Ex-Giant Kevin Wilkins joins Wink Martindale at Michigan

Former New York Giants assistant Kevin Wilkins is joining defensive coordinator Wink Martindale at Michigan as a defensive analyst.

Former New York Giants defensive assistant Kevin Wilkins will be joining the staff of the National Champion Michigan Wolverines as an off-field assistant this season.

Wilkins will be working once again under defensive coordinator Wink Martindale, who was hired by first-year head coach Sherrone Moore to be the team’s defensive coordinator.

Wilkins was fired by the Giants after the 2023 season along with his brother, Drew, in a bloodbath that culminated in Martindale’s departure.

“Wilkins is still a good football coach and hiring him as an analyst is a huge boon for the Wolverines,” writes Chris Peterson of GBMWolverine.com.

“He’s got nine years of NFL experience and knows the defensive scheme like the back of his hand. The addition should also make Martindale more comfortable since none of the position coaches were really his guys.”

Drew Wilkins recently joined head coach Jerod Mayo’s staff in New England as the new outside linebackers coach.

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Michigan football adds Wink Martindale protege as defensive analyst

Good move for #Michigan! #GoBlue

Wherever Wink Martindale has gone, he’s tended to bring along a pair of brothers he has an affinity for.

Drew Wilkins was an on-field coach, but Kevin Wilkins was most recently listed as a defensive assistant for the New York Giants. The Rutherford, New Jersey-based franchise ultimately fired both which precipitated Martindale’s departure from the NFL program.

Now one of the Wilkins brothers appears to be Ann Arbor-bound.

According to 247Sports’ Matt Zenitz, Kevin Wilkins will join Michigan football, coming aboard as a defensive analyst. His role previously as a defensive assistant is unclear, but he’ll re-team with Martindale to help lead the defensive charge for the maize and blue.

Wilkins joined Martindale in 2015, coming aboard to the Baltimore Ravens, first as a video assistant before working his way up the ladder.

Via the Giants press release when Wilkins was officially hired:

Wilkins joined the Ravens in 2015 as a video intern, a position he held for two seasons. He was Baltimore’s video operations coordinator from 2017-20. Wilkins began doing special projects for the Ravens’ defensive coaching staff in 2019 and was made a defensive assistant for the 2021 season.

Wilkins was a business major at the University of South Carolina, where he worked as a studio video assistant for five seasons.

A native of Doylestown, Pa., Wilkins attended La Salle College High School.

Wilkins is the first publicly noted analyst to join the new-look Michigan football program under head coach Sherrone Moore.

Giants’ Mike Kafka unhappy, may want out of New York

Even if he doesn’t land a head coaching job, Giants OC Mike Kafka is reportedly unhappy and may want to exit New York stage left.

The New York Giants have a problem that’s beginning to boil over, and their attempts to control the narrative have failed.

After months of denying that tension exists inside 1925 Giants Drive, it’s now apparent that the environment, as some staffers have suggested, has become toxic.

On Black Monday, the Giants fired special teams coordinator Thomas McGaughey.

Whether or not that termination was justified — and many believe it was — an end to that relationship was inevitably coming. Although he toed the company line publicly, McGaughey was unhappy behind the scenes, put off by head coach Brian Daboll’s routine eruptions.

“(McGaughey) was also not especially happy. He kind of wanted out,” ESPN’s Jordan Raanan reported on the latest Breaking Big Blue podcast.

Immediately following the termination of McGaughey, Daboll informed defensive assistants Drew and Kevin Wilkins, that they too were fired.

The belief was that Drew Wilkins, the right-hand man of defensive coordinator Wink Martindale, may have been the one leaking frustrations to the media.

Raanan isn’t so sure.

“I still have not found a single person who said a bad thing about Drew Wilkins,” Raanan said. “I know a lot of people think he’s the one out there — the Wilkins brothers — spilling all the beans to people. I really don’t think that’s true. I don’t think they talk to anybody.”

After the Wilkins brothers were fired, it set off a chain reaction inside the building. Martindale unloaded on Daboll in an expletive-filled rant and then stormed out.

Initially, it was reported that Martindale would resign, but he thought better of that. The Giants would control where he could work in 2024, so instead the two sides came to an agreement and “mutually parted ways.”

With two unhappy coordinators and two unhappy assistants gone, the problem was solved for the Giants, right?

Wrong.

Offensive coordinator Mike Kafka, who has reportedly faced the brunt of Daboll’s eruptions, is also unhappy. And even if he doesn’t land any of the head coaching jobs he’s interviewed for, Raanan expects him to take his leave from East Rutherford as well.

“Mike Kafka, the more I hear, the less likely it is — and I know he’s still there now — even if he doesn’t get a head coaching job, I wouldn’t be surprised if the Giants let him out and he ends up somewhere else anyway,” Raanan said. “He’s unhappy.”

Kafka’s displeasure is nothing new. Word has filtered out over the last several weeks that he’s less than enthused by the situation in East Rutherford.

“I had heard this weeks ago,” Raanan said. “At that point, I had heard it from multiple people. At this point, I’m hearing it from five, six, seven people.

“I had heard on multiple occasions that Kafka’s deal was that Brian Daboll was super suffocating. He was overly involved in the offense if that was possible — even though it’s his offense. But really, just in a way, undercutting, completely undercutting Kafka, who is the offense coordinator.”

Raanan added that one assistant coach, who didn’t come with Daboll from Buffalo and had no personal ties to Martindale, said the head coach repeatedly makes things personal.

That is not the first time a similar accusation has been made.

“I know of at least a handful of people on the coaching staff who weren’t happy or completely disliked Brian Daboll this year,” Raanan said. “That’s just not healthy.”

Despite all of the dysfunction, Giants ownership remains supportive of Daboll and hasn’t blamed him for any of the fallout.

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Report: Giants’ Brian Daboll makes ‘brutal’ outbursts ‘personal’

New York Giants head coach Brian Daboll reportedly makes his “brutal” outburst “personal” and is considered an unhinged “madman” on game day.

The New York Giants and defensive coordinator Wink Martindale parted ways this week after tensions between head coach Brian Daboll and him boiled over.

Martindale exploded on Daboll following the firing of his most trusted assistants, Drew and Kevin Wilkins, leading the veteran defensive coordinator to head home to Florida.

But the issues between Martindale and Daboll began long before that fiery exchange. In fact, they started to butt heads during their very first training camp together in 2022.

Dan Duggan of The Athletic reports that Daboll’s explosive temper rubbed not only Martindale the wrong way, but several other coaches and assistants throughout the organization.

One Giants team source told The Athletic that Daboll often turns his fits of rage unnecessarily personal.

“You could probably see it building a little bit,” the Giants source said. “Like the defense is getting installed and you might have 12 guys on the field and Dabes is losing it, and he’s calling out coaches, and he’s making it personal.”

Daboll has never shied away from his outbursts, owning them without shame over his first two seasons. And as bad as they’ve been behind the scenes, they’re even worse on game day.

“On game day, he’s a madman. It’s just brutal,” a team source said.

“It’s to the point where you’ve got to take your headsets off or take one ear off,” another team source added. “He’s just constantly screaming. It’s like, ‘Jeez, I can’t even think.'”

That kind of treatment — something often dubbed “The Patriot Way” — is not something Martindale took kindly to. And although Martindale managed to keep his cool in the public eye, he would reportedly needle Daboll in front of other staff members with the intent of making the head coach blow his stack — not that he needed much motivation.

“Wink would just walk in (to a coaches’ meeting) and say something like, ‘When such and such did this, I stayed calm. I just went onto the next play.’ He’d throw stuff out there and see if he could get (Daboll) riled up. Dabes knows it. Dabes isn’t stupid. It would just float on by in the meeting, and nobody would say anything,” another team source said.

Daboll was the loose cannon who made things personal. Martindale played the long game. It was oil and water for the Giants.

“(Martindale’s) personality kind of fits his style of defense — blitz zero, man coverage,” the source told The Athletic. “He’s not a loose cannon. He’s very calculated. But he just doesn’t give a (expletive).”

In the end, Daboll found something that sent Martindale over the edge: He sent the Wilkins brothers packing.

Daboll’s over-the-top outbursts are accepted by most of his players, but his actions wear thin with other members of the coaching staff. And in order for this thing to work, Daboll will have to channel his inner Tom Coughlin and calm his jets a bit.

If he can’t, the Giants may be looking for another head coach as early as 2025.

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Giants forced Wink Martindale out by firing his most trusted assistants

The New York Giants and Brian Daboll knew exactly what they were doing when they fired Wink Martindale’s two most-trusted assistants.

Hours after New York Giants general manager Joe Schoen and head coach Brian Daboll said they expected their offensive and defensive coordinators back next season, defensive coordinator Wink Martindale walked away following a blow-up with Daboll.

Martindale and Daboll had been butting heads for a while and when it was announced that two of Martindale’s top assistants — brothers Drew and Kevin Wilkins — were fired by the club, Martindale decided to split for his home in Florida. Two days later, it was announced that he was out.

Many are seeing the moves as a backdoor way for Daboll to force Martindale out without publicly firing him, which would have cost Daboll a chunk of his credibility.

It would have also cost the Giants a chunk of money.

Either way, Martindale is out and now Daboll can hire a DC who doesn’t steal his thunder. Martindale isn’t expected to be unemployed for very long.

The Giants hope Martindale doesn’t land back in the NFC East where he’ll torment them twice per season for the foreseeable future.

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Giants fire Drew, Kevin Wilkins as Wink Martindale resigns

New York Giants OLBs coach Drew Wilkins and defensive assistant Kevin Wilkins were fired Monday.

The New York Giants fired outside linebackers coach Drew Wilkins and his brother defensive assistant Kevin Wilkins in the wake of defensive coordinator Wink Martindale’s resignation on Monday.

The Giants have made some significant changes to the coaching staff including the firings of offensive line coach Bobby Johnson and special teams coordinator Thomas McGaughey.

The Wilkins brothers joined Martindale when the Giants hired him as the defensive coordinator during the 2022 offseason.

Drew Wilkins spent roughly a decade with Martindale during the latter’s tenure with the Baltimore Ravens. His brother, Kevin, joined the Ravens staff in 2015 and has been with Martindale ever since.

Giants add Bryan Cox and Kevin Wilkins to Brian Daboll’s staff

The New York Giants have hired assistant coaches Bryan Cox and Kevin Wilkins, adding to Brian Daboll’s staff.

New York Giants head coach Bran Daboll continues to add to his 2022 staff with two more assistant coaches officially hired on Wednesday.

Former NFL linebacker and long-time defensive assistant coach Bryan Cox, 54, has been named the Giants’ assistant defensive line coach. He will work alongside Andre Patterson, who was hired as the defensive line coach last week.

Kevin Wilkins, who served as an assistant under new the Giants’ defensive coordinator Don ‘Wink’ Martindale in Baltimore last season, will now handle similar responsibilities in East Rutherford.

Cox was a three-time Pro Bowler as a player whose career spanned from 1991 through 2002. He had stints with the Miami Dolphins, Chicago Bears, New York Jets, New England Patriots and New Orleans Saints. He also won a Super Bowl with the Patriots in 2001.

As an assistant, Cox has coached the defensive line for the Jets, Cleveland, Tampa Bay and Atlanta, and was the Dolphins’ pass rush coach in 2011.

Wilkins began his career as a video intern for the Baltimore Ravens and worked as a video operations coordinator before moving into coaching in 2021.

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Lions sign DT Kevin Wilkins, waive Olive Sagapolu

Wilkins was with the Eagles under Cory Undlin in 2019

The Detroit Lions added a new defensive tackle to the roster just ahead of Thursday’s practice session in Allen Park. The Lions announced they have signed free agent Kevin Wilkins to a contract.

In order to make room for Wilkins, the team waived DT Olive Sagapolu.

Wilkins was most recently with the New York Giants. He spent most of the 2019 season on the Philadelphia Eagles practice squad, where he spent time working with new Lions defensive coordinator Cory Undlin. He was originally an undrafted free agent from Rutgers. The 25-year-old Wilkins has not played in an NFL game as of yet.

 

Giants add two, waive one to level roster at 90 players

The New York Giants have signed two more undrafted rookie free agents and released one to level their roster at 90 players.

The New York Giants are now at the league maximum of 90 players after making three roster moves on Thursday.

The club signed rookie free agents tight end Rysen John of Simon Fraser and defensive end Dana Levine of Temple, and waived defensive end Kevin Wilkins.

John, a 6-foot-7, 237 pounder out of Simon Fraser University in British Columbia, played in 25 games and caught 112 passes for 1,675 yards and 19 touchdowns.

John was selected first-team All-Great Northwest Athletic Conference after catching 53 passes for 861 yards and 10 touchdowns. He is named after former NFL star wide receiver Andre Rison (yes, we realize the spelling is different). John is now one of seven tight ends on the Giants’ roster.

Levine is a 6-foot-4, 235 pound prospect that played mainly defensive end in his four years at Temple.

Levine amassed 91 tackles (52 solo and 18.5 tackles for a loss) with 11.0 sacks and four forced fumbles. Last season, he had career highs of 11 tackles for loss and 5.5 sacks in his 32 total tackles, 19 of which were solo.

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Giants sign DB Rashaan Gaulden off practice squad

The New York Giants have signed defensive back Rashaan Gaulden off of their practice squad.

The New York Giants made a series of roster moves on Tuesday, including placing tight end Evan Engram on season-ending injured reserve, but remained one player short on their 53-man roster after the shuffling had concluded.

That additional spot was created last week when the team parted ways with veteran cornerback Janoris Jenkins after he used a term one Twitter that some perceived to be offensive.

On Wednesday morning, ahead of their first Week 16 practice, the Giants closed that gap by signing defensive back Rashaan Gaulden off of their practice squad.

Per the team release:

Gaulden, 6-1 and 200 pounds, played in 24 games in two seasons with the Carolina Panthers, including nine this year, most recently on Nov. 24 at New Orleans. He was released the following day.

Gaulden was credited with 14 tackles (10 solo) and returned one punt for the Panthers. He was a 2018 third-round draft choice (85th overall) by Carolina, from the University of Tennessee.

With an open spot on their practice squad, the Giants signed defensive end Kevin Wilkins (6-foot-2, 304 pounds), who played at Rutgers before joining the Philadelphia Eagles as an undrafted rookie free agent.

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