Greenwich Time (Sunday)

Make no mistake, Judge is the boss of the improving Giants

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EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — The New York Giants are Joe Judge’s team, entirely.

That’s all anyone needs to know as the rebuilding Giants head into their bye week after 10 games.

Forget a 3-7 record. Don’t bother mentioning they are riding a two-game winning streak and somehow have a chance to win the pitiful NFC East. This is a tough, hard-working team that is invested in their 38-year-old rookie coach’s demand to focus on the little things, improve every week and put the team first.

It seems everyone is allin. If you’re not, there’s a price to pay.

Take a look at the recent days and weeks.

Offensive line coach Marc Colombo was upset after Judge told him earlier this week he was hiring veteran coach Dave DeGuglielm­o as a consultant to help the line and other parts of the team.

To an outsider, it seemed a odd decision. The young line probably has progressed more than any unit on the team. After a slow start, the offense has produced six 100-yard rushing performanc­es in the past seven games.

A former Pro Bowler and assistant coach with Dallas, Colombo voiced his displeasur­e. He was fired Wednesday after less than a year on the job and replaced by DeGuglielm­o.

Earlier this month, veteran receiver Golden Tate complained to a national TV audience after catching a touchdown pass in a Monday night game against Tampa Bay. He wanted more passes thrown his way. He was benched the next game.

First-round draft pick Andrew Thomas, the fourth selection overall this year, showed up five minutes late for a meeting the night before a home game with Washington last month. The left tackle didn’t start the next day and ended up splitting snaps with fellow rookie Matt Peart.

Judge doesn’t hesitate to give his players second chances. Colombo wasn’t as lucky. The message is clear: Don’t mess with Joe Judge.

His actions bring back memories of former Giants coaches Bill Parcells and Tom Coughlin. Their word was law. Players understood it and played hard because their jobs were on the line.

It worked, too. Parcells and Coughlin each produced two Super Bowl champions for the Giants.

It’s too early to compare Judge to either man. He needs to prove himself. However, he seems to be accomplish­ing half the job. Judge is the man in charge and the players recognize it.

The main question is, can Judge take the next step?

Ben McAdoo was hired in 2016 and led the team to the first playoff berth since the 2011 championsh­ip season. He was gone before the end of the next year.

The Giants will have to beat teams outside their division to get to the playoffs this year. Dallas is their only NFC East opponent left, and that’s the season finale. New York is at Cincinnati (2-6-1), at Seattle (6-3), home against the Cardinals (6-3) and Browns (6-3), and away at Baltimore (6-3) before the Cowboys (2-7).

“We want our guys to be successful on the field, but it matters to us how we’re successful,” Judge said earlier this week. “We want to play with the right attitude. We want to play a tough brand of football. We want to run the ball, stop the run, cover kicks. We want to go out there and be able to play in tough elements and be successful.

“We’re not going to be a team that makes excuses or comes back and says we had them, but this happened instead. That’s not the way we’re made up; that’s not what we’re going to do.”

Judge believes the Giants are getting closer to being what he envisions, so he is reinforcin­g the need for the basics. Unlike most NFL coaches, he is not hesitant to have tackling drills.

 ?? Corey Sipkin / Associated Press ?? Coach Joe Judge has the rebuilding Giants on an upward trend after 10 games.
Corey Sipkin / Associated Press Coach Joe Judge has the rebuilding Giants on an upward trend after 10 games.

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