Giants great Tom Coughlin snubbed for Pro Football Hall of Fame

Retired New York Giants head coach Tom Coughlin was snubbed again for induction into the Pro Football Hall of Fame.

The New York Giants will not have any coach, contributor, or senior finalists for this year’s Pro Football Hall of Fame’s Class of 2025.

Former head coaches Tom Coughlin, Dan Reeves, and Bill Arnsparger were all shut out in the coaches’ category while former players, linebacker Carl Banks, running back Ottis Anderson, and quarterback Charlie Conerly, were left off the list for seniors.

The Giants still have one player in the modern-day category, quarterback Eli Manning, who advanced to the semifinals two weeks ago.

There is much debate today on the selection of Mike Holmgren over Tom Coughlin and Mike Shanahan in the coaches’ category.

It was a close call. Coughlin and Shanahan both won the two Super Bowls they appeared in during their careers. Holmgren won one of the three he took his teams to.

Holmgren has a better win-loss record in the regular season (161-111, .592). Shanahan had a record of 170-138 (.552) and Coughlin went 170-150 (.531).

Coughlin was the best in the postseason, going 12-7 (.632), while Shanahan was 8-6 (.571) and Holmgren went 13-11 (.542).

Holmgren took the Green Bay Packers to two Super Bowls, winning one. He later took the Seattle Seahawks to the big game and lost.

That is a fine distinction but he’s not alone in achieving the feat. Dick Vermeil, Dan Reeves, Don Shula, Andy Reid, and Bill Parcells also did that but no coach has ever won the big game with two different teams.

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Michael Strahan makes emotional case for Tom Coughlin’s HOF bid

New York Giants legend Michael Strahan penned an emotional letter in support of Tom Coughlin’s Pro Football Hall of Fame bid.

Once upon a time, New York Giants legend Michael Strahan considered retirement because the alternative was playing another season under hard-nosed head coach Tom Coughlin.

Strahan ultimately returned to find that Coughlin was a new man. On the advice of his late wife, Judy, the disciplinarian showed a softer side and his players responded in kind.

Coughlin was still very much an old-school head coach who demanded greatness and accountability from the men he led, but there was a personal bond that formed and a respect that was shared.

What occurred after that is a matter of history. The Giants went on to win two Super Bowl championships — both over the dynasty New England Patriots — and Coughlin now finds himself just a few short steps away from a well-deserved destination: the Pro Football Hall of Fame.

Strahan, who is a member of that illustrious group, believes deep in his soul that Coughlin is worthy of joining him, which he expressed in an emotional letter penned for People magazine late last week.

“He quickly went from the coach I didn’t want to play for to the only coach I would ever play for. All the little things that he asked of me made me a better player and ultimately a better man, because guess what: The details matter. Whether you’re setting up a blitz, or setting up an interview, or setting up a cancer treatment plan for your daughter,” Strahan wrote.

“Coughlin didn’t just build teams, he built a culture. He made us responsible to and for each other. He made us completely dedicated to a single goal and that was to play for each other. It sounds so easy, but when you take a bunch of guys with a lot of big egos and ask them to win, it is anything but.”

Despite all of his on-field accomplishments, awards, recognitions, and titles, it’s what Coughlin has done away from the field that means the most to him. It’s also what means the most to those who played for him.

“Coach always says that God isn’t going to ask him about the Super Bowl rings on his fingers, but rather the impact he has had on the lives of others,” Strahan added. “Watching him and his late wife Judy work so tirelessly for families tackling pediatric cancer in New York, New Jersey, and Jacksonville, Fla., has not been lost on me or any of my teammates. He has inspired many of us to pursue similar paths in how we give back and that’s because he is a leader, a role model, and has our respect.

“Coach, I am so grateful to call you a mentor and a friend. You have made me a better person. There is no doubt in my mind that you belong in the Hall of Fame, but until you get that gold jacket and that bust to talk to the other busts late at night in Canton, please know you are already a Hall of Famer to so many you’ve touched on and off the field.”

Perhaps no one deserves the Hall of Fame more than Tom Coughlin and that has a lot more to do with his shaping of lives, both on the field and through the Jay Fund Foundation, than anything else he’s ever accomplished. He’s not just a champion head coach but a champion human being.

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Giants legend Tom Coughlin named semifinalist for Hall of Fame

Retired New York Giants coach Tom Coughlin has been named a semifinalist for the Pro Football Hall of Fame alongside three other ex-Giants.

Former New York Giants head coach Tom Coughlin, who led Big Blue to two Super Bowl championships, is among nine semifinalists in the coaches’ category for the Pro Football Hall of Fame’s Class of 2025.

One of the nine candidates will be selected as a finalist for the Class of 2025 on November 19.

Other candidates who advanced on the list, which was cut down from 14 to nine on Thursday, include two other former Giant head coaches — Bill Arnsparger and Dan Reeves, and a former assistant Marty Schottenheimer.

Mike Shanahan, Mike Holmgren, George Seifert, Chuck Knox, and Clark Shaughnessy round out the list.

Along with being a two-time Super Bowl champ, Coughlin was the first head coach of the expansion Jacksonville Jaguars, taking them to two AFC Championship Games. His overall NFL record is 182-157 over a span of 20 seasons.

Arnsparger coached the Giants from 1974-76, compiling a 7-28 record but made his name as a coordinator of the Miami Dolphins’ No-Name defense of the early 1970s. He passed away in 2015.

Reeves coached Big Blue from 1993-96, compiling a 31-33 record. He is noted for taking the Denver Broncos to three Super Bowls and the Atlanta Falcons to another. He passed away in 2022.

Schottenheimer compiled a 205-139-1 record over 21 seasons as a head coach for Cleveland, Kansas City, San Diego, and Washington. He was a defensive assistant for the Giants in the mid-1970s where he developed Harry Carson and Brad Van Pelt into Pro Bowl linebackers.

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How Brian Daboll compares to other Giants coaches after 42 games

New York Giants head coach Brian Daboll’s record after 42 games isn’t much different than that of many of the team’s best coaches.

The New York Giants have begun the 2024 NFL season by losing six of their first eight games, which has become the norm in East Rutherford in recent years.

The Giants have started seven of their last eight seasons 2-6 (or worse) after eight games. The only exception was 2022 when they got off to a 6-1 start en route to a 9-8 season and a playoff berth.

Head coach Brian Daboll, since taking over the reins as head coach in 2022, is 17-24-1 in the regular season and 1-1 in the postseason.

There have been numerous conversations and articles suggesting that Daboll should be on the hot seat. But looking back a the history of the Giants, his record isn’t much different than that of his predecessors.

Daboll is the 10th man to coach 42 or more games for the Giants in their century-long existence and the seventh since the 1970 NFL-AFL merger.

Here’s where Daboll stands against those other six Giant head coaches after 42 games:

  1. Jim Fassel (23-18-1)
  2. Tom Coughlin and Dan Reeves (23-19)
  3. Bill Parcells (19-22-1)
  4. Alex Webster (19-23)
  5. Brian Daboll (17-24-1)
  6. Ray Perkins (15-27)

So, Daboll is just two games worse than the great Hall of Famer Bill Parcells and ahead of Perkins, who is largely credited with helping to modernize the Giants under general manager George Young after decades of ineptitude.

Still want to fire Daboll? Or do you want to be a little more patient now that you know where he stands in team history?

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Tom Coughlin, Eli Manning named finalists for 4th Annual Anthem Awards

New York Giants legends Tom Coughlin and Eli Manning have been selected as finalists for the 4th Annual Anthem Awards.

New York Giants legends Tom Coughlin and Eli Manning have been selected as finalists for the 4th Annual Anthem Awards in the “Health: Nonprofit Community Engagement” category.

Coughlin and Manning are being recognized for their continued efforts to fight childhood cancer through the Jay Fund Foundation, which was founded by Coughlin, and Tackle Kids Cancer.

Giants fans can support Coughlin and Eli, as well as the Jay Fund Foundation and Tackle Kids Cancer, at the Anthem Awards website.

Voting is open now through Thursday, October 31, at 2:59 p.m. EDT.

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Giants legend Tom Coughlin inches closer to Hall of Fame

Retired New York Giants head coach Tom Coughlin has taken one more step toward enshrinement in the Pro Football Hall of Fame.

Retired New York Giants head coach Tom Coughlin took another step toward immortality on Thursday as the Pro Football Hall of Fame narrowed its list of nominees down to 12 in the Coach category.

In addition to Coughlin, two other former Giants head coaches made the cut: Dan Reeves and Bill Arnsparger.

Tom Coughlin: Spent 20 years as an NFL head coach with Jacksonville Jaguars (1995-2002) and New York Giants (2004-2015), totaling 170 wins and leading the Giants to two Super Bowl titles.

It’s been a fruitful year for Coughlin, who was inducted into the Pride of the Jaguars earlier this season. He had also previously been enshrined in the Giants’ Ring of Honor back in 2016.

Although Coughlin is widely recognized as a two-time Super Bowl head coach for the Giants, he also picked up a third title in New York while serving as their wide receivers coach in 1990.

After his first successful stint with the Giants, Coughlin took over as head coach at Boston College which proved to be a springboard back to the NFL. He was hired as head coach of the expansion Jacksonville Jaguars in 1995 and promptly made history. In just the second year of the team’s existence, Coughlin led them to the AFC Championship Game.

In total, Coughlin led the expansion Jaguars to the playoffs four times and the AFC Championship Game twice. However, it wasn’t until his time with the Giants that he finally picked up a Super Bowl title as a head coach. And then four years later, he added a second.

Both on the sideline and off the field with the Jay Fund Foundation, Tom Coughlin is a true Hall of Famer and deserves a bronze bust.

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Tom Coughlin: Eli Manning is ‘best big-game QB I’ve ever seen’

Retired New York Giants head coach Tom Coughlin sings the praises of Eli Manning, calling him the “best big-game quarterback” he’s ever seen.

Former New York Giants head coach Tom Coughlin extolled the virtues of his former quarterback Eli Manning recently on a recent episode of Barstool Sports’ Pardon My Take.

“You look at his eyes,” Coughlin said when asked if he knew that Eli would rise to the occasion during the Giants’ two Super Bowl runs in 2007 and 2011. “He’s the greatest big game quarterback I’ve ever seen.”

Coughlin explained that Eli knew the odds were against him going up against the likes of Tom Brady and the New England Patriots but never wavered.

“He accepted the challenge. He wanted the challenge. He wanted that,” said Coughlin. “Call it his pedigree, call it what you want. You talk about making plays when he had to make them… Look at Super Bowl 46, the (Mario) Manningham catch. Eli’s back there maneuvering to get the ball off in that situation, and made that throw.

“You talk about big play, big game people… I’m taking him.”

Now the big question is the Pro Football Hall of Fame going to agree when they vote on the Class of 2025 later this year?

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Watch: Tom Coughlin inducted into Pride of the Jaguars

Watch: Tom Coughlin inducted into Pride of the Jaguars

Sunday was a special day in Jacksonville. The Jaguars not only achieved their first victory of the 2024 season but also inducted the first head coach in franchise history, Tom Coughlin, into the team’s Hall of Fame, the Pride of the Jaguars.

The Jaguars sported throwback uniforms, based on a combination of the team’s looks from 1998-2008, adding a touch of nostalgia to their 37-34 win over the Colts and to pair with the ceremony.

Watch Coughlin’s Pride of the Jaguars celebration below.

Coughlin, 78, served as Jacksonville’s head coach for the 1995-2002 seasons, although he was hired in Feb. 1994 with the authority to build the Jaguars’ roster and football staff from scratch. He returned to the club as its executive vice president of football operations between 2017-19.

Coughlin achieved a 68-60 regular season record with the Jaguars, which made four playoff appearances under his lead, in consecutive years following the team’s 1995 debut.

Jacksonville reached the AFC Championship in 1996 and 1999 campaigns, falling one game short of a Super Bowl appearance each time, to New England and Tennessee, respectively.

Speaking with reporters after his enshrinement, Coughlin expressed gratitude for those who trusted and committed to his vision for the Jaguars, recalling the construction of the team and the growing pains it experienced, a 4-12 first season in the NFL, before finding success.

“I’m humbled. I’m very proud. I told the players last night that it’s because of them that I’m here, that I have this great honor bestowed, but for me it’s never about the individual. It’s always about the team. And I really regret the fact that I could never just stand there for lack of time and read, for example, the first staff off and the staff supporters and so on and so forth. And I think you’d get a kick out of it.

“We had, let’s see, 12 on the field coaches. 12, okay? And we had two strength coaches. That’s how we started. Because my day and age, we were raised like that. It was, I want everybody where I can look ’em in the eye where everybody’s on the same page. I don’t know how it happens with, but anyway, I would’ve loved to have been able to say the names and let them hear. And hopefully they understand that I am saying thank you. Because what we had in the very beginning was very unique.

“We were, yes, we were an expansion team, but because we took that [1994] year and I was here and I built the responsibilities as they were needed, the training staff, certainly personnel came right away. And they also were building the other side of the hall. And we did things together and we were unified when we won, we all won and we lost. We all lost. It was a heck of a feeling to get started like that.

“But in that first year, in [1995], we lost one game by a lot. The Detroit game. But we were in every other game that year. It was an amazing thing. When I look back, three points, seven points, 10 points, occasionally 14. But we were in them. We were in those games. And the reason those guys, our players that year came together, they weren’t real happy with me. They were unified. They didn’t like me, but it unified ’em because think about where they came from, all walks of life, expansion, draft, draft, street free agents, you name.

“But it is very gratifying to me to hear these guys come up to me this day and age and tell me they love me. It’s quite a feeling.”

Coughlin became the seventh member of the Pride of the Jaguars on Sunday, alongside former Jacksonville players, left tackle Tony Boselli, running back Fred Taylor, wide receiver Jimmy Smith and quarterback Mark Brunell, and former Jaguars owners Wayne and Delores Weaver.

Jay Fund hosting 20th Champions for Children Gala at MetLife Stadium

Retired New York Giants coach Tom Coughlin and the Jay Fund Foundation will host the 20th Champions for Children Gala at MetLife Stadium.

Retired New York Giants head coach Tom Coughlin and the organization he established, the Jay Fund Foundation, will host the 20th Champions for Children Gala at MetLife Stadium on Thursday, October 10.

This year’s honorees include Ralph Andretta, Carolyn Tisch Blodgett, Next 3 Ventures Founder and CEO and Governor of NY/NJ Gotham FC, and Robert Garrett, CEO of Hackensack Meridian Health.

Additionally, offensive lines from the Super Bowl XLII and Super Bowl XLVI teams will be celebrated “for their unwavering commitment to childhood cancer patients and their families.”

From the Jay Fund Foundation:

Guests will experience special access to the New York Giants locker room and the field at MetLife Stadium as we raise funds for local families tackling childhood cancer. Cocktails and dinner will be followed by a live and silent auction featuring spectacular experiences and exclusive sports memorabilia. Meet Jay Fund families and hear their powerful testimonials as they share what it is like to walk in their shoes and the enormous impact your support provides.

Several former Giants are scheduled to appear, including Coughlin, Chris Snee, Harry Carson, Victor Cruz, Shaun O’Hara, Rich Seubert, Kevin Gilbride, and many more.

The Jay Fund Foundation, established in honor of late Boston College football player, Jay McGillis, who lost his battle with leukemia, has raised more than $28 million in financial support for over 5,800 families dealing with childhood cancer.

For those interested in attending, visit the Jay Fund Foundation website for details on sponsorship information. If you are unable to attend, there are several other ways you can help a family in need.

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Chris Snee reacts to being ranked among top 100 Giants players in history

Chris Snee reacts to being named one of the top 100 New York Giants players in franchise history: “This one means a lot!”

In celebration of their 100th season, the New York Giants have been releasing a ranking of their top 100 players in franchise history.

The list, which was compiled by a committee of 14 individuals, continued this week with the release of numbers 40 through 31.

Among those who were ranked was guard Chris Snee.

Chris Snee was a stalwart on the Giants teams that won Super Bowls XLII and XLVI. He was a four-time Pro Bowler and an All-Pro. Snee started all 141 regular-season games and 11 postseason games in which he played.

“I think Chris was everything you could ever hope for in a player: toughness, integrity, and a lot of pride,” Giants president and chief executive officer John Mara said at the time of Snee’s retirement. “Winning mattered to him. I think he set a great example for all of the other players. He’s somebody we’re going to miss very much. He was one of the greatest offensive linemen in Giants history, and he’ll be on that Ring of Honor someday.”

Snee was a Pro Bowler in 2008–10 and in 2012. He was a selected All-Pro in 2010. From 2005 to 2011, he started 101 consecutive regular-season games (plus seven postseason games) before missing a game against Buffalo with a concussion. Snee was the last member of the terrific and popular offensive line that included Shaun O’Hara, Rich Seubert, David Diehl, and Kareem McKenzie from 2006 to 2010. At one time, the group started 38 consecutive regular-season games, then the league’s longest streak.

“I took pride in being out there every game,” Snee said. “You only get so many opportunities to play games, so I am thankful. There were games where I probably was 70 percent, less than that, but I thought I owed it to the organization and to my teammates, coaches, and the fans just to be out there. I’m getting paid to play that day, so I’m going to play.”

“To me, he was the best guard in all of football – no doubt,” said coach Tom Coughlin, who is Snee’s father-in-law. “No matter who you put him against, all of the great defensive tackles in the game, the 350[-pound] guys, the 340 guys, he blocked them. When he first came here, he was so, so committed and so driven to excel at the professional level.”

Snee, who spent the entirety of his 10-year career with the Giants, went to X to share his reaction to making the list.

Snee married Kate Coughlin, the daughter of head coach Tom Coughlin. Coach Coughlin was with the Giants for the entirety of Snee’s career and helped jumpstart his son-in-law’s scouting career after he retired.

Given Snee’s impact with the Giants, it’s easy to see how he came in so high on the list. He is part of two very small and very special lists of Giants who played his entire career with the Giants and won two Super Bowls with the team.

The offensive line during those two Super Bowl runs was a crucial part of the team’s success during that time and Snee may have been arguably the best player on each of those units.

Snee continues to be a part of the Giants organization, now working as a scout.

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