Hartford Courant

Giants tight end Evan Engram not living up to immense preseason hype.

Tight end Engram certainly not living up to preseason hype

- By Tom Canavan

EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — This was supposed to be the season NewYork Giants tight end Evan Engram lived up to the hype.

The 2017 first-round draft pick had shown flashes in his first three seasons, only to be slowed by injuries — again and again.

All that was forgotten in training camp. Engram made one big play after another in an NFL camp overshadow­ed by the coronaviru­s pandemic. He was making some have visions of former Giants stars Mark Bavaro and Jeremy Shockey running toward the end zone.

Two games into the season, Engram is an enigma.

He dropped the first pass thrown his way against the Steelers and finished the game with two catches for 9 yards.

Against the Bears this past weekend, No. 88 was invisible for almost the first three quarters. He was targeted by Daniel Jones once in the first half and didn’t have a catch until there were less than four minutes to play in the third quarter.

Remarkably, that’s when the other Evan Eng ram showed up. He ended the game with six catches for 65 yards, including an impressive 22-yard catch and run that gave the Giants a chance to win on their final drive in a 17-13 loss.

It was what everyone expected and something the Giants are going to need Sunday against San Francisco (1-1) with Saquon Barkley (knee) out for the season and receiver Sterling Shepard (toe) sidelined for at least three games.

Offensive coordinato­r Jason Garrett said Engram clearly would like a do-over on some plays in his first six-plus quarters this season. He also noted Engram has not stopped grinding.

“He’s playing hard,” Garrett said. “Hehad some opportunit­ies as that game (the Bears) wore on and he took advantage of them. He won someone-on-one matchups, he made some runs after the catch that were impressive for us. Big, explosive plays like we’re talking about. He’s certainly going to be a big part of our offense going forward.”

New coach Joe Judge described Engram as a developing, tireless player who prepares hard and is tough.

“A lot of guys got on him after that first game in terms of where the production was,” Judge said. “I think we saw a glimpse of that last week. He really made some good plays for us at key times, and he’ll continue to do that throughout the season when the opportunit­y comes his way. He doesn’t have to force it. He doesn’t have to do anything outside of his own responsibi­lity or job. When the play comes his way, he has to be in position to go ahead and finish it. “We have confidence he will.” After practice Thursday, Engram said he got into a rhythm late against the Bears, as did the offense.

“That was our mindset as an offense coming out for the second half,” Engram said. “To get going, make some plays, get the ball rolling. That was just me kind of getting opportunit­ies and cashing in on them, doing my job.”

Engram refused to make any excuses for his play or the Giants’ 0-2 start.

“We need to get it done,” he said. “That’s what we’re doing, we’re working on it.”

Turf is cleared: The new MetLife Stadium turf passed Wednesday’s extra inspection. Giants-Niners on Sunday is a go.

“Representa­tives from the NFL, NFLPA, MetLife Stadium, the Giants and Jets, Field Turf and the independen­t field inspector conducted an additional review of the field surface at MetLife Stadium,” the league said in a statement. “The group again verified that the field meets all applicable standards and protocols for NFL field surfaces.”

The inspection included a frame-by-frame analysis of all the Nine rs’ injuries against the Jets in last week’s win, as well as a review of the cleats players used in the game.

The grounds crew will conduct an additional inspection of the field within 72 hours of the game, per standard NFL protocol of every stadium each week. But now it’s clear the new turf, whose installati­on was completed on June 8, will play host to its third NFL regular season game on Sunday.

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 ?? CHARLES REXARBOGAS­T/AP ?? Giants tight end Evan Engram runs after a catch against the Bears during the second half Sunday in Chicago.
CHARLES REXARBOGAS­T/AP Giants tight end Evan Engram runs after a catch against the Bears during the second half Sunday in Chicago.

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