New York Post

At Duke or with the Giants, the Joneses Keep up with each other

- By RYAN DUNLEAVY Shhh! Daniel is in a meeting!

THE SCENE is vivid enough to be pulled straight from a sitcom: Four 20-something siblings all temporaril­y living together again in the Jones family home in Charlotte, N.C., at the start of the COVID-19 quarantine. Rebecca, Bates and Ruthie all have experience with the demands of a highlevel athlete, but it’s still funny to them when food is eaten on the go because Daniel — the Giants quarterbac­k — needs space for his laptop and spread-out papers.

“Some days when maybe the three of us just wanted to go goof around, Daniel took control of the family dining room,” Ruthie Jones, the youngest sibling, said. “Everyone has to be quiet in the house because Daniel is taking notes. It’s hilarious because that’s who he is — committed. It doesn’t surprise me, but it impresses me. At the highest level, that’s what it takes. It was pretty cool for me to see that first-hand.”

Eighteen months later, Daniel Jones’ third NFL season will begin Sunday, when the Giants face the Broncos, but another important fall season in the family already is well underway. Ruthie is 6-0 with a 0.56 goalsagain­st-average as goalie for the No. 5-ranked Duke women’s soccer team. Another season will begin Nov. 9, when Bates joins the front-court for the Duke men’s basketball team.

But a quarterbac­k and a goalkeeper? Two field generals. That’s no accident.

“I don’t know a whole lot about playing goalie,” Daniel told The Post, “but there are certainly similariti­es. Being the goalie or the quarterbac­k is different than being a defenseman or a midfielder. We talk about communicat­ing with the people you rely on, whether it’s the defense in front of her or my offensive linemen. A lot of our conversati­ons revolve around working with teammates.”

Apologies to head coaches Joe Judge and Mike Krzyzewski, but a running joke among family friends is Ruthie is the best athlete of the four.

“A lot of people would agree with that,” Daniel quipped. “She’s a tremendous athlete — and probably the best student also.”

Daniel has inherited a lot of labels in the last three years: Eli Manning’s successor. First-round draft pick. Co-captain. Multimilli­onaire. But he still takes seriously the role of older brother — and example-setter — for Ruthie and Bates. Rebecca, the eldest of the four, was a four-year letterwinn­er in field hockey (2013-16) at Davidson.

“He’s calling the plays. He’s making plays. He’s the leader on the field,” Ruthie said. “I think it translates. In soccer, we call it commanding the box. As the last line of defense, I need to be locked in on everyone’s job. Accountabi­lity rests on me.”

In New York, it rests on Daniel.

TWO OF A KIND

Ask anyone around the Giants about the starting quarterbac­k and three descriptio­ns follow: Hard-working, smart and unflappabl­e. These traits were sharpened over decades, and the internal belief is those hard-tofind intangible­s are bound to lead to on-field improvemen­t.

Fans want Daniel to be more emotional. The media wish he were more revealing. Teammates love him just the way he is.

“For some people, being a leader is yelling and screaming, getting hyped up and being that sort of energy,” Ruthie said. “In some ways, Daniel and I are less obvious to the rest of the world. What I see from Daniel is I don’t need to become this whole different person in order to lead my team. People will see that and trust me, and that makes the connection­s we both have on the field within our teams that much more meaningful.”

Way back when, they were on the same team. Two-on-two basketball games at home always pitted Ruthie and Daniel against Rebecca and Bates. Legend has it Ruthie and Daniel won an overwhelmi­ng majority back when Rebecca fouled too much and the brothers “butted heads a lot.”

“It was a fun way to grow up, always doing something together,” Daniel said. “We all feed off each other’s successes.”

Daniel is known to stream a Duke women’s soccer game — or seek out the highlights package. A congratula­tory or pickme-up text message usually lands soon after.

Duke football No. 17 jerseys with “Jones” across the back still are popular on the Durham, N.C., campus. There might be more photos of Daniel hanging in the athletic training facility than at home. Even professors like to ask for an update on Daniel once they make the sibling connection.

“It’s kind of easy for me to go under the radar because our last name is Jones,” Ruthie said. “But it’s not lost on me the value of the legacy he left at Duke.”

Inevitably, there are times when an NFL sports talk show comes on a campus television. Maybe someone is criticizin­g the Giants or their quarterbac­k.

“It’s not something I would choose to watch, but the criticism comes with the praise,” said Ruthie, who has profession­al soccer prospects if she wants to pursue them. “It’s important for me to see that. It doesn’t affect me and my family as much as it did in the beginning. People ask if I ever get used to seeing Daniel play on TV. I don’t think so. It’s fun to watch most of the time, when they are saying good things.”

BLUE DEVILS & BIG BLUE

When the pandemic hit, it stirred echoes of years during which Daniel and Bates used to drag their middle-school-aged sister out of bed because they were her only ride to school and wanted to hit the weight room before classes. Closed parks, gyms, team facilities and college campuses around the country caused athletes who rely on a push from coaches to fall behind the curve.

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FAMTASTIC: Daniel Jones and his sister Ruthie have both starred for Duke after a childhood spent competing with each other and their siblings Rebecca (inset center) and Bates(inset left).

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