Giants activate Sterling Shepard, Jamison Crowder, welcome 3 others back to practice

The New York Giants have activated Sterling Shepard and Jamison Crowder, and will also welcome three others back to practice on Sunday.

New York Giants head coach Brian Daboll was back in front of the media on Sunday morning after a day off on Saturday and revealed the team would be activating both Sterling Shepard and Jamison Crowder.

Daboll opened the presser by announcing that Shepard (knee) will be coming off the PUP list on Sunday and will be participating in drills. It will be his first time back on the filed since tearing his ACL last September.

Daboll also said they are activating 2023 free-agent signing, Crowder (calf), off the non-football injury list. He will also take part in practice.

Among other injury updates, defensive lineman Rakeem Nunez-Roches, who was involved in a car accident last week that landed him in the concussion protocol, will also be back to practice on Sunday.

The same will be the case for veteran wide receiver Cole Beasley (quad) and rookie defensive back Gervarrius Owens.

Linebacker Jihad Ward (undisclosed ailment) and backup tight end Ryan Jones (undisclosed) will sit out Sunday’s drills.

The first week of practice has many wondering if the team’s first-round pick, cornerback Deonte Banks out of Maryland, is ready to step right in and start this season. Daboll didn’t say either way but had some positive feed back on Banks.

The Giants traded up one spot in the first round in this year’s draft to select Banks, who they see as a physical player who can man-up with the bigger outside receivers in the league.

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Giants have logjam at wide receiver

The New York Giants will bring at least 15 wide receivers into training camp and half of those won’t make the 53-man roster.

The New York Giants will be taking 15 wide receivers to training camp this week, leading to the question — what is the plan?

Are they just throwing options against the wall to see what sticks? Or are they simply creating competition to see who will rise, or are they safeguarding themselves in case of a repeat of last year when they suffered an unusually high number of injuries?

It could be a little of both. The team found themselves shorthanded last season and they don’t want to get caught short again.

The unit will be run again by assistant coach Mike Groh and he will have a diverse group of players of all shapes, sizes and skill sets who possess a varied level of NFL experience.

Of the 15 players, perhaps eight of them will make the team’s final 53-man roster, and — if things go right — one or two of them could end up leading the team in targets and/or catches.

But that will be difficult. The Giants’ big move this offseason on offense was the trade for former Pro Bowl tight end Darren Waller. He is expected to be heavily involved in the passing game.

So is running back Saquon Barkley, when he returns from his ‘holdout.’ Barkley has been the Giants’ best receiver when healthy the past few years and there’s no reason to stop throwing him the football.  Between he and Waller, there will be fewer opportunities for the wideouts, unless something changes.

So, what should fans expect this summer at wide receiver?

Expect the veterans to get the benefit of the doubt, at least in the beginning. That means initial work for Sterling Shepard, who is returning from another lost season due to injury, and Darius Slayton. Toss in Isaiah Hodgins and Wan’Dale Robinson (when he’s ready), along with free agents Parris Campbell, Jamison Crowder, Jeff Smith, Cole Beasley, and rookie Jalin Hyatt.

The Giants will try to forge a serviceable unit out of those names. They are top-heavy on slot receivers it seems so they might thin the herd there in favor of some outside options.

The others will all have to have monster camps to even be considered. Collin Johnson, David Sills and rookie Bryce Ford-Wheaton are interesting names to watch but where do they fit? Jaydon Mickens, Makai Polk and Kalil Pimpleton are long shots and will have to show special teams prowess to stick.

Wide receiver will be a heavily contested unit this summer and will be a fun one to follow.

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9 Giants players who need a strong training camp

These nine New York Giants players need to shine during training camp or risk being buried on the depth chart or worse.

The New York Giants will soon return to the Quest Diagnostics Training Center in East Rutherford, New Jersey for their 2023 training camp.

For many players, the impression made on coaches and front-office executives over the summer will determine their future with the organization. Even some of the established veterans and recent signees will have something to prove as they convene to lay the foundation for the second season under general manager Joe Schoen and head coach Brian Daboll.

Some will look to prove they’ve made progress since they joined the team. Others will look to prove they’re better than the rookies brought in at their respective positions. Training camp will ultimately paint a clear picture of the best players.

Here are nine Giants players who need to have a strong training camp for one reason or another.

Which former Bills players will face Buffalo in 2023?

Here’s the list of former #Bills players… who Buffalo will play against in 2023:

The attention of western New York is completely on the team’s 2023 roster. Is this one that can finally crack the Super Bowl?

But let’s face it. We’ve all ben there.

“Hey, I know that guy,” said every Bills fan when a former player is facing Buffalo. Here’s the few times you’re going to say that again next season.

The full list of former Bills that will face Buffalo in 2023 is right here:

Commanders season opener in 80 days: Washington’s best No. 80?

Several players have had success wearing No. 80. Who wore it best?

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Commanders Wire continues a countdown to the Commanders season opener for 2023 in 80 days. Who was Washington’s best player wearing number 80?

This one needs some comparing of players who competed in different eras. That is always understandably tough to do. This one gets really interesting. Here are some of the best.

Coy Bacon is an often forgotten fierce pass rusher. Bacon came to Washington at age 36, playing his last four NFL seasons for the Redskins. Interestingly enough, Bacon only wore No. 80 for one season (1978) when he achieved an impressive 11.0 sacks.

Virgil Seay was one of the original Smurfs for the Redskins. Seay only stood 5-8, a wide receiver for Washington (1981-84). Catching 43 passes for 792 yards, Seay impressively averaged 18.4 yards a reception those four seasons, also catching 5 touchdown passes.

Stephen Alexander was a promising tight end. The former Oklahoma Sooner was drafted 48th overall in 1998. By the 2000 season he was selected to the Pro Bowl, catching 47 passes (33 first downs) for 510 yards. But after a disappointing 2001 season (injured), Alexander signed with the Chargers as an unrestricted free agent.

Laveranues Coles only played in Washington two seasons (2003-04). Many don’t realize Coles caught 82 and 90 passes those two seasons for 1,204 yards and 950 yards, averaging 14.7 yards and 10.6 yards a reception. Coles was Pro Bowler in 2003, then traded to the Jets for Santana Moss.

Jamison Crowder in his four seasons (2015-18) in Washington caught 221 passes (121 for first downs) for 2,628 yards averaging 11.9 yards a reception, scoring 14 touchdowns. Crowder also returned a punt for a touchdown in 2016.

Roy Jefferson was traded to Washington in 1971 by George Allen at the age of 28. Jefferson played the next six seasons (1971-77) for Washington. He was a Pro Bowler (1971) leading the team in receptions with 47 for 701 yards, 14.9 yards per reception.

Those Washington teams under Allen were very much run-oriented, so that must be considered heavily as NFL teams throw much more today. Jefferson scored the only touchdown in the 1972 playoff 16-3 win over the Packers.

In his six seasons for Washington, Jefferson caught 208 receptions for 3,119 yards averaging 15.0 yards per reception along with 16 receiving touchdowns.

Ivan Lambert is a long-time Washington football fan, having memories dating back to the 1969 season. You can follow Ivan’s coverage of the Commanders @IvanLambert18  and Commanders Wire coverage @Washington_Wire.

Are Giants risking too much on players with an injury history?

The Giants added both quality and quantity to their roster this offseason, but are they risking too much on players with an injury history?

New York Giants general manager Joe Schoen entered the offseason intent on beefing up the team’s depth and talent at skill positions. Finally, the organization was going to provide quarterback Daniel Jones the help he has so desperately lacked.

And to Schoen’s credit, he did exactly that.

The big acquisition came early in free agency when the Giants acquired tight end Darren Waller, a big 6-foot-6, 238-pound target, from the Las Vegas Raiders.

That move was supplemented by the free-agent additions of wide receivers Parris Campbell, Jamison Crowder, and Jeff Smith. They also re-signed wide receivers Sterling Shepard, Darius Slayton, and Isaiah Hodgins.

But Schoen wasn’t done there. He also wanted to add talent and depth for defensive coordinator Wink Martindale, so a big-splash signing was made with linebacker Bobby Okereke.

Other notable defensive additions included defensive tackle Rakeem Nunez-Roches, safety Bobby McCain, and cornerbacks Amani Oruwariye and Leonard Johnson.

On paper, those are solid additions. There’s a lot the Giants can do with each of those players but there is one thing the vast majority of them share in common: a history of injury.

In seven career seasons, Waller has played a full slate of games just twice. He’s missed 14 games over the previous two seasons and his production has dipped considerably as a result.

“I believe wholeheartedly in myself, and I believe that through action and consistent performance Giants fans will believe, as well,” Waller said during his introductory Zoom call. “They can have questions at this moment about my health — those are legitimate concerns — but I believe I’ve addressed those issues. I’m willing to be the best I can be to be a weapon for this team — a tool that this team can use to get to the next level they want to go to.”

Similarly, Campbell had the first three seasons of his career marred by injury. He missed 34 total games before finally playing a full 17-game schedule in 2022.

“The injuries that I had, there were things that were just freak accidents. You couldn’t really draw it up. They weren’t avoidable to me. They were things that happened and just had some bad luck,” Campbell said during his first Zoom conference. “Like I said, was able to play all 17 last year, so I was extremely blessed.”

Crowder, too, has dealt with various injury issues in recent years. After a relatively healthy start to his career, he’s missed a combined 22 games over the past three seasons.

Giants fans are intimately familiar with Shepard’s injury issues, as well as those of running back Saquon Barkley and quarterback Daniel Jones, each of whom managed to stay healthy in 2023.

Defensively, the issues aren’t quite as pronounced. McCain has remained consistently healthy throughout his career, which is also true for Okereke and Nunez-Roches. However, Oruwariye has missed a combined six games over the past two seasons.

Johnson, of course, missed his entire rookie season after suffering a torn ACL ahead of the 2022 NFL draft.

Overall, the injury risk seems pronounced. But Schoen has done his due diligence on each individual player, including his own, and feels comfortable with the lot. He also understands that sometimes injuries are simply the result of bad luck.

“When I got the job, Daniel [Jones], he missed a lot of games the year before,” Schoen said, via the New York Post. “Saquon [Barkley] missed a lot of games the year before. Richie James missed the entire season the year before. Leonard Williams hadn’t missed a game his entire career. You’ve got to balance it.

“It’s football. There are going to be injuries. You evaluate the injuries on an individual basis. Were they preventable? How did they occur? You look at the film on some of the injuries. Is it something we could’ve done better? So we’re always going to continue to find a competitive advantage where we can. I have a lot of confidence in our training and our medical staff and the research that we’ve done.”

The larger issue in adding players with an injury history is the Giants’ history themselves. They are routinely among the most-injured teams in the league and since 2009, lead the NFL in man games lost. They were again among the worst in 2023.

Some of that can be — and has been — blamed on the turf at MetLife Stadium. The Giants set out to change that this offseason and although they didn’t go with grass, they did swap it out with something deemed to be safer.

What does it all add up to? That remains to be seen but the Giants are ultimately banking on players with a long injury history to remain healthy while also bucking their own injury trend in 2023.

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Full list of 2022 Bills players who have signed with new teams

Here’s a rundown of who the #Bills have lost in free agency thus far:

As it goes each and every offseason, the Buffalo Bills can’t keep all their free agents even if they wanted to.

Here’s the full list of pending free agents the Bills had after the 2022 season that have gone on to sign contracts with new teams:

Giants sign former Bills receiver Jamison Crowder

#Giants sign former #Bills receiver Jamison Crowder:

Jamison Crowder’s short-lived career with the Buffalo Bills will go down as just that.

According to Giants Wire, Crowder, one of Buffalo’s pending free agents this offseason, has signed one-year deal in New York. Full terms of the deal have yet to be announced.

Crowder, 29, was a fourth-round pick of the Washington Commanders back in 2015 out of Duke.

While Crowder might appear to be “following” former Bills offensive coordinator Brian Daboll to New York, he’s not. The Giants’ bench boss had never coached Crowder in Buffalo as the wideout only was with the Bills last year.

It was a disappointing season for Crowder to say the least.

Crowder was injured in his fourth game in Buffalo. An ankle injury ended up sidelining him for the remainder of the year after he made only six catches for 60 yards.

Crowder did say at the end of the season that he was open to returning to the Bills, but that’s not happening.

He also expressed a bit of frustration with the team at the end of 2022.

Crowder said he was given a clean bill of health ahead of the team’s final game of the postseason–He thought he could’ve played against the Cincinnati Bengals, but was not activated from injured reserve.

But a bigger reason for Crowder not returning might have to do with Khalil Shakir.

The Bills drafted Shakir in 2022 who profiles as a player that could see an increased role out of the slot next season. Shakir and Crowder both have the ability to return kicks as well.

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Giants sign WR Jamison Crowder: 5 things to know

The New York Giants have signed Jamison Crowder, so here are five things to know about their newest wide receiver.

The New York Giants and general manager Joe Schoen continued adding to their stable of wide receivers on Thursday, officially signing Jamison Crowder.

Crowder has obvious experience in both New York and the NFC East, having previously played for the Washington Commanders and New York Jets. He spent last season with the Buffalo Bills.

Here are five quick things to know about Crowder.

Giants sign WR Jamison Crowder

The New York Giants continued to add to their wide receiver room on Thursday, signing veteran Jamison Crowder.

New York Giants general manager Joe Schoen isn’t standing pat or even waiting for next month’s NFL draft to build his offensive arsenal.

On Thursday, the Giants signed veteran wideout Jamison Crowder.

Crowder, 29, was a fourth-round pick of the Washington Commanders back in 2015 out of Duke. His college career did not coincide with another Duke alum, Giants quarterback Daniel Jones, but the two have worked out together in the past.

Crowder has played for three teams in his eight-year NFL career — Washington, New York Jets, and one season with the Buffalo Bills last year.

His best year was 2019 with the Jets when he caught 78 passes for 833 yards and six touchdowns. In 2016, Crowder had 67 receptions for 847 yards and seven scores with Washington. He missed 13 games last season with an ankle injury.

The 5-foot-9, 177-pound Crowder is another slot receiver on a roster that already contains Sterling Shepard, Wan’Dale Robinson and Parris Campbell. They still lack a dominant presence on the outside, so this in no way means they are done loading up their wide receiver room.

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