New York Post

THE NEXT BIG THING

Few athletes arrived in New York matching Giant hype that has accompanie­d Barkley

- Mike Vaccaro Mvaccaro@ nypost.com

THE PRESSURE is there. It is real. It is tangible. And it isn’t just because there is so much easily-obtainable testimony about just how good Saquon Barkley is. Anyone with a laptop and an internet connection can see that.

Here’s one: Barkley takes a hand off from Penn State quarterbac­k Trace McSorley, tiptoes slightly right, measuring the USC linemen in the 2017 Rose Bowl and … holy COW, he makes a diagonal cut that seems geometrica­lly implausibl­e, and physically impossible, and he dashes 79 yards to the end zone …

Here’s another: Barkley taking the ball from McSorley and not simply running through a gaggle of Pittsburgh Panthers, not merely running over them, but all but

dismissing them, as if they were a collection of Pop Warner kids. We can do this all day. There are, in truth, many worse ways to spend a rainy day.

But those obvious gifts alone aren’t what will make the spotlight that glares on Barkley beginning next September as bright and as intense as any that has ever shone on a rookie athlete in New York. Barkley is used to the adulation of regular folks; he used to perform these miracles in front of 106,572 people every Saturday at Beaver Stadium.

It’s the accolades that keep falling out of the mouths of grown men, experience­d football men, men who generally know better than to heap hyperbole on a kid still four months shy of playing his first-ever NFL game, unable to help themselves.

“He was touched by the hand of God,” said Dave Gettleman, the Giants general manager who made Barkley the second pick of the draft, notably eschewing Sam Darnold (who, for trivia buffs, watched Barkley’s Rose Bowl sprint from the sidelines before completing a 453-yard, five-touchdown, masterpiec­e of his own in a 52-49 USC win and who, for as long as they share the city, will be Barkley’s daily foil).

He’s a “touchdown maker,” Gettleman gushed.

“I haven’ t seen a guy like this in a long time,” Gettleman cooed, “and I’ve been doing this thing for 30 years.”

So much for managing expectatio­ns.

On the one hand, of course: good for Gettleman. This is the pick that will likely define his tenure running the Giants, and if he wants to praise Barkley (and, by associatio­n, his own wisdom) from Hasbrouck Heights to Valley Stream, then good for him, and better for Giants fans if Barkley is equal to the adjectives.

It is certainly a unique way to go. We are a city that saw the ultimate soft-sell in 1996, when Derek Jeter was a rookie and was preceded by almost zero hype. We are already listening to the Jets’ brass cool fans’ jets on how early they should expect to see Darnold take meaningful snaps from center. The most-beloved rookie of recent vintage, Kristaps Porzinhis, made children cry out loud when he was selected, for crying out loud. This is something else. To f ind something this close to the early Barkley Phenomenon, you have to probably go back more than a half century. As early as 1961, the NBA wanted to phase out the archaic “Territoria­l” draft, by which teams could claim rights to players thanks to geography. But Knicks boss Ned Irish fought to keep the rule in place and for only one reason.

“There’s a kid on the freshman team at Princeton,” Irish told confidante­s, “and I’ll be willing to junk the system once we get Bill Bradley.”

Irish stood by that belief, and took Bradley even though when he did it Bradley had already accepted a Rhodes Scholarshi­p and showed no inclinatio­n to play pro ball (and as sacrilegio­us as this may sound, Knicks fans, doesn’t it make you wonder at least a little bit if the Knicks lineup Bradley ultimate joined two years later hadn’t instead included Billy Cunningham or Rick Barry, whom Irish eschewed?).

By the time Bradley returned from Oxford, it was at the eye of a hype storm the Knicks had never known. Even their former coach, Joe Lapchick, never one to engage in much purple prose about any one player, said after watching Bradley practice: “He can change the whole league around. He has too many assets and competes so beautifull­y. He is capable of the incredible and does things on a court that make you wonder if you really saw them.”

You probably have to fastforwar­d 15 years to find another example. Boston Globe sportswrit­er Bob Ryan was covering the 76ers-Celtics NBA Finals in 1980 when, on an off-day, Sixers GM Pat Williams — who’d done a little dabbling as a baseball scout — invited him to drive with him to Crenshaw High School, where the two watched Darryl Strawberry strike out in a high school game. Looking.

And yet Williams, like every other scout in attendance, was smitten just watching Strawberry lope back to the dugout.

“He reminds us all of a black Ted Williams,” Pat Williams told Ryan, and that was a descriptio­n that followed Strawberry all the way to May 4, 1983, when he made his debut for the Mets — in Year 7 of a seven-year slog through the baseball desert — when even normally taciturn Mets GM Frank Cashen couldn’t help himself.

“This kid,” Cashen said that night, “has more potential than any player I’ve ever seen. This team will go where he takes us the next few years.”

Two years and eight days later, not long after punching a table at the Waldorf-Astoria with unbridled glee after winning the inaugural NBA lottery, Knicks GM Dave DeBusscher­e — who never much minded sharing exactly what was on his mind — upped the ante when hen he encoun encountere­d his first microphone after earning the rightt to be Patrick Ewing’s new boss..

“He puts us on another level,” DeBusscher­e said.

A few days later, no less an authority than Bill Bradley — by then the junior senator from New Jersey — said of Ewing, “He is a once-in-three--generation­s kind of player.”

Now, it shouldd be noted that both Cashen and DeBusscher­e happened to be right. Strawberry was a key member of the 1986 championsh­ip Mets, and Ewing did everything within his power to deliver the Knicks back to the Canyon of Heroes during 15 marvelous years with the franchise.

And maybe it’ s worth rememberin­g what another notso-bashful Giantss GM had to say on the day in April 2004 when he swapped three draft picks along with Philip Rivers to San Diego in exchange for Eli Manning.

“What woul d yo u have given to get a chance at Peyton Manning if you knew he was going to be this good?” Ernie Accorsi asked, some seven months before Eli would play the first of 210 consecutiv­e starts, and he barely waited an eyeblink before adding: “That’s how much we think of this kid.”

Two Super Bowls later, with Eli aboutut to spend much of the com-cominging autumn handingg the ball off to Saquon Barkley, you’d have to say Ernie wa s probably right, too.

 ?? Getty Images (3); Bill Kostroun; N.Y. Post: Charles Wenzelberg; AP (2) ?? MAD ABOUT YOU: Giants GM Dave Gettleman (below) wasn’t shy about expressing his admiration for Saquon Barkley before selecting the Penn State running back second in the NFL
draft.
Getty Images (3); Bill Kostroun; N.Y. Post: Charles Wenzelberg; AP (2) MAD ABOUT YOU: Giants GM Dave Gettleman (below) wasn’t shy about expressing his admiration for Saquon Barkley before selecting the Penn State running back second in the NFL draft.
 ??  ?? Darryl Strawberry Bill Bradley Eli Manning Patrick Ewing
Darryl Strawberry Bill Bradley Eli Manning Patrick Ewing

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