people on game day, so the more position flex, the more versatility a player can have, the better.”

Ghobrial cut right to the chase when defining what he wants to see first and foremost from his returners.

“The biggest thing to me with any returner value is the person has to make sure they can own the football,” he said. “That’s safely securing it because the most telling statistic in terms of winning and losing in this league is turnover margin. So, we want to make sure whoever is back there, that guy is owning the football and making smart decisions to catch it.”

Ghobrial was asked about second-year wide receiver Bryce Ford-Wheaton, who has emerged as a solid gunner on punts. The Giants kept ‘BFW’ on the 53-man roster over more experienced wideouts due to his play on “teams.”

“I love Bryce Ford-Wheaton, by the way. He’s wired the right way. I think it starts with the mentality. When the mentality is right, the rest of it comes into play,” Ghobrial said. “Obviously, as a receiver, he has a natural feel for being able to get people off the spot. He’s a really good catcher. He gives that possession position flexibility in terms of that.

“Anybody that’s a receiver that’s out there, you’ve got to obviously regard them in terms of coverage. I think the mentality, number one, is awesome because he approaches it like he is going to go win that rep every time. Then again, the experience of him being a receiver also translates in other parts.”

Finally, the issue of placekicker Graham Gano’s rehabilitation from a knee injury that cut his 2023 season in half, came up.

“I’ve seen Graham, the Graham Gano that wins football games in this league,” Ghobrial said. “I’m really excited to see him put pen to paper. He is a proven kicker in this league and I’m fully confident in his ability to go make kicks at any distance.”

The Giants had Northern Irish national Jude McAtamney in camp but released him after Gano proved to be healthy.

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Giants hoping a healthy Graham Gano can once again become Mr. Automatic

The New York Giants are relying on kicker Graham Gano to return to both health and dominance during the 2024 regular season.

The New York Giants’ 2024 season hinges on a particular player — quarterback Daniel Jones — successfully rehabbing from ACL surgery and returning to action 100 percent.

But there’s another knee the team will be keeping an eye on this summer. That of veteran kicker Graham Gano, who also missed the second half of the 2023 season with an injury to his left knee that required surgery.

The 37-year-old Gano’s injury was to his plant leg, not his kicking leg, and although it was reported in mid-October, he was not placed on injured reserve (IR) until November 3.

Gano, who had been hitting over 90 percent of his field goal attempts since becoming a Giant in 2020, was just 11-of-17 last year. He was also dealing with a right ankle issue early on in the year.

The Giants replaced Gano on the roster with Randy Bullock and Mason Crosby. Punter Jamie Gillan was also thrust into spot placekicking duty one week.

This spring, Gano — who is under contract until 2026 — was back on the field at OTAs kicking, but the Giants aren’t taking any chances. They will have former Rutgers standout Jude McAtamney on hand in case Gano should suffer a setback.

First-year Giants special team coordinator Michael Ghobrial is looking forward to working with Gano this summer and beyond.

“He’s a tremendous person to have in the room, a guy that’s seen a lot of football,” Ghobrial said at the Giants’ minicamp in mid-June. “He has great foot accuracy. You obviously see the explosive leg… So it’s been fun to work with him and to see his skillset in terms of the kickoff and field goal stuff. I’m excited for him to start off day one with us.”

Ghobrial also addressed the plan for Gano this summer, which will depend on how well Gano is coming along.

“I think you always have to monitor how many kicks a specialist has in general,” he said. “But the fact of the matter is that is like a conversation that you always have with the player. How are you feeling today? The biggest thing is you want to make sure they show up to the game healthy and ready to go. I’ve seen him do everything that I need to.”

That’s good news for the Giants. Gano has been a stalwart for them and they need all of the consistency they can get as they attempt to climb back into contention.

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2 Giants named to The Sporting News’ All-Overpaid Team

Two members of the New York Giants have been named to the The Sporting News’ 2024 All-Overpaid Team, but Daniel Jones is not one of them.

New York Giants general manager Joe Schoen has spent three years attempting to clean up the mess led by his predecessor, Dave Gettleman, and has done an admirable job. Although the team carries more dead cap than they’d like, things have largely been sorted out.

But no one is perfect and mistakes, which are subjective based on personal interpretation, are made.

Vinnie Iyer of The Sporting News recently released his 2024 All-Overpaid Team and two members of the Giants were among those listed. But before you assume quarterback Daniel Jones is one of them, pump those brakes. He isn’t.

Deshaun Watson got the nod at quarterback, saving Jones from another all-too-common round of criticism.

So, which two Giants made the cut? First up was one of Schoen’s major offseason signings, guard Jon Runyan Jr.

Jon Runyan, Giants ($10 million)

The Giants also overspent inside in free agency for the fading former Packer.

It’s a tough sell to suggest the Giants overpaid for Runyan. The veteran’s contract is the going rate for starting guards and even if it is on the high side, it’s what the market has dictated, says an NFL executive.

“Runyan was a market deal even though it was expensive,” an executive from another team told The Athletic. “He’s not a $10 million player, but that’s what the market dictates.”

Next up for the Giants is veteran kicker Graham Gano.

Graham Gano, Giants ($5.5 million)

Gano has limited range and has started to become less reliable on field goals at 37.

“Limited range” is a curious criticism of Gano. Before his injury-riddled 2023 campaign, which he initially tried to play through, Gano was about as automatic as it came.

In 2022, Gano connected on 90.6% of his field goal attempts, including eight of nine from beyond 50 with a long of 57. Even last season, the veteran boomed one through from 57 yards out (he has a career-long of 63).

Iyer also notes that had Darren Waller not retired, he would have been listed as the most-overpaid tight end in the NFL. Instead, that honor went to Noah Fant (Seattle Seahawks).

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Giants’ Graham Gano snaps back at troll in ‘most Scottish way imaginable’

New York Giants kicker Graham Gano recently shut down an online troll in what’s been called the “most Scottish way imaginable.”

New York Giants kicker Graham Gano has zero patience for online trolls.

Over the weekend, an NFL fan on social media disparaged the Giants, suggesting they would go a mere 4-12 in 2024 (obviously forgetting there are 17 regular season games now).

Gano was having none of it.

“Haud yer wheesht,” Gano replied.

American fans were understandably confused by what Gano had said but pledged their support nonetheless.

“I have no idea what that means, but I support everything Graham says,” one user on X, formerly known as Twitter, wrote.

Translated, what the Scottish-born Gano said was essentially, “keep your mouth shut.”

It’s also not the first time this offseason that Gano has clapped back at a troll online. He also replied to a fan who demanded Gano give up his jersey number to whatever player wanted it simply because he was nothing more than a kicker.

Don’t test the veteran. He has no patience for nonsense.

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Every Pro Bowl selection in Panthers franchise history

Let’s take a look back at every Pro Bowl selection in Panthers franchise history

It took a bit longer than it should’ve, but defensive tackle Derrick Brown rightfully became the latest Pro Bowler in Carolina Panthers history.

So, as we gear up for the rest of the festivities this weekend, let’s look back at Brown and every other Panther who has been selected as an all-star.

4 potential cap casualties for Giants in 2024

If New York Giants GM Joe Schoen is interesting in clearing cap space, there are four potential (albeit difficult to part with) options.

The New York Giants are expected to have approximately $37.8 million in available salary cap space this coming offseason (pending the cap ceiling).

They can squeeze a bit more if they re-work some contracts, but general manager Joe Schoen has done an excellent job of trimming the fat already.

Since Schoen became the Giants’ GM in January of 2021, he has been fiscally prudent and very creative with player contracts.

Schoen doesn’t have a lot of options this offseason when it comes to creating cap space, but we went up and down the roster and found four possibilities.

Giants’ 9 biggest disappointments of 2023

The New York Giants regressed significantly in 2023 and these nine players were among the most disappointing.

The 2023 season was a major downer for the New York Giants. There were a few surprises and glimmers of hope on the defensive side of the ball, but it wasn’t enough to extend the season.

The front office issues plagued the team and resulted in more upheaval with the “parting of ways” with Wink Martindale.

In the wake of the blinders being ripped off around the whole Wink/Brian Daboll fiasco, let’s take a look at nine players (in no particular order) who disappointed the most in 2023.

Giants’ Thomas McGaughey laments injuries to kickers

Thomas McGaughey isn’t particularly thrilled that the New York Giants will be on their fourth different kicker in Week 16.

The New York Giants have been ravaged by injury this season and no position group has managed to avoid the nightmare, including the team’s kickers.

Back in early November, the Giants lost veteran Graham Gano to a knee injury. He was replaced by Randy Bullock, who also landed on injured reserve (IR) this week as the result of a hamstring issue.

Bullock was forced to leave a Week 15 game against the New Orleans Saints and was replaced by punter Jamie Gillan, who also endured an injury in that contest.

With two kickers on IR and their punter ailing, the Giants are expected to elevate Cade York from their practice squad on Christmas Day against the Philadelphia Eagles. He will technically become their fourth kicker of the season.

“It’s a lot,” special teams coordinator Thomas McGaughey said on Wednesday. “But I told you this early in the season, I said you don’t want to get on the kicker train, because the destination is unknown. Because you don’t know. Once that train gets rolling, you never know where it’s going to end. But it is what it is, we’ll make the adjustments, we won’t make any excuses, just keep it moving.”

The 22-year-old York was originally on the Giants’ 53-man roster but they opted to elevate and start Bullock instead. Once his elevations ran out, the team waived York and signed Bullock to the active roster before adding York back to the practice squad.

McGaughey had a hunch they might need to go back to York, so they’ve continued working with him.

“He’s getting better. He’s working at it,” McGaughey said of York. “Young specialists are always a work in progress, so those guys are always trying to find a routine, trying to tweak certain things and just work on those small details of what he’s doing. Being around Randy and Graham has been huge for him.

“It’s almost unheard of. Even during the offseason, this rarely happens. But he’s been taking advantage of it. And I told him, this is a godsend for you to be able to be around two veteran kickers that have had double-digit years that have both started over 150 games, played in 150 games, in the same building as you at the same time. That’s big for him.”

York started 17 games for the Cleveland Browns last season but was inconsistent. He made just 75 percent of his field goal attempts and missed two point after attempts. Now he’ll have to lace up his cleats and start for the Giants on Christmas Day in Philadelphia, where it will be cold and windy. And very loud.

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5 impact Giants from 2022 who have vanished in 2023

The 2022 New York Giants surprised the football world by picking up a playoff victory but these 5 impacts players have vanished in 2023.

The New York Giants came into the 2023 season with high hopes after experiencing their first playoff appearance since 2016 last season.

Those hopes have been dashed — and then some — as the Giants have opened the 2023 season with a 2-8 record and are on course to have one of their worst seasons in franchise history.

That didn’t happen in a vacuum. Injuries, poor coaching and personnel choices, and yes, player underperformance, have all contributed to the club’s rapid demise.

Here are five players who contributed heavily in 2022 that have ‘vanished’ this season.