The Daily Courier

QB Eli Manning benched by Giants

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New York coach says teams needs to know more about backups Smith, Webb

EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — The Eli Manning era with the New York Giants may be coming to an end. And if it is, it is ugly.

The Giants announced Tuesday the two-time Super Bowl MVP was being benched for the first time in more than 13 years so they could evaluate the other quarterbac­ks on the roster over the final month of a lost season.

The decision to sit the 36-year-old Manning was totally unexpected, especially with five games left in the regular season.

It was clear the decision hurt and annoyed Manning, who has been the face of the Giants (2-9) since they made a bold draft day trade with the-then San Diego Chargers in 2004 to get the No. 1 overall selection to the Meadowland­s.

Manning expressed his unhappines­s but once again he played the good soldier, voicing his support for Geno Smith, who will start against Oakland on Sunday.

His emotional pain was all over his face. His eyes welled with tears talking to reporters. His chin quivered when asked about how much this hurt. His face got red the more he talked.

Coach Ben McAdoo gave Manning the option of starting to keep his streak of 210 consecutiv­e starts alive, but he didn’t want any part of that.

“You start knowing you are going to come out of the game to keep a streak alive, maybe, that’s not what it is about,” Manning said.

“It’s not a preseason game where you are going to start to the half, the next week a quarter, a series, that’s not fair. That’s not fair to me, not fair to Geno, not how you play. You play to win. When you are named the starting quarterbac­k you think it’s your job to go win the football game.

“If you are going to play a little bit, I didn’t think it was the right way to play,” said Manning, who became the Giants starting quarterbac­k in 2004, about a month before Eagles quarterbac­k Carson Wentz turned 12.

Manning’s voice broke when asked how this one hurt, noting it was one of his hardest days as a Giant. “It’s been a hard day to handle this, but (I’ll) hang in there and figure it out.”

Manning spoke with the media for less than four minutes.

He then took his backpack and left the locker room.

McAdoo said he made the decision to start Smith over the weekend, and co-owner John Mara and general manager Jerry Reese were in agreement.

“This is not a statement about anything other than we are 2-9, and we have to do what is best for the organizati­on moving forward, and that means evaluating every position,” Reese said in a statement.

“I told Eli this morning that an organizati­on could not ask for anymore in a franchise quarterbac­k. He has been that and more. Nobody knows what the future holds, but right now, this is what we think is best for the franchise.”

McAdoo, the second-year head coach, said the organizati­on needed to learn more about Smith and rookie third-round draft pick Davis Webb in the final weeks of the season. Smith took four snaps in a blowout loss to the Rams. Webb has not played.

McAdoo refused to say if this was the end of the Manning era.

“I have a lot of confidence in Eli as a player, as a quarterbac­k,” McAdoo said.

“But at this point, it’s my responsibi­lity for the organizati­on to make sure we take a look at Geno and at some point take a look at Davis and give them the opportunit­y to show what they can do.”

Manning and Smith were told about the decision Tuesday, and later the team was filled in.

McAdoo also plans to give Webb an opportunit­y, but probably not this week. Manning, who recently passed the 50,000-yard mark, will be the backup. Webb called Manning the best teammate he has ever had.

“If you had a Mount Rushmore of not only New York Giants, but New York athletes, he’d be on it,” Webb said.

Manning’s streak is the second-longest streak by a quarterbac­k in NFL history, behind Brett Favre’s 297. Manning has started every Giants game since Nov. 21, 2004, when he took over for veteran Kurt Warner in the 10th game of his rookie season. Manning has also started 12 post-season games, and twice led the Giants to Super Bowl victories.

Warner, now a NFL Network analyst, criticized Tuesday’s decision by the Giants and said he was happy that Manning said he didn’t want to start to protect his streak.

“This is so much bigger than Eli Manning,” Warner said.

“This is about an entire organizati­on that has gone sideways. If you’ve got one guy that represents what this organizati­on has been about and the character and the success of this organizati­on, it’s that guy that has been under centre in Eli Manning. He’s never done anything but show character and do things the right way.” — The Associated Press

 ?? The Associated Press ?? The New York Giants are changing quarterbac­ks for first time in more than 13 years. Yes, Eli Manningisn­otgoingtos­tart.TheGiantsa­nnouncedon­Tuesdaytha­tGenoSmith­willstart.
The Associated Press The New York Giants are changing quarterbac­ks for first time in more than 13 years. Yes, Eli Manningisn­otgoingtos­tart.TheGiantsa­nnouncedon­Tuesdaytha­tGenoSmith­willstart.

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