New York Post

Despite stats, QB coach claims Jones improved

- By PAUL SCHWARTZ

When the robot character in the old sci-fi TV series “Lost in Space’’ — named, simply, “Robot’’ — was presented with something illogical, he would flail his accordion-styled arms and exclaim, “Does not compute … does not compute.’’

In a way, this brings us to how the Giants feel about Daniel Jones. They sing his praises every chance they get and by now it is well-establishe­d that he is a hard worker, a tough guy, extremely coachable, dedicated and eager to learn and improve. Far less establishe­d are his credential­s. He is 7-18 in his two years as a starting quarterbac­k and this season has nine touchdown passes, nine intercepti­ons, 10 fumbles and has been at the helm of the NFL’s second-lowest scoring team.

Head coach Joe Judge said this week he sees plenty of progress out of Jones. Jerry Schuplinsk­i, the quarterbac­ks coach, doubled-down on that Tuesday, saying Jones’ greatest improvemen­t from the start of the season to now is his awareness in the pocket.

“I feel like his anticipati­on and understand­ing of the coverages and his reads have been improved,’’ Schuplinsk­i said. “And I would say, from not just what I saw on film last year, because it was a different system, but in our system Day 1 in training camp, understand­ing where he’s looking, where he wants to go, what the defense is doing, there’s some really good examples.’’

There is a dichotomy at work here. The Giants are bullish on Jones despite what virtually all the numbers and data say.

“I’d say the win part of it is a team thing, a lot of it’s a team thing,’’ Schuplinsk­i said. “I think Daniel’s progressed, I’m happy he’s here, I’m happy to have him. Again, I don’t get overly caught up in things like that, in statistics and wins. I think the results will keep coming … but certainly, we hope for a better record than we’re at right now.’’

➤ The Giants ran for 54 yards and allowed six second-half sacks in the 27-13 loss to the Ravens. The pass protection was solid in the first half but caved in when the Giants were in catchup mode and out of balance on offense, throwing on almost every down.

“Well, listen, it wasn’t good enough,’’ offensive line coach Dave DeGuglielm­o said. There are always bright spots in a ballgame and there are some individual plays where you just say, ‘Wow, what a great job’ a guy did, or you see advancemen­t in fundamenta­l techniques or hand placement or footwork or awareness or things like that. But when you take the totality of the play, it’s just not good enough. It’s not good enough as a group, it’s not good enough individual­ly, and clearly it’s not good enough in terms of how I got them ready to go.’’

Asked how he felt seeing two veterans, Cam Fleming and Kevin Zeitler, called for false start penalties back-to-back on the opening series, DeGuglielm­o said, “I’ll use the old Pat Hanlon ‘No comment’ on that one, how’s that?’’ Hanlon is the team’s senior vice president of communicat­ions.

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