Infighting, sideline tantrums a microcosm of Giants’ lost season

The New York Giants are crumbling before your eyes with infighting and sideline tantrums becoming a weekly norm for the boys in blue.

In what has become an all-too-common theme for the 2023 New York Giants, infighting and sideline tantrums stole the show on Sunday afternoon in Arlington.

While the Giants were being demolished, 49-17, on the field, all eyes were on what was happening away from the field. That’s where head coach Brian Daboll continued to dress down his players while they fought with each other.

A week removed from safety Xavier McKinney throwing the coaching staff under the bus by claiming they don’t listen to team captains, the wheels completely came off in Week 10.

There was the usual Daboll meltdown, this time aimed at quarterback Tommy DeVito and defensive coordinator Wink Martindale — the latter of which continued through halftime.

After the game, Daboll downplayed his heated conversation with Martindale.

“We talk a lot throughout the game. Probably going into half, kind of some things we wanted to get worked on, things we want to do, but I have conversations with all those guys,” Daboll told reporters. “Normal stuff during a game.”

Normal for these Giants, sure.

But Daboll’s interactions with DeVito and Martindale aside, FOX cameras also caught a very heated exchange between wide receivers Darius Slayton and Sterling Shepard, which apparently began with wide receivers coach Mike Groh.

“Slaton and Shep, they weren’t getting into it. Little stuff during the game. Not a big deal,” Daboll said, suggesting that you should not trust your lying eyes.

“I don’t know what the cameras caught, I’m sure it probably looked combative to me and him but it wasn’t in the moment,” Slayton said of his tiff with Groh, via the New York Post. “I was just already worked up so I was talking emotionally. At that point we weren’t arguing back and forth, we were talking about the same thing, spiritedly.

“I just have to manage my emotions a little bit better in those scenarios.”

That “spirited” conversation then spilled over onto the aforementioned Shepard.

“Just trying to motivate him to keep on going,” Shepard said. “It’s frustrating, obviously, you look at the scoreboard and how the game went down. I was just trying to motivate him to keep on going and fighting.

“Listen, that is like my brother, like my mother’s kids. It was straight me motivating him to go out there, that’s the honest truth.”

Slayton expressed love and appreciation for Shepard, reminding reporters that the two are close friends off the field. But then there was also running back Saquon Barkley, who appeared to have a few choice words for Daboll toward the end of the first half.

Again, like the others, Barkley attempted to sweep that under the rug.

“There was no argument, nothing like that,” Barkley said. “It happens. It’s football.”

So, there you have it. All of that unusual and clearly not normal screaming and arguing on the sideline is common for every team. Had FOX cameras shown the Cowboys sideline, it would have been exactly the same, right? The Giants aren’t crumbling, they’ll tell you — it’s just an incorrect outside perception.

And since that’s the case in their minds, surely their other players would have no problems discussing it after the game, right?

Well, not so much. McKinney declined to speak with reporters a week removed from wanting to say a whole lot, but he wasn’t the only one. Defensive tackle and team captain, Dexter Lawrence, also refused to speak with the media. As did veteran defensive lineman Jihad Ward, although he promised a little venting in the near future.

“I’m going to talk to you, just not today. I’m going to speak my mind. I’ll let you know,” Ward said, via the New York Post.

That should be fun.

Lawrence, meanwhile, addressed his refusal to meet with reporting noting that it was his birthday and he had family waiting.

The Giants can say whatever they want but it’s clear to everyone watching that this group has crumbled. The plane is off the runway and the sideline exchanges are becoming more and more intense by the week. The team is infected with a losing mentality and since they can’t beat anyone on the field, they’ve resorted to beating each other off of it.

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Giants rookie Jalin Hyatt embraces ‘next play mentality’

New York Giants rookie WR Jalin Hyatt had an ugly drop against the Panthers but didn’t let it consume him — it was onto the next play.

New York Giants rookie wide receiver Jalin Hyatt has made explosive play after explosive play during training camp but was silent in his preseason debut against the Detroit Lions.

Hyatt hauled in just one reception for negative-four yards and didn’t see another target thrown in his direction.

Then, on Friday night against the Carolina Panthers, Hyatt dropped a pass that hit him right in the hands. But rather than sulk about it, the rookie popped back up and went right back to work.

Shortly thereafter, Hyatt did what he does best — used his blazing speed to coast past a Panthers defender en route to a 33-yard touchdown, the first of his career.

“It’s always good to get the first one,” Hyatt told Giants.com after the game. “Those are the ones that are the hardest ones. When you’re open and it’s just you and the ball, sometimes you (lose) focus. It’s always good to look it in, focusing, and making a play when you need to make a play.”

Hyatt was frustrated with his drop but didn’t allow it to impact how he played for the remainder of the game. It’s a lesson instilled upon him by head coach Brian Daboll and wide receivers coach Mike Groh.

“As a receiver, when the ball touches our hands, we want to catch everything. I believe I can catch any ball that comes to me,” Hyatt said. “When you have a play like that — and I didn’t come up with it — it’s always next play mentality.

“That’s what (Brian Daboll) and (Mike) Groh have been teaching me. . . I am just glad that Coach Dabes trusted me and called that next play. Lot of respect for him.”

And how did Hyatt get so open? Speed, of course. But a few other things as well.

“It’s speed, it’s acceleration, it’s getting open, it’s knowing what you have to do and being comfortable with the quarterback,” Hyatt said.

The good news for the Giants is that Hyatt is becoming more comfortable every day and clearly doesn’t allow the negatives, which he will experience as a rookie, to get him down.

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Giants’ Jalin Hyatt has ‘maximized every opportunity’ to improve

New York Giants wide receivers coach Mike Groh says rookie Jalin Hyatt has “maximized every opportunity to get better” this spring.

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Just prior to the 2023 NFL draft, wide receiver Jalin Hyatt went viral for his exchange with Dallas Cowboys wide receivers coach Robert Prince.

In the clip, Prince repeatedly implies that Hyatt is a speed-only receiver who struggles to run a full route tree. The Tennessee star, of course, disagreed.

Following the draft, where he was selected in the third round by the New York Giants, anonymous NFL executives and head coaches continued to pile on. They told The Athletic that Hyatt was “arrogant,” “squirrelly,” and “naïve.”

Despite all of the outside criticism and doubt, those inside the Giants’ building have seen something totally different from Hyatt. Their reality doesn’t match the perception.

Hyatt has proven himself to be very coachable, personable and professional. Perhaps more importantly, he’s shown an ability to run various routes. And he improves every single day.

On Wednesday, just prior to the team’s final minicamp practice, wide receivers coach Mike Groh praised Hyatt’s strong route running ability and noted that the rookie maximizes every single opportunity to improve.

As far as his speed, Groh acknowledged that as well.

“Oh, yeah. He’s fast,” Groh told reporters.

Hyatt had seen his workload increase every day during the team’s offseason program and that’s likely to continue when they return for training camp in late July.

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Giants minicamp: Notes, videos and highlights from Day 2

News, notes, highlights and a few videos from Day 2 of the New York Giants’ 2023 mandatory minicamp.

The New York Giants were back on the field for their final practice of mandatory minicamp on Wednesday. They will now head into summer break and are not required to return to East Rutherford until the start of training camp in late July.

The day began with offensive assistants meeting with members of the media before head coach Brian Daboll took the podium for a press conference. Then it was off to practice.

Here is some news, notes, highlights and videos from Day 2 of minicamp:

4 possible OC candidates for Frank Reich’s Panthers

Are you tired of playing Charlie Kelly and trying to connect all of the offensive coordinator dots to Frank Reich? Then we got you covered, Panthers fans.

After Thursday’s hiring of Frank Reich, mum currently seems to be the word on the rest of the Carolina Panthers’ coaching staff. And that includes the offensive coordinator position, which may or may not belong to 2022’s play caller Ben McAdoo at this point.

So, who could fill the spot if the team opts for an overhaul? Here are four possible candidates, all with some sort of link to Reich, for the job.

Giants to hire Colts WRs coach Mike Groh

Colts WRs coach Mike Groh is expected to join the Giants’ coaching staff.

The New York Giants are expected to hire Indianapolis Colts wide receivers coach Mike Groh for the same role, per Art Stapleton of The Record.

Groh has been with the Colts for two seasons as the wide receivers coach under Frank Reich. He joined the Colts staff in 2020 after his two-year stint as offensive coordinator for the Philadelphia Eagles.

Groh was also a candidate for the vacant offensive coordinator role with the Carolina Panthers before they hired Ben McAdoo.

It isn’t clear what the motive for a lateral move is with Groh holding the same role on the Giants coaching staff, but this is another spot the Colts will have to replace this offseason.

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Giants hire Laura Young, announce partial coaching staff

The New York Giants have hired Laura Young as director of coaching operations and officially revealed a portion of their coaching staff.

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The New York Giants announced some additions to their coaching staff on Friday.

Big Blue officially named their coordinators under new head coach Brian Daboll: Mike Kafka (offense), Don “Wink” Martindale (defense) and Thomas McGaughey (special teams).

The team also subsequently announced the hiring of some key assistants:

  • Quarterbacks coach Shea Tierney
  • Running backs coach DeAndre Smith
  • Wide receivers coach Mike Groh
  • Tight ends coach Andy Bischoff
  • Offensive line coach Bobby Johnson
  • Asst. offensive line coach Tony Sparano, Jr.
  • Defensive line coach Andre Patterson

In addition, the Giants announced that Laura Young has been hired as the team’s director of coaching operations. Young will be involved in “every aspect of football operations, including coordinating/organizing practice, as well as game day operations.”

“(Young will) have her hands all over the organization in terms of the coaching side,” Daboll said. “She’s with me every step of the way. She’s a rock star really, and I feel very fortunate that I get to work with her each day because she provides just a tremendous amount of support and value to really everyone, but myself the most, I would say.

“She’s smart, there’s really not a job she can’t do and a job she won’t do. That’s her mindset. Very humble, egoless, but driven, smart. I just think she’s the best.”

Daboll took a unique approach to assembling his staff. He leveraged several relationships from his time as offensive coordinator in Buffalo, but also hired coaches he had no prior relationship with.

“I think what you try to do when you’re putting together a staff, whether that be an offensive staff in a smaller form or the entire staff, you try to put together a group of people that will complement one another, whether that’s experience, whether that’s energy, whether that’s detail, whether that’s passion,” Daboll said. “You don’t want to have a cookie cutter approach and hire everybody that’s exactly the same. I think that you have to offset blind spots.”

Daboll will continue to add to his staff over the next week or two as the Giants prepare for the NFL combine later this month and free agency which begins in mid-March.

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Giants expected to hire Mike Groh, John Egorugwu

The New York Giants are expected to hire two more assistants to Brian Daboll’s staff: Mike Groh and John Egorugwu.

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Brian Daboll’s coaching staff for the New York Giants continues to take shape with new assistants being added seemingly daily.

Following the hires of both Tony Sparano Jr. and Andre Patterson on Thursday morning, the Giants added two more on Thursday night.

The first, reports Art Stapleton of USA TODAY, is former Indianapolis Colts assistant Mike Groh, who will take over as the Giants’ wide receivers coach.

The Giants had interviewed former wide receivers coach Adam Henry, but decided to not hire him. The team was looking to replace Tyke Tolbert, who had been the wide receivers coach for the last four seasons.

Groh had been the Indianapolis Colts’ wide receivers coach for the las two seasons under Frank Reich. Before that, he was the offensive coordinator for the Philadelphia Eagles from 2018-2019.

Groh, the son of former New York Jets head coach Al Groh, was also on Doug Pederson’s Super Bowl winning staff as the wide receivers coach.

Meanwhile, Bruce Feldman of The Athletic reports that the Giants will also hire former Vanderbilt linebackers coach John Egorugwu.

Prior to returning to Vandy in 2021, Egorugwu spent four seasons (2017-2020) serving as a defensive quality control coach and assistant linebackers coach for the Buffalo Bills. While there, he worked alongside Daboll.

Egorugwu also worked under Don “Wink” Martindale for two years (2015-2016) as a member of Baltimore Ravens’ coaching staff, serving as a defensive assistant.

It’s unclear what Egorugwu’s role will be in East Rutherford, but it’s a safe bet that he’ll somehow be involved with the linebackers.

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Tracking the Colts’ interviews for other HC, GM vacancies

Tracking the HC and GM interviews the Colts have taken this offseason.

The Indianapolis Colts have become a popular target across the league when it comes to teams filling their vacancies at head coach and general manager.

The process has been well underway for a few weeks now with the New York Giants being the only team to have named a new general manager. They went with former Buffalo Bills assistant general manager Joe Schoen.

The Colts have had a few executives interview for vacant general manager roles while a pair of assistant coaches have interviewed for head coach and offensive coordinator vacancies.

Here’s all of the interviews we know so far involving the Colts’ executives and assistant coaches:

Panthers 2021 offensive coordinator search tracker

Keep track of all the potential candidates that have been linked to the Panthers’ offensive coordinator opening.

This search for a “rockstar” could get pretty exhaustive for the Carolina Panthers and head coach Matt Rhule and maybe even exhausting for you!

So, let’s keep track of every potential candidate that has popped up for the team’s offensive coordinator opening.