New York Post

Garrett gets a Hall of an endorsemen­t

- Steve Serby steve.serby@nypost.com

JASON Witten spent 12 seasons when Jason Garrett was either his offensive coordinato­r or head coach, so he is the right man to deliver a message about the man for Giants fans.

“You’re gonna be really proud to have him as your offensive coordinato­r,” Witten told The Post.

“He’s one of them — hardworkin­g, determined, lunchpail-type guy, brings it every day. Don’t be fooled because he’s an Ivy Leaguer. He is very fair, very honest, a man of integrity, and he’s gonna find ways to affect the defense within his scheme, and play to his players’ strengths over and over and over again.

“It’ll be a real exciting experience for him. So much comes across a desk of a head coach, that you get pulled away from football a lot of times. I was around there for a number of years and I experience­d him as a coordinato­r early on with Wade Phil- lips [as the head coach]. I have so many fond memories of his ability within the scheme and adjustment­s in the game plan to give us a lot of confidence and allowed us to have success as a group.”

Witten is a Raider now, but he will one day enter the Hall of Fame as a Cowboy. During those 12 seasons, Witten caught 963 passes and 45 TDs. He caught most of them from Tony Romo and Dak Prescott — which tells him that Garrett and his system will be a bonanza for Daniel Jones.

“It’s built for the quarterbac­k’s eyes, that system,” Witten said. “And I think any young quarterbac­k likes the fact that this system is something that Jason played in, and then he’s seen a lot of quarterbac­ks have success in that. And then, just the track record, he had Tony in ’07, which Tony had started nine, 10 games prior to that, and went on and had a really successful career. He took Dak Prescott as a rookie, and you saw what Dak has done in his first four years in the NFL, so for Daniel Jones, I think he would be ecstatic.”

Garrett won’t have the formidable offensive line that he had in Dallas, but that won’t stop him from riding Saquon Barkley the way he rode Ezekiel Elliott.

“Jason had a little bit of success as a play-caller early on when our offensive line wasn’t full of firstround­ers,” Witten said. “I think he’s gonna find ways to get him in space, get him downhill, and I think the other thing for Saquon is just as a receiver, he’s gonna find ways to get him the ball in open space through the passing game that will obviously play to his strengths because he’s such a dynamic athlete in open space.”

In his 2018 rookie season, Barkley rushed 261 times (for 1,307 yards) and caught 91 passes. Elliott has exceeded 300 carries in three of his four years and caught a career-high 77 passes in 2018.

“He wants to run the football, and he believes in the play-action game that comes off of that,” Witten said. “His system is not one that’s just gonna be a new scheme every week. It’s gonna be the fundamenta­ls and the techniques — let’s get really good at these handful of things, and then impose that week in and week out by dressing it up and doing different things. ”

Of course this can be a career year for tight end Evan Engram if he can stay healthy.

“Evan’s an extremely talented player, and I can tell you from playing in that system they’re gonna get the playmakers the football, and find a number of different ways to do that,” Witten said. “First off, it starts with when you want to run the football, the numer one thing that comes off of that is the play-action passing game. And for a tight end, that’s the No. 1 thing, because a lot of times when you do play-action, it doesn’t really affect the corners on the outside, it really affects the linebacker­s in the underneath coverage. And that’s really where the tight end kinda makes his hay, and so I think that’ll be really exciting for him.”

Garrett will be an invaluable resource for Joe Judge.

“He’s a really good person, his character is such that he’s gonna communicat­e that way and be a sounding board for the head coach, not trying to be the head coach,” Witten said. “I think he’s just got a really good way about him from that standpoint of he’s been a backup quarterbac­k, he’s been an offensive coordinato­r before. He’s seen a lot, and he has a good way of being able to communicat­e that in the right tone, in the right way to a young head coach. If you take the idea and you run with it, great. If you take it and you don’t do it, his feelings not gonna be hurt, or anything from that standpoint.

The Giants have been all wrong for too long. This time, Jason Witten believes they got it all right.

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