Albany Times Union (Sunday)

Battle of bottom set at Metlife

A win by either team would get winner back into the NFC East race

- By Tom Canavan

New coaches, roster changes and even the deletion of a team nickname haven’t changed things on the field for the New York Giants and the Washington Football Club five games into the NFL season.

The longtime rivals are again bringing up the rear in a mediocre NFC East, a division that is wide open with Dallas (2-3) and Philadelph­ia (1-3-1) struggling.

Washington (1-4) and the Giants (0-5) will meet for the 177th time in a series that dates to 1932 when they play Sunday at Metlife Stadium. New York is looking for its first win under 38-year-old Joe Judge. Washington has lost four straight and changed quarterbac­ks since giving Ron Rivera a win in the season opener.

With 11 games left in the regular season, Rivera and Judge realize a few wins will get their teams back in the hunt. However, they also know their teams have to stop making mistakes and start playing complete games to win.

“You hear me talk about it; we have not sustained success,” Rivera said. “When you watch the things that we do, you see it’ll be first-and-10, secondand-3 and then we’ll do something and end up at thirdand-8. That’s the frustratio­n is that we don’t sustain a positive thing. On the defensive side,

same thing. We get a team into third-and-long and we’ll allow a first down. That’s the frustratio­n, is that the consistenc­y is not where it needs to be.”

Judge says he has been brutally honest with his young team. After every loss, the videotapes are reviewed and the good and bad discussed, as well as where they are as a team and what needs to improve.

“That ties into obviously tangible results on the field with wins and losses,” he said. “It’s a production business. We’re all very conscious and aware of that. It’s my job to make sure they understand what we need to do better, what we need to clean up. But then it’s also my job to highlight and show them where they’ve made improvemen­ts and where we’ve made progress as a

team, so they understand what we have really to build with.”

If there is a good piece of news for the Giants, it’s they have played well against Washington, winning the past three games. Quarterbac­k Daniel Jones threw for five touchdowns in December.

Banged up backers

In the past two games,

the Giants have lost young starting outside linebacker­s Oshane Ximines (shoulder-ir) and Lorenzo Carter (Achilles tendon). Kyler Fackrell, who was signed as a free agent in the offseason, and Markus Golden are expected to replace them.

Fackrell started last week against Dallas and returned an intercepti­on for a touchdown, the first

of his career. Golden, who led New York with 10 sacks last season, picked up a half-sack after replacing Carter.

Expect rookies Cam Brown and Carter Coughlin to pick up some playing time.

Brown has been impressive on special teams coverage.

Allen starts again

Kyle Allen — not Alex Smith nor Dwayne Haskins — is Washington’s starting quarterbac­k for a second consecutiv­e game. Rivera benched Haskins after three consecutiv­e losses, and Allen started 9-for-13 for 74 yards passing and scored a rushing touchdown against the Rams before injuring his left (non-throwing) arm in the second quarter. Smith took over and played for the first time since severely breaking a leg in two spots in 2018.

Allen is good to go with Smith as his backup. Haskins is third on the depth chart.

 ?? Scott Taetsch / Getty Images ?? Markus Golden of the Giants will be seeing increased playing time at linebacker. He had a half-sack last week.
Scott Taetsch / Getty Images Markus Golden of the Giants will be seeing increased playing time at linebacker. He had a half-sack last week.

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