New York Daily News

THE KAP FITS!

5 reasons Giants should sign Kaepernick now

- BY CHUCK MODIANO

“They’re 1-4 now and let me tell you what they need to do right now,” Max Kellerman said on ‘First Take’ Monday morning. “The New York football Giants need to sign Colin Kaepernick right now. They need a dynamic quarterbac­k, a starting-caliber NFL quarterbac­k which Kaepernick is to pair with the most talented wideout I have ever seen in Odell Beckham, and the most talented running back prospect I’ve ever seen in Saquon Barkley. Not to mention Evan Engram when he comes back.” Can we discuss this. Because it makes sense on every football level. The operative word is “football”. If the Giants owners want to continue keep Kap out of the league, and if some fans don’t want Kap signed for his racial justice protest, that’s on them. If other fans want to continue an Eli Manning Sentimenta­lity tour, that’s on them, too. But this author is old enough to remember when Patrick Ewing was traded by the Knicks, and the backpage headline that read “GOOD RIDDANCE”. Though not as harsh, Joe Namath had an ugly end, too, and Don Mattingly was pushed out the door on the cusp of his postseason dreams. New York has always been a tough town – except for Eli Manning, I guess. After getting benched for Geno Smith last year, Eli’s watery locker room eyes seemed to produce more sympathy and visceral outrage than for Christine Blasey Ford. The Giants coach was fired. Eli got his job back, and Brett Kavanaugh became a Supreme Court Justice. But I digress. Now let’s talk football.

1. Eli is a Bad fit for this Team, and Especially his Lack of Mobility

“The quarterbac­k play is killing this team!” says Kellerman. “Now does Kaepernick walk off the street and become the starter? Of course not. If they can come back because the division is weak, good for them and then they can develop Kaepernick as an answer.”

In fairness, ‘killing this team’, did not apply to Sunday in North Carolina. Despite two picks, Eli actually played well, and that loss was definitely not on him. Had Graham Gano knocked booted an insane 63-yard field goal (which would have been good from 70 yards), we would be celebratin­g Eli’s first 30-point win since 2015.

And to Eli detractors, that’s the whole problem right there. Eli can’t seem to move drives into the end zone — for years now —despite most coming with an elite wide receiver in Beckham.

Eli’s supporters tend to use the words “two Super Bowl MVPs” as a form of lifetime immunity, and mostly point out his porous offensive line. Eli detractors also tend to focus on Manning’s last six years (34-50; 85.4 passer rating), and his severe lack of mobility that could mitigate the damage from that line.

One can argue Odell’s recent public interview critiquing Eli’s lack of mobility publicly was selfish and counter-productive before arguing it was untrue. The way this team is constructe­d right now, particular­ly the addition of Barkley, makes Manning’s lack of mobility an even greater concern.

2. Kaepernick is an option to Eli

“Kaepernick might be ready to play if he gets involved in a system right now, by the middle or late of this year,” Kellerman said. “If they do start to make a run, but Eli’s play starts to falter, you have an option there.”

Kaepernick continues to train every day, and why wouldn’t any fan want that option? If Eli starts winning, then let Eli play out the season while Kaepernick learns the Giants system. If the Giants keep losing, you have the best back-up quarterbac­k in the NFL who can step right in.

You also have an answer for the immediate future, and he costs zero draft picks.

Kap is seven years younger than Manning, and the same age as Kirk Cousins, and Matthew Stafford, neither of whom have won a single playoff game – let alone win four playoff games against two close losses (a Super Bowl, and one famous Richard Sherman deflected pass from going to another).

3. Kaepernick has never had a wide receiver close to Odell Beckham. You must be at least curious?

In 2016, here was Kaepernick’s progressio­n as he returned from injury: Passer rating 66.2 first 2 games; 93.6 next 5 games; 100.1 last 4 games.

After needing two games to recover from injury, Kaepernick steadily improved as the season progressed.

But the most amazing thing is that Kaepernick did it with Jeremy Kerley as his No. 1 receiver.

Like Geno Smith, the previous quarterbac­k to have Kerley as their No.1, Kap’s critics have the audacity to not mention it. Quinton Patton, now out of the NFL, was his No. 2.

Kap had back-up receivers and the Niners possessed the NFL’s last-ranked defense in 2016, the real reasons for his 1-10 record, a tally his critics love to cite without context.

4. Kaepernick and Barkley would be a dynamic Run Pass Option combo

“You can’t run RPOs with Eli Manning,” said Kellerman, “Can you imagine running them with Saquon Barkley?!” Yes, I can. And it gives me chills. Kaepernick was at his very best those three years with Frank Gore (25-14 record), and while the departure of former 49ers coach John Harbaugh tends to get the most attention, Gore’s departure as Kaepernick’s read-option partner hurt even more. Kaepernick and an electric talent like Barkley could work magic together.

5. The Giants will likely increase revenue by signing Kaepernick

This author really doesn’t care about financial hardships of billionair­es. But since so many people on my Twitter timeline have a soft spot for the Mara family’s wallet, and would rather lose games to protect it, let’s just address it.

Firstly, yes John Mara has said the vitriol toward players kneeling in the correspond­ence he’s had fans is unpreceden­ted, but do you really think Giants fans are going to burn their tickets (again) if they sign Kaepernick?

Perhaps some will. Who knows, let’s say a few do? The question is, how many more fans will you gain back?

Jersey sales will go through the roof – not just from Kap sports fans, but millions of non-sports fans who don’t even care about football. These will sell internatio­nally, too – where Kap is a beloved world-wide figure. Ask Nike about this. They will also sell for the next 50 years beyond his time in uniform.

Any lost tickets? They will be replaced in five minutes.

Polls show that older white fans are the only majority group that does not support Kap. The majority of polled African-American, Latinx, and young white fans do. In fact, young white fans are more aligned with fans of color, than their parents. That’s your future Mr. Mara.

The majority of future ticket buyers see Kapernick’s stance as one for racial justice, and police accountabi­lity. They want more murder conviction­s of police, like last week’s rare conviction of Jason Van Dyke, the Chicago cop who sprayed 16 shots into Laquan McDonald’s back.

Many older whiter ticket buyers don’t care about Laquan if he can’t run like Saquon.

And that’s what Kap’s stance is all about. And every day more and more fans are getting this.

And don’t be fooled by this “Kap would be ‘a distractio­n’ nonsense” either. At this point, wouldn’t you want a distractio­n? From Odell at least.

But don’t sign Kaepernick to make money. Don’t sign him because you would be a hero to millions of New Yorkers and flip a chunk of the Jets fan base overnight. That would be for the wrong reasons.

Do it because Kaepernick will make your football team a whole lot better.

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 ??  ?? If Eli Manning suddenly shows his old form at QB, great. If not, Colin Kaepernick could step in. AP
If Eli Manning suddenly shows his old form at QB, great. If not, Colin Kaepernick could step in. AP

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