John Mara expected to address media at NFL annual league meeting

New York Giants CEO John Mara is expected to address the media this week.

The NFL will hold its annual meeting this week down in Orlando and New York Giants CEO John Mara is expected to formally field questions from the media for the first time in nearly a year.

Mara, once accused of being too “hands-on” and influential over the team’s direction, has basically stepped back since hiring Joe Schoen as general manager back in 2022.

NJ.com’s Darryl Slater recently wrote a piece about what subjects Mara might be probed about. They appear to range from his patience level with the current management team and coaching staff to the draft to his perception of how close the team is to contending after a 6-11 showing last season.

“The Giants last reached (and won) the Super Bowl after the 2011 season,” writes Slater. “In 12 seasons since, they have reached the playoffs twice — a one-and-done trip in 2016 and the 1-1 divisional round trip in 2022. Mara isn’t getting any younger (and probably isn’t getting any more patient). He turns 70 in December. Since that most recent Super Bowl title, the Giants have endured records of 9-7, 7-9, 6-10, 6-10, 11-5, 3-13, 5-11, 4-12, 6-10, 4-13, 9-7-1, and 6-11.

Their fans are fed up. Is Mara?”

That is a good point to ponder. Mara’s father, Wellington, viewed the fans as “customers” and even went through the fan mail personally, addressing and answering each letter and concern.

His son appears to be just as caring but the pro sports paradigm has changed vastly since those days. There is a formula for winning in the NFL now that allows the “meek” to “inherit the earth” so to speak. No team should have more than three consecutive losing seasons if they follow the formula.

The Giants veered away from that in the latter days of Jerry Reese’s stewardship and it continued through the archaic, old-school tenure of Dave Gettleman.

With Schoen still putting his stamp on the team, Mara has little choice but to sit back and see how things unfold. The Giants have a chance to draft a new quarterback and move on from Daniel Jones, of whom Mara was a chief proponent.

We’ll find out just how much faith he has in Schoen this week. Schoen’s performance in free agency has far onshore his record in the draft. He may have to outperform this year to gain Mara’s full support again.

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Report: Bills assistant GM Joe Schoen not a finalist for Panthers job

Buffalo Bills assistant general manager Joe Schoen not a finalist for Carolina Panthers general manager job.

It doesn’t appear the Bills will lose their assistant general manager just yet.

Joe Schoen interviewed for the vacant Panthers general manager job earlier this month. It was reported on Jan. 5 that the Panthers had asked the Bills for permission to talk to him.

But a new report on Thursday says that the Panthers have “final three” for the job, and Schoen is not one of them.

According to CBS Sports’ Jonathan Jones, the final three are Scott Fitterer, Ryan Poles, and Monti Ossenfort.

Fitterer is the Seahawks’ VP of football operations, while Poles is with the Chiefs as their assistant director of player personnel. Ossenfort is the Titans’ director of player personnel.

On their team website, the Panthers announced on Wednesday that all three, plus 49ers vice president of player personnel Adam Peters, had second interviews with the team. Schoen evidently did not, therefore he’s likely out of the running for the job.

In total, the Panthers interviewed 15 candidates.

At this time no other team has reportedly asked to interview Schoen.

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