Giants’ Brian Daboll thrilled to add ‘generators’ on offense

New York Giants coach Brian Daboll feels some relief after the team added several “generators” to their offense during the 2024 NFL draft.

The New York Giants were one of the NFL’s worst offenses in 2023, averaging just 15.6 points per game (30th) and finishing 29th in yards per game (280.0).

Injuries to the quarterbacks and offensive line were major factors in the team’s poor offensive output but it was also clear they just did not have enough playmakers. Head coach Brian Daboll calls them “generators.”

The Giants used their first-round pick in the 2024 NFL draft on one of this year’s top playmakers, LSU wide receiver Malik Nabers.

“Generators,” Daboll told reporters on Saturday. “People that can do stuff with the ball in their hands.

“Whether that’s take a jet sweep and go 30 yards or whether that’s running a double move and catch it 50 yards down the field to help you score points. You know, just to go back to Malik, I feel that he is that.”

Daboll was quick to pump the brakes on the high expectations for Nabers by saying he’s got “a lot of work to do” before he can become a factor.

“There’s a big playbook to learn. You’ve got to try to slow it down for these young players when they get in,” he said. “But anyone that can touch the ball — and linemen can be generators, too, in a different way, by keeping the pocket clean, by getting movement at the line of scrimmage.

“So I wouldn’t say that it’s necessarily — you’ve got to wait to see what you have and then try to move pieces around and see where — Theo, where he fits it in, where Malik fits in, there are different positions to play. There’s five eligible players on every play and you try to use those guys the best you can. But they have to come in here and prove it and earn the right to play.”

The Giants also selected interesting players in the fourth and fifth rounds who they hope will become generators as well — tight end Theo Johnson and running back Tyrone Tracy.

Tracy is a player the Giants hope will help them generate some big plays on kickoff returns now that the rules have changed.

“He’s an athlete who has played receiver and then played running back and has some good production,” said Daboll. “We’ll throw him in the mix. Whether that’s in the kickoff return game or whether that’s at running back or the receiving part of it, we’ve got to do a good job of getting him in here and seeing where he’s at and then trying to fit him into the things that he can do well.”

One thing is for certain — the Giants added plenty of speed and athleticism to the offensive side of the ball over the previous three days.

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2024 NFL draft: Giants select RB Tyrone Tracy in Round 5

With the No. 166 overall pick in the 2024 NFL draft, the New York Giants select Purdue running back Tyrone Tracy.

With the 166th overall pick in the fifth round of the 2024 NFL draft, the New York Giants have selected Purdue running back Tyrone Tracy.

The 6-foot-1, 210-pound Tracy has significant experience having played six seasons in college, appearing in 61 games. He amassed 947 yards on 146 carries (6.5 ypc) and scored 10 rushing touchdowns.

Tracy added 113 receptions for 1,201 yards and five touchdowns through the air while also returning kicks and punts.

Although the 24-year-old’s numbers seem pedestrian given his experience, he didn’t really burst onto the scene until 2023 with the Boilermakers when he was converted from wide receiver to running back.

As a sixth-year senior, Tracy gained 848 yards from scrimmage and scored eight touchdowns, adding 411 return yards (408 as a kick returner) with one additional touchdown.

Tracy is another top-tier athlete, having earned a relative athletic score (RAS) of 9.78, which is 42nd-best among all running backs since 1987.

Although Tracy is still learning to play running back, his versatility makes him a valuable, interchangeable piece for Mike Kafka’s offense. He’ll be used in a multitude of ways and not pigeonholed to a single role.

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‘Now, it’s like our time’: Keagan Johnson embracing opportunity of added reps, production in 2022

Sophomore Iowa wide receiver Keagan Johnson is embracing the opportunity to see added reps and increase his production heading into 2022.

The training wheels are officially off for sophomore Iowa wide receiver Keagan Johnson. That’s if they were ever even on in the first place.

In 2021, Johnson finished as the Hawkeyes’ second-leading receiver with 352 receiving yards on 18 receptions. His 19.6 yards per catch average was tops among all Iowa players with more than one grab last season.

The Bellevue West product’s week four start against Colorado State represented the first time a true freshman wide receiver had started a game for the Hawkeyes since Ihmir Smith-Marsette did so in 2017. Johnson and Arland Bruce IV combined to become the first pair of true freshmen in the Kirk Ferentz era to start the same game in week 11 against Illinois.

Now, after one season of nine starts under his belt, Johnson enters the 2022 season with the expectations of being one of Iowa’s primary pass catchers and helping improve a passing offense that finished ranked just 109th nationally.

“Yeah, in the spring, I wasn’t out there, but, just observing and, you know, we have a few new guys, and then we have a few new guys helping coach. I feel like we’re trying to make those changes so we can be a more efficient, effective passing offense this year. I think we’re trying to change a few things up and I’m excited to see how we look this year. I’m confident that we can be better than we were last year,” Johnson told Hawk Central‘s Chad Leistikow.

After sitting out and rehabbing throughout the spring, the 6-foot-1 wide receiver feels like he’s back fully healthy and he’s actually put on some weight, too.

“I didn’t really want to push it and, you know, risk anything that far out. Really just rehabbing through the spring and I’ve been participating in everything this summer. I’m back 100 percent with the team and I should be ready to go.

“I feel like I’m more explosive right now. I put on six more pounds, so just got a bit stronger. Obviously, what you’re trying to do every offseason, you know, come back in better shape than you were the year prior. I’m confident where my body is at, and I’m just looking forward to another fun year,” Johnson said.

Charlie Jones and Tyrone Tracy Jr. both left this offseason to Purdue. Johnson wasn’t concerned about what that means for he and the Hawkeyes’ collective strength at wide receiver.

“Yeah, receiving room is definitely slimmer. We lost a few, but I feel like we have enough to produce more than what we did last year. Honestly, I’m not too worried, because I’m confident in the guys that we have in our room and I think we all have really good camaraderie. We’re just looking forward to having a good camp, so we can enter the season confident, ready to go,” Johnson said.

In fact, after the initial shock of one of his former roommates leaving wore off, it’s fair to say that Johnson is fully prepared for the challenge of replacing that lost production.

“Yeah, at first, we’re like—he lived with me and Arland—so, we’re like, ‘Ah, it sucks. I feel like we lost a brother and just a great guy.’ When you have to move on with it, it’s just, all of us have bigger roles, bigger duties. Charlie brought a lot to this team in a lot of different aspects of special teams and offense. I think right now we just have to fill those roles. Me and Arland being younger guys, we didn’t know how big our role was going to be coming in last year. Now, it’s like our time, and I think we’re both just looking forward to stepping up and fulfilling that challenge,” Johnson said with HawkeyeReport‘s Tom Kakert.

Of course, everyone wants to know how the quarterback situation is looking. While the real heart of the quarterback battle is just taking shape, Johnson likes the approach he’s seen from all of the Hawkeyes’ quarterbacks.

“Right now, we’re doing, we call it skills and drills. I haven’t been out there for them, so I’ve been able to just watch and I feel like all the quarterbacks are progressing pretty good. Obviously, it’s like a competition, so I think every guy out there is trying to give it their all, especially on each rep.

“Yeah, but we haven’t really entered camp yet, so like as far as a quarterback race and who’s going to play, who’s going to be out there week one, I really couldn’t tell you because there’s still a lot in the air and there’s a lot of days ahead before we play that first game. I think right now all the quarterbacks have the right mindset, though, and I think at the end of the day we all just want to see a better result on the field than we saw last year with just the whole offense in general. We just want to produce better and be more efficient,” Johnson said.

Kakert also asked if Johnson might help out in the kickoff return department. It’s something Johnson hasn’t campaigned for yet, but an opportunity he would happily embrace.

“We have a lot of guys on this team who I think could be good at punt return or kick return. If that’s a role that he asks me to fill, then I’m all for it,” Johnson said.

Whether or not kickoff returns are in his future, fans are anxiously awaiting the sophomore encores from both Johnson and Bruce IV.

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Iowa Hawkeyes 2022 schedule breakdown: Purdue

Iowa will be looking to exact revenge on Purdue in the start of a West division gauntlet. Here’s several Boilermakers to watch in 2022.

Hopefully, Iowa enjoyed a nice easy win over Northwestern because the pressure is back on. The honeymoon is over, here comes the Big Ten West division gauntlet.

While their midseason clashes against Michigan and Ohio State will show just where Iowa stacks up nationally, the Hawkeyes’ season really depends on the final four games of the season. Iowa faces four straight extremely tough divisional rivals as they push for a spot in the Big Ten championship.

Iowa fans will want to forget all about Purdue. Just when it looked like the Hawkeyes were legitimate national contenders last year, Iowa ranked No. 2 in the country and coming off of a massive win over Penn State, everything came crashing down against Purdue. The offense couldn’t do anything against the Boilermakers, losing 24-7.

Purdue is an interesting team in 2022. They played spoiler in 2021, knocking off both Iowa and Michigan State. They just weren’t consistent enough, though, dropping some key games against Ohio State and Wisconsin. Their offense emerged as one of the best in the nation over their last six games, averaging 37.1 points per game during that stretch. Can Purdue keep that hot streak rolling into 2022?