New York Daily News

YOU HANDED IT TO THE WRONG GUY!

Kayvon says Giants should have paid Saquon before Jones

- BY PAT LEONARD

Giants edge rusher Kayvon Thibodeaux said on the “7PM in Brooklyn” podcast that Saquon Barkley should have gotten paid before Daniel Jones.

Thibodeaux’s comments showed strong support for Barkley and presented a key Giants player’s honest reflection on the organizati­on’s priorities.

But it is rare for profession­al athletes to discuss teammates’ money publicly. And it’s even rarer for a player to talk about a team’s financial investment in its quarterbac­k in a critical light.

“You pay Daniel Jones $40 million [a year], and it was a great — Me? I believe. OK. But lemme tell you what I’m mad at. And this is the only thing I’ll say about that,” Thibodeaux, 23, told hosts Carmelo Anthony and The Kid Mero. “What I’m mad about is that Saquon — because if you look at the game, the tape, Saquon was responsibl­e for at least 30% of our explosive plays [in 2022] the year we won the playoff game.

“So for me and for the integrity of working together and hard work and we all believe the same things, I feel like Saquon should have got paid first,” Thibodeaux continued. “That’s what I feel. And maybe, I don’t know the back end. Maybe it’s the franchise [tag again], maybe it’s an extension. Maybe it’s blah, blah, blah. That’s none of my business. I don’t. I focus on me.”

Then Anthony chimed in: “That’s the respect we was talking about.”

“Exactly,” Thibodeaux said. “With the team chemistry. Because we see it.”

It’s ironic that Joe Schoen’s first-ever draft pick, the No. 5 overall selection in 2022, would be the one to put the GM’s work under the microscope like this on this Wave Sports + Entertainm­ent Original podcast.

But it was definitely timed intentiona­lly as a message of support for Barkley, 26, who hopes to capitalize on his value this offseason if he’s able. He could be franchise-tagged a second straight year, negotiate an extension with the Giants or sign elsewhere in free agency.

Former Cowboys, Bills and Giants receiver Cole Beasley also chimed in on social media to support the Giants’ back.

“@saquon I need you to go to Dallas,” Beasley wrote on ‘X.’ “Getting to run it up on your old team who disrespect­ed you is rejuvenati­ng. Lol.”

Barkley responded with three laughing emojis, a fist emoji and the message, “miss my dawg.”

Thibodeaux, meanwhile, made a second reference to Jones when discussing the Giants falling short on high expectatio­ns for 2023.

“This year I’m like, ‘We might win the Super Bowl.’ I’m thinking 12-5. I’m thinking Super Bowl,” Thibodeaux said. But then “nothing went right” in a Week 1 blowout loss to the Dallas Cowboys, paving the way to a 6-11 season.

“I know all the Giants fans who watched the first drive of the first game, you were like, ‘Oh, we got a chance,” Thibodeaux said. ‘People, they was going to Vegas after that. They were like, ‘Yo, we cooking!’ And then football is football. Things fell apart [in] certain places. Your quarterbac­k is your most important player. You gotta, you know — situations, you know — it is what it is.”

Thibodeaux pointed out later in the interview, though, that when players speak up, it’s important to address the underlying issues he is addressing and not just focus on the fact that he stepped out of line.

He touched on a lot of other topics in an expansive interview that demonstrat­ed an advanced perspectiv­e on business and the world from a man his age. It’s worth a listen. Here are some of his other Giants observatio­ns:

On why he reveres and appreciate­s LB Bobby Okereke: “We just signed a guy, Bobby Okereke. He’s our middle linebacker. And I literally sat and I thanked God that they brought him on the team… His ambition — he’s on Year 5 now, I’m on Year 3. When you talk about who he is at this moment and who I am at this moment, we’re not the same player. He embodies who I wanna be… He literally told me, ‘Bro, everyday you come here you gotta find motivation.’ [One day] he get[s] in the cold tub, right, [and] he put his neck all the way down up to here. Cold tub, me? I’m going to the hips. He’s like, ‘Damn, KT, you ain’t gonna give your shoulders no love? I’m like, ‘Man, my shoulders don’t need no love.’ He said, ‘Man, what, your shoulders ain’t worth $100 million?’ He said, ‘Oh, your shoulders ain’t worth greatness?’ And I’m like alright you got me messed up [laughs].’”

On the Giants: “I wouldn’t want to be on any other team, with any other franchise in any other league. I love where I’m at … I believe in what we got. I think the back office, they’re gonna handle the draft well. I think they scheme and put the team together I said like I would. I like the pieces they got. I like what they’re doing. It’s their first couple draft classes. This year didn’t go too good. I love the coach. I love what we got going. Our defensive coordinato­r, they ended up parting ways.” Thibodeaux did not expound on former DC Wink Martindale’s resignatio­n.

Random notes: Thibodeaux was asked if he has a ‘good rapport’ with the coaches and organizati­on’s leaders, and he said, “I don’t think none of them like me. I don’t think none of them are my friends.” He added: “When I say ‘them,’ I’m talking about anybody in the business.” He loves being a Giant but sees it as a bottom-line business: if he performs, he’ll get paid; if he doesn’t, he won’t. Basically, he’s realistic that a college or profession­al program’s love for the player is conditiona­l — and strong for him, drafting him so high — but that eventually they are also paid to replace him … When Anthony described how one player’s mistake could kill the triangle offense in basketball, Thibodeaux related it to a Giants practice late this season: “End of the season’s here, and now everything is kinda out of hand. We’re losing. We’re out of the playoffs. When you get to the end of the year, there might be a little bit of finger-pointing. You’re not finger-pointing but you’re elbow-pointing. So we get to the last couple weeks and I just remember a practice, and guys are lined up, and we’re lined up to go, and we call a blitz. And there are multiple guys, multiple, that are like, ‘I’m running the blitz.’ And the other guy’s like, ‘Who said that?’ He said, ‘I said it!’ And I heard it, and he said, ‘S–t, I guess somebody just ain’t gonna be covered.’ I was like, ‘Oh, if they do that, sub me out.’” And for me, I’m the guy — why coaches respect me is because I’m gonna tell the coach oh if they on that B.S., take me out. We not [gonna] play these games.’ I’m addressing what needs to be addressed.” … The Giants announced they have hired Jets assistant special teams coach Michael Ghobrial as their new special teams coordinato­r. He replaces the fired Thomas McGaughey. Ghobrial, who turns 36 on Feb. 9, was a college special teams coordinato­r at Tarleton State (2016-17), Hawai’i (2018-19) and Washington State (2020) before joining the Jets in 2021.

Sunday, 3:00 p.m., Ravens by 3.5, 44.5

As good as the Ravens are, as much of an MVP candidate that Lamar Jackson is, does anyone really want to bet against Patrick Mahomes as an underdog in the playoffs? He’s 9 -1 -1 ATS as a dog, playoffs and regular season combined, 2 -0 in the postseason.

The Ravens have been studly on defense all year and shut down C.J. Stroud in his road playoff debut. Much of that was due to shutting down the Texans’ mediocre running attack. Isiah Pacheco (monitor his injury status) is a different animal, however. His violent running style is suited to taking advantage of a Baltimore run defense that has not played well at times. The Ravens stacked the box against the Texans last week, but you must play more honest against Mahomes. Travis Kelce has been coming out of his lovesick malaise recently and rookie Rashee Rice has emerged as a reliable wide receiver who won’t drop the ball.

The Ravens can run it and, like Josh Allen, so can Jackson. Buffalo pushed Kansas City’s front around like a blocking sled early last week but the Chiefs’ second half adjustment­s against the run turned that game around. Keep an eye on the status of Willie Gay, who will spy on Jackson. The Ravens do match up well against the Chiefs’ secondary with its outstandin­g corners because they love to attack the middle of the field and could have TE Mark Andrews back. K.C. safety Mike Edwards must clear concussion protocol, another injury concern.

The under is slightly in play here because of the way the Chiefs are likely to play it by grinding out yards and possession. No one has scored a ton of points on the Ravens defense and the Chiefs’ D has also been the best in the Mahomes era. Steve Spagnuolo will find a way to limit what the Ravens do. He’s always been at his best in big games, going back to his days with the Giants. This game could come down to the red zone, where, admittedly, the Ravens have been better as an offense.

Chiefs and the under.

Mahomes. That’s all. 1-3

1-3

1-1

Lamar Jackson and Patrick Mahomes are two of the best players of their generation.

On Sunday, they will break another NFL barrier and have a chance to punch their ticket to Super Bowl LVIII.

With Jackson and Mahomes, the AFC Championsh­ip game will feature two Black starting quarterbac­ks for the first time. Sunday will also be the second conference championsh­ip game in NFL history in which two Black quarterbac­ks have started. The first was the 2005 NFC Championsh­ip game between the Falcons and the Eagles, which featured Michael Vick against Donovan McNabb.

Jackson and Mahomes took two completely different paths to reach the AFC title game.

Last year, at this time, it appeared that Jackson’s time with the Baltimore Ravens was ending. He was set to become a free agent last March, but the Ravens franchise tagged him. Weeks later he requested a trade before the two sides eventually agreed to a five-year, $260 million extension with $185 million in guarantees.

He parlayed his new long-term security into a season that will likely end with his second NFL MVP award (the first was a unanimous win after the 2019 season).

Last offseason, Baltimore hired Todd Monken as offensive coordinato­r, wanting to improve its passing game with a more balanced offense. Mission accomplish­ed as Jackson passed for a career-high 3,678 yards along with 24 touchdowns and seven intercepti­ons. The two-time All Pro also rushed for 821 yards and five touchdowns.

“He’s going to be the MVP for a reason,” Mahomes said about Jackson. “He goes out there, he leads his team. He scores, he runs, he throws, he does whatever it takes to win. That’s what the great greats do. It

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Patrick Mahomes
AP GETTY Lamar Jackson Patrick Mahomes
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 ?? GETTY ?? Sunday’s AFC title game between Lamar Jackson and the Ravens and Patrick Mahomes (inset) and the Chiefs is one for the ages.
GETTY Sunday’s AFC title game between Lamar Jackson and the Ravens and Patrick Mahomes (inset) and the Chiefs is one for the ages.

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