Baltimore Sun Sunday

Manning’s Giants goodbye likely here

- By Tom Canavan

EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — The man who has been the face of the Giants since 2004 is probably going to make his final appearance for them Sunday.

Eli Manning’s 16-year career with the Giants, in which he helped restore the team as a title force in the NFL and led it to two Super Bowl victories, likely will come to an end. The Giants will try to spoil the Eagles’ bid to win the NFC East.

If it is the end, Manning will leave with almost every Giants passing record; two NFL championsh­ips; two Super Bowl MVPs; a streak of 210 consecutiv­e starts between 2004-17; a Walter Payton NFL Man of the Year Award; and the respect of his teammates.

No doubt the last eight years have been tough. The Giants have made the playoffs once since winning the championsh­ip for the 2011 season, and that’s taken a toll on his tenure and his prospects for selection to the Pro Football Hall of Fame.

That’s just the stuff on the surface. To his teammates, friends and coaches, Manning will always be the player’s player, a classy, giving guy, a family man and a football intellect who wanted nothing more than to help his teammates win games.

What’s little known is Manning the prankster, the quiet imp who found a way to get his teammates to laugh.

The pranks are legendary. The No. 1 overall draft pick in 2004 — by the Chargers before a quick trade to the Giants — would borrow a teammate’s cellphone and change the language. He would put a dye in the socks of his offensive linemen that would turn their toes blue for weeks.

Former center Shaun O’Hara made the mistake of getting into a disagreeme­nt with his quarterbac­k and found his car coated with petroleum jelly and baby powder. Try to get that off.

Make no mistake, Manning isn’t going out the way he would like. First-round pick Daniel Jones will be the starting quarterbac­k Sunday in a game that may decide the division title.

Manning will be standing on the sideline watching, like he has most of the season. He lost his starting role after the second game, although he did write a heart-warming final chapter at home in leading the Giants to a 36-20 win over the Dolphins two weeks ago.

Though disappoint­ed, Manning never hesitated to help Jones, the No. 6 overall choice in the draft.

“To have a guy like that to work with every day and to learn football, learn how the NFL works, has been … I’ve been fortunate to be in that position,” Jones said. “He’s a fun guy to hang out with, he’s a fun guy to come to work with; you learn a lot just hanging around him. I’ve been lucky to be around him.”

Veteran receiver Golden Tate III has been amazed by how Manning went out of his way to help the 22-year-old who took away his job.

“With everything that has gone on with him and D.J. he stayed consistent to who he is, still the witty, funny guy, jokester,” Tate said. “He has remained upbeat and we all noticed that and appreciate­d it. I can’t say I would’ve handled the situation the way he did, with the New York media and being that guy for so long until all the sudden it’s not.”

Manning, who earned $23.2 million in the final year of his contact, hasn’t disclosed his future plans. It’s obvious he doesn’t want to be a backup. With the right team and a good offensive line, he can still make plays.

“He is really special for a lot of the reasons that won’t ever go down on a stat sheet, in my opinion,’’ said offensive coordinato­r Mike Shula, who seemed on the verge of tears talking about Manning. “The kind of guy he is, the way he handles things, watching him how he is with you all, with his teammates, with coaches, handling the situation earlier this year. It’s just unbelievab­le. I’ll never forget it.”

Manning wasn’t shy about saying he did not want to be drafted by the Chargers in 2004. That opened the door for Giants GM Ernie Accorsi to acquire the Mississipp­i quarterbac­k and younger brother of then-Colts star Peyton Manning. It gave the Giants a franchise quarterbac­k for years and years, something they had not had since Phil Simms in the 1980s and early ’90s.

New coach Tom Coughlin waited nine games before benching future Hall of Famer Kurt Warner and making Manning his starter. As a rookie, Manning went 1-6 after taking over on a team that finished 6-10 after going 4-12 the year before. But it laid the groundwork for the Giants to win the NFC East the following season.

The Giants won their third Super Bowl in franchise history in 2007, when Manning hit Plaxico Burress on a 13-yard TD pass with 35 seconds remaining to knock off the previously undefeated Patriots 17-14. The touchdown was set up by David Tyree’s famous helmet catch after Manning eluded a rush.

The second title came in ’11 when Manning led another late drive to knock off Tom Brady and the Patriots again. Ahmad Bradshaw scored on a 6-yard run with 57 seconds to play to cap an 88-yard drive that was ignited by a 38-yard pass to Mario Manningham. He made an over-the-shoulder catch and barely stayed in bounds right in front of Bill Belichick.

Special teams coordinato­r Thomas McGaughey joined the Giants in 2007, left in 2010 and returned to the organizati­on last year when Pat Shurmur was hired as coach. He said Manning was the same guy when he returned. He was first in the building each morning, eating breakfast around 6:15 a.m. and then doing whatever had to done while helping out where ever needed.

“He’s going to be definitely missed around here,” McGaughey said. “He’s a legend in his own right. I’ve got to thank him before he gets out of here for giving me a ring, because he did a heck of a job in that ’07 season.

“All of the memories and just being around E all of time, especially back then when I first got here. Just watching him grow as a quarterbac­k, and now just to come back and to see him as the old man in the building, just the old grizzly veteran, who is a guy that just loves ball. He just loves ball.”

 ?? ADAM HUNGER/AP ?? Eli Manning’s 16-year career with the Giants, which will probably end Sunday, included a pair of Super Bowl victories.
ADAM HUNGER/AP Eli Manning’s 16-year career with the Giants, which will probably end Sunday, included a pair of Super Bowl victories.

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