Odell Beckham: Giants never built around Eli Manning

Cleveland Browns WR Odell Beckham says the New York Giants wasted Eli Manning’s final years and that he never envisioned playing elsewhere.

Former New York Giants wide receiver Odell Beckham Jr. once drew ire for appearing to speak ill of quarterback Eli Manning, but several years removed from his trade to the Cleveland Browns, OBJ says that’s not the case at all.

In fact, Beckham says, one of his biggest gripes with the Giants is that they completely wasted Manning’s final years and that the ever-loyal Manning never said a word about it.

“I will tell you where I ran into trouble,” Beckham told the “All Things Covered” podcast. “I felt like they never put people around Eli. I know I got a lot of [expletive] when I talked bad on Eli and I never once said a bad thing. If anything, I just speak the truth. The only thing I can look back on and be like ‘Man, I regret saying that’ is saying he’s not the same player even though it’s the truth.

“It bothered me because they never built around him and we were just drafting, but we were just drafting and not building an organization and a franchise. My frustration grew because it was another 5-11 and 5-11 and we were just never good. Even the year we were 11-5, the defense was holding teams to 10 points a game and we were only good because of the defense. My frustrations grew and I felt like they weren’t growing and I had wanted more.”

Beckham, of course, punched his ticket out of town shortly after a bizarre ESPN interview alongside Little Wayne in which he ripped the Giants, playing in New York and Eli himself to some degree.

Despite that moment of frustration, Beckham says he never envisioned playing for another team and was sold on bringing another championship back to the Giants.

“I never thought I would play for another team besides the Giants,” Beckham said. “I never wanted to win a championship for anybody more than the Giants, bro. It was just such a legendary place. I was very proud to be a part of that organization.”

Beckham added that the losing was too much in the end, and despite pleading with Manning for more, the next evolution never came.

“I ran into that problem when I felt they weren’t growing and evolving as an organization,” he said. “I wasn’t winning and I hated losing that bad. I was having great seasons, but I hated losing. I hated it, I hated it, and I feel like that’s where I ran into the problems.

“That was was really it for me, bro. I used to text Eli all the time, ‘Bro, you’re seventh on the list for greatest of all-time. Let’s [expletive] do it.’ I would come to work every day and giving them everything that I had and then I felt like when I was the one pushing. … I just felt like I was coming to an end of the road and I was pushing for something that wasn’t really tangible. That was where it all just kind of went haywire for me.”

When Pat Shurmur came in as head coach, Beckham felt that was the end of the line. He believed he was betrayed and needed to get out.

“We got a new coach in there and you know, it felt like that’s a situation I could be honest about now because people have come out and now it’s like, ‘anonymous coaches,’ but we all know who it’s about now,” Beckham said of Pat Shurmur. “I felt betrayed in a sense. This coach has tried to turn me against my brothers and my people. He was telling the young guys to stay away from me because I’m not a good teammate or role model.”

In the end, love him or hate him, Beckham isn’t lying. It was an unfortunately situation and one that wasted Manning’s final years and drove OBJ to Cleveland.

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Throwback Thursday: Giants-Buccaneers has become a fun rivalry

In the latest Giants Wire Throwback Thursday, we look at three New York Giants-Tampa Bay Buccaneers games that have ignited this rivalry.

The New York Giants will meet the Tampa Bay Buccaneers this coming Monday night in a matchup that appears to be an uneven one. The 5-2 Bucs are soaring toward the top of the NFC while the 1-6 Giants are struggling to find their way.

Recent history tells us none of that means anything. If you’re smart, you might hop on the Giants train and take those 10.5 points this week.

The Giants and Bucs meet for a fourth straight season, and if recent trends hold true, this will be a whopper of a ballgame. The past three contests were decided by one, three and two points, respectively.

October 1, 2017: Buccaneers 25, Giants 23

It seems like 100 years ago that Ben McAdoo and Dirk Koetter were the coaches of these teams. The Giants came into Tampa 0-3 and would be in big trouble with a loss after qualifying for the playoffs the year before. The Bucs led 16-10 at halftime but the Giants took a 17-16 lead in the third quarter on a 4-yard pass from Eli Manning to running back Wayne Gallman.

Tampa would outscore the Giants 9-6 in the fourth quarter to win the game, 25-23. This battle was more about the points missed than the points scored.

Bucs kicker Nick Folk missed two field goals and a PAT. They also failed on a two-point conversion in the fourth quarter. After the Giants took a 23-22 lead on a Manning-to-Rhett Ellison 2-yard touchdown pass with 3:16 remaining, the two-point conversion attempt was disallowed as it was ruled that wide receiver Odell Beckham Jr. stepped out of bounds.

November 18, 2018: Giants 38, Buccaneers 35

The 2-7 Giants, led by new head coach Pat Shurmur, faced off against Koetter’s 3-6 Bucs at MetLife Stadium in an afterthought of a game that had no bearing on the playoff picture.

The Giants had a new weapon to throw at Tampa this time around, rookie running back Saquon Barkley, and he would score three touchdowns and rush 27 times for 142 yards in the game.

The Giants would open up a 31-14 lead on a Manning to Beckham 8-yard touchdown strike but the Bucs, behind erratic but explosive quarterback Jameis Winston, would come charging back with three fourth-quarter touchdowns. The Giants were able to stave them off and secure the victory, though.

September 22, 2019: Giants 32, Buccaneers 31

A new era in Giants history began when rookie Daniel Jones took over the starting quarterback job from Eli Manning. Jones had a storybook debut, rallying the Giants from an 18-point deficit to win the game on a quarterback keeper with 1:21 remaining in the quarter.

What most will ignore — or conveniently forget — is that Matt Gay’s 34-yard field goal attempt that would have won the game for Tampa, sailed wide right to give the Giants the win.

But Giants fans will revel in the legend more than the facts on this one and remember how the kid rose up and carried the team on his back for an impressive start to his career.

4 former Giants named to PFF’s All-Decade Top 101

Four former members of the New York Giants, including one draft pick, have been named to Pro Football Focus’ All-Decade Top 101.

On Thursday, Pro Football Focus released their top 101 players of the past decade. Three former New members of the York Giants made the list, but it may not be in the order you would think.

Damon “Snacks” Harrison came in at No. 56 overall and you could argue that he was the best of the big-name free agents that were acquired in the 2016 free agency spending spree:

56. DI DAMON HARRISON SR.

In a different era of the game, Damon Harrison would go down as one of the greatest players to ever play. In today’s NFL, he will be remembered as the best run defender of his era, at a time where the run game became progressively less important year by year. Harrison earned a PFF run-defense grade above 90.0 for five of his six first seasons as a starter, and he topped 40 run stops four consecutive seasons, a mark only a couple of other players have ever managed from the defensive line. Harrison was an immovable force against the run and changed the way teams attacked on the ground, but never managed more than 22 total pressures over a season, despite rushing the passer at least 300 times for three straight years.

Snacks was with the New York Jets for four years before coming over to the crosstown rival Giants during the 2016 offseason. Snacks spent the last season and a half with the Detroit Lions after he was reluctantly traded from the Giants to the Lions during the 2018 season.

Just five spots later came wide receiver Brandon Marshall, who many have either forgotten was a member of the Giants or hope to forget that he was. Regardless, Marshall was an elite receiver for the better part of the last decade which helped land him at number 61 on the list:

61. WR BRANDON MARSHALL

One of the most physically gifted receivers of his generation, Brandon Marshall’s best years came over the past decade. The player dubbed “baby T.O.” — in reference to Terrell Owens — shared many of the same characteristics. Like T.O., drops were always his biggest issue, and he accrued 84 of them over the nine years he played in the last decade. But he also broke 81 tackles and was one of the most physically imposing receivers in the league. Even late in his career, he was able to go toe-to-toe with physically dominant cornerbacks like Richard Sherman and catch almost 100 yards’ worth of passes and score a touchdown.

Marshall’s time with the Giants was extremely short-lived and was a major bust of a free agent signing.

Recently, Marshall said in an interview that the Giants are not a well-run organization. However, it should be noted that most former members of the organization do not share that thought.

The only player who made the list that the Giants drafted was wide receiver Odell Beckham Jr., who checked in at No. 91.

Beckham spent the first five years of his career with the Giants before being shipped off to the Cleveland Browns last offseason. From a talent perspective, he could be considered the best receiver to made the list.

Beckham’s time with the Giants, let alone his time in the league, has been controversial to say the least. Even the trade that sent him to the Browns was considered highly controversial, and there are still Giants fans who express disappointment over his departure.

91. WR ODELL BECKHAM JR.

There are few more-talented receivers in NFL history than OBJ. The start of his career showed the kind of impact he could have, but injuries have begun to derail that impact, whether it was missing time in New York or battling through pain only to look like a shadow of himself in his first season with the Cleveland Browns. He has broken 20 or more tackles in a season twice in his career while notching double-digit totals in every healthy season. OBJ is one of the most dynamic receivers in the league after the catch, and you only have to watch his pregame warm-up routine to see his natural catching ability. The receiving talent pool in the NFL has never been deeper, but even so, OBJ has the potential to be as good as any.

One thing there is no debating is Beckham’s talent. Beckham gave Giants fans some of the most exciting plays in recent memory and he certainly belongs on the list regardless of how you feel about him.

Finally, there was a bit of an outlier.

Although he only spent three months with the Giants and did not see the field in either the preseason or regular season, New York did sign edge rusher Cameron Wake as an undrafted rookie free agent in 2005. He checked in at No. 41 overall.

41. EDGE CAMERON WAKE

Cameron Wake’s NFL beginnings seem hard to believe, given what he became — one of the top pure pass-rushers of his generation. Only Von Miller has a higher PFF pass-rush grade than Wake among edge rushers over the past decade, and only Miller surpassed the 600 total pressures that Wake amassed to go with his incredibly impressive 16.5% pressure rate. Wake was one of the most devastating speed-rushers the league has ever seen, and because his NFL career took some time to get going, the decade captured pretty much the entirety of his elite-level play.

The Giants’ current roster is full of youngsters with a bunch of potential. Hopefully, 10 years from now when PFF comes out with this list for 2020 decade we are talking about more current and former Giants — possibly even Daniel Jones and Saquon Barkley.

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Best Giants draft picks by round since 2000

Draft season is upon us, so travel back in time as we look at some of the best New York Giants draft picks by round since 2000.

With the free agency frenzy now in the rear-view mirror and April just around the bend, it’s time to begin looking ahead (and back) at the NFL Draft, its impact and what it could mean for teams in 2020 and beyond.

While there will be weeks of coverage ahead of the 2020 NFL Draft, we here at Giants Wire decided to kick off draft season with a look back at the New York Giants’ best draft picks by round since 2000.

Here they are in reverse order:

Chris Trotman/Getty Images

Round 7: Ahmad Bradshaw (2007)

Bradshaw is far and away the Giants’ best seventh-round pick since 2000. Unless, of course, you wanted us to tab Matt Dodge or Bobby Hart for this position. No? Didn’t think so.

Bradshaw immediately took the Giants by storm in 2007 and helped propel them to a Super Bowl XLII title (and later, a Super Bowl XLVI title).

In total, Bradshaw spent seven seasons with the Giants and then three more with the Indianapolis Colts before retiring following the 2015 season.

In 103 career games, Bradshaw gained 4,928 yards and scored 36 touchdowns, adding an additional 1,493 yards and 12 touchdowns through the air.