Hartford Courant

GM Gettleman out, says he is retiring

- By Tom Canavan

EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — Dave Gettleman is out as the general manager of the New York Giants after a fourth straight double-digit losing season.

The Giants announced the 70-year-old Gettleman retired Monday, a day after New York (4-13) dropped its season finale 22-7 to Washington. It was the sixth straight loss and it ended a dismal, injury-plagued second season under coach Joe Judge.

Gettleman probably would have been fired had he not stepped down.

“It was a privilege to serve as the general manager of the New York Giants the last four years and to have spent so many years of my career with this franchise,” Gettleman said. “We obviously have not had the on-the-field success I expected, and that is disappoint­ing. However, I have many fond memories here, including two Super Bowl victories, and I wish the team and organizati­on only the best moving forward. There are many good people here who pour their souls into this organizati­on.”

Judge’s future with the Giants also is in question after the late swoon marked by inept offensive performanc­es. He plans to talk to team co-owners John Mara and Steve Tisch this week about returning for a third season.

Defensive lineman Leonard Williams, quarterbac­k Daniel Jones and cornerback Logan Ryan said Judge talked to the team Monday about preparing for next season, which some took as an indication he was coming back. The team has not confirmed he will be back.

The Giants went 19-46 during Gettleman’s tenure and were rarely in playoff contention in that period.

“It is an understate­ment to say John and I are disappoint­ed by the lack of success we have had on the field,” Tisch said. “We are united in our commitment to find a general manager who will provide the direction necessary for us to achieve the on-field performanc­e and results we all expect.”

This past season was particular­ly hard to watch. The Giants came into the year with higher expectatio­ns coming off a 6-10 campaign that saw them close the season with a 5-3 run to finish second in the weak NFC East, a game behind Washington (7-9).

The anticipati­on grew in the offseason when New York signed playmaking wide receiver Kenny

Golladay, drafted speedy receiver Kadarius Toney in the first round, and signed veteran tight end Kyle Rudolph to help with the blocking. Nothing went right.

The offensive line lost left guard Shane Lemieux (knee) and center Nick Gates (broken leg) in the first two weeks of the season. Golladay didn’t catch a TD pass all season. Toney missed seven games with an assortment of injuries, and Jones missed the final six games with a neck injury. Defensivel­y, inside linebacker Blake Martinez and safety Jabrill Peppers were lost to ACL injuries.

Despite strong play by the defense, the result was four wins, the team’s lowest total since a 3-13 mark in 2017 led to the firing of coach Ben Mcadoo and two-time Super Bowlwinnin­g GM Jerry Reese early in December.

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