USA TODAY International Edition

On Eli Manning, the Giants have done it all wrong

Veteran QB’s ignominiou­s benching is just the latest exercise in lousy judgment.

- Mike Jones

Eli Manning deserved better than this.

So what if his skills have started to decline? So what that he will receive $ 17 million to make two starts this season and now will become the backup to rookie Daniel Jones with the Giants off to a 0- 2 start?

When you’ve carried a franchise to two Super Bowl victories, you deserve to go out in better style. You deserve to avoid the dizzying ways of indecision that have engulfed the Giants franchise over the course of the last twoplus years.

The Giants should have put the quarterbac­k out of his misery long before coach Pat Shurmur informed Manning on Tuesday the team is turning to Jones, the Duke product New York drafted sixth overall in April with intentions of grooming him for the future.

As the second- year head coach told reporters, “Eli was obviously disappoint­ed, as you would expect, but he said he would be what he has always been, a good teammate, and continue to prepare to help this team win games.”

Of course he would be disappoint­ed to be stuck with all of this.

In the last calendar year, his bosses have expressed a commitment to him and to winning. Yet their actions have suggested otherwise. Just months after giving wide receiver Odell Beckham Jr. a long- term contract last August, they shipped the three- time Pro Bowler while failing to replace him with a comparable top weapon. The Giants also opted against re- signing one of their top

When you’ve carried a franchise to two Super Bowl victories, you deserve to go out in better style.

defensive players ( safety Landon Collins). They made efforts to reconfigure their offensive line, yet it remains as ineffective as ever.

The Giants have clearly been in rebuilding mode, yet they haven’t wanted to acknowledg­e it. They’ve wanted to keep Manning in their jersey for the entirety of his career, yet they’ve failed to adequately support him or make it

worth it for him to stick around.

Now, with a 0- 2 record and the squad plagued by ineffective play on multiple fronts, they’re making Eli the fall guy and hoping Jones can give them a spark.

Spoiler alert: This move will not save the Giants’ season. Outside of running back Saquon Barkley, there’s very little to work with on this roster.

Jones might have a little more zip on his passes, and he might be a little more fleet of foot. But he is going to be just as swarmed and overwhelme­d by pass rushers as Manning was, just as frustrated by the dropped passes of his wide receivers and just as betrayed by a defense that ranks among the worst in the league in both yards and points allowed.

At best, Jones gains experience playing at an NFL pace and gets a head start on next year, when hopefully, for his sake, the Giants have better stocked this roster with legitimate talent.

At worst, Jones either gets hurt or looks awful, develops bad habits and has his confidence shot entering Year 2. Hey, at least he’ll have the good soldier Eli with whom he can commiserat­e.

But for Manning, it should’ve never come to this. He shouldn’t even be here. When the Giants decided to hit the reset button and part with what little upperechel­on talent they had, they should have said goodbye to Manning as well.

In truth, they probably should have made that move in the 2018 offseason.

Somewhere, Ben McAdoo is shaking his head and chuckling.

He was right, was he not? That’s essentiall­y what the Giants have conceded now that they have officially ended the Manning era. But when McAdoo tried to position the franchise to plan for the future by benching Manning late in the 2017 season, he wound up losing his job the very next week.

Co- owner John Mara wanted to remain loyal to Manning. He made changes to the Giants’ front office and coaching staff while sticking with his quarterbac­k. But he hired a general manager in Dave Gettleman who possessed the vision of stripping this roster down and building it back up again with young, affordable talent.

So while that restoratio­n project got underway, Manning remained and continued to toil away as the same undesirabl­e conditions he had endured in recent years only worsened.

If Mara really wanted to properly support Manning, he should have ordered moves that would have dramatical­ly upgraded this roster on both sides of the ball. He shouldn’t have allowed the roster to deteriorat­e to the point that it had in the first place. You don’t see the Patriots or the Saints letting Tom Brady’s or Drew Brees’ supporting cast reach such levels of incompeten­cy.

But the Giants’ roster did reach that point. It was indeed a mess and in need of an overhaul.

It’s OK to admit that it’s time for a change. It’s OK to say, “Thanks, but this is the end. It’s not you, it’s me.”

That’s what the Giants should have done for Manning: Given him his freedom so he could sign with a contender-level team that simply lacked a competent quarterbac­k.

But nostalgia can cloud judgment. Now, the Giants’ restoratio­n project is delayed by a year or two. Manning has already wasted the 2018 season in Giants colors, and he’ll waste another as he watches from the sideline for the next 15 weeks.

By season’s end, he’ll be days away from his 39th birthday with his free agency prospects – and possibly his desire to start over again – diminished further than they would have been the last two years.

Meanwhile, the Giants will try again to get it right. Based on the indecision that has plagued them for years now, it’s anyone’s guess how that attempt to get this thing back on track will go.

 ?? RON JENKINS/ AP ??
RON JENKINS/ AP
 ?? BRAD PENNER/ USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Besides leading the Giants to two Super Bowl titles, quarterbac­k Eli Manning has thrown for 56,537 yards and 362 TDs since 2004.
BRAD PENNER/ USA TODAY SPORTS Besides leading the Giants to two Super Bowl titles, quarterbac­k Eli Manning has thrown for 56,537 yards and 362 TDs since 2004.
 ??  ??
 ?? VINCENT CARCHIETTA/ USA TODAY SPORTS ?? In the Giants’ first two games this season, Eli Manning had completed 62.9% of his passes and thrown two TD passes.
VINCENT CARCHIETTA/ USA TODAY SPORTS In the Giants’ first two games this season, Eli Manning had completed 62.9% of his passes and thrown two TD passes.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States