New York Post

PRINCE OF THIEVES

Giants want Amukamara to improve ball skills

- By PAUL SCHWARTZ paul.schwartz@nypost.com

It sure looked as if the first preseason game of the summer for Prince Amukamara was a good one, as he kept things under control at his right cornerback spot and even showed off his speed by running stepforste­p with Sammy Watkins, the fleet Bills rookie receiver.

But the Giants want more from Amukamara.

“I would like to see him intercept two of those three balls because he had a chance,’’ cornerback­s coach Peter Giunta said Tuesday at training camp. “He had better position than the receivers did on all of them. He did a great job of the forcing the receiver. He had them pinned against the sideline. He did a great job at the line of scrimmage getting his hands on the guys and forcing them to the sideline.’’

It may have been a great job but it was not a complete job. Entering his fourth season with the Giants, the 25yearold Amukamara is in his physical prime and has shaken off some earlycaree­r turbulence fueled by injury, missed practice time and his wideeyed, sluggish recognitio­n of the giveandtak­e world of an NFL locker room. In some ways, the Giants lightened the load on him by opening the coffers to sign Dominique RodgersCro­martie, a starqualit­y cornerback. In some ways, they made Amukamara’s job more difficult.

Tom Coughlin has already stated RodgersCro­martie will shadow the top receiver on the opposing team, which may or may not be the way the Giants use him on defense this season. Either way, quarterbac­ks are not going to force the ball in RodgersCro­martie’s direction and Amukamara as the other starter will get enough action on his side to have ample opportunit­y to make plays.

Is he capable of making the plays? Amukamara is willing and able in run support, has excellent cover skills and is physical enough to get his hands on a receiver to impede progress. But he hasn’t shown much ability as a ball hawk, with three career intercepti­ons (one apiece in his first three seasons) in 36 games (27 starts).

In the preseason opener against the Bills, Amukamara said his timing was off.

“There was one where I was in very good position and I should have jumped, but the receiver played defensive back and knocked it down,’’ he said. “It was just bad timing.’’

Amukamara planned on staying after practice to work on his ball skills, hoping to find a quarterbac­k or “a coach who throws it well’’ to throw him passes 30 or 40 yards down the field.

One problem with Amukamara is he has small hands. He jokes he compensate­s with “large gloves’’ and believes he has what it takes to pluck the ball out of the air.

“I think guys can learn to have ball skills and some guys are born with it,’’ Amukamara said. “I played offense in high school and I played basketball, I think I’m pretty coordinate­d with the ball. I think some guys are born with it, some guys are not but it definitely can be worked on.’’

As far as the increased attention as the starting cornerback who figures to be picked on opposite RodgersCro­martie, Amukamara says bring it on. His confidence is rising and he is no longer the younger guy looking up at Corey Webster, Terrell Thomas and Aaron Ross. Those three are all gone and Amukamara remains, hoping to show he’s a franchiset­ype player the Giants will want to invest on into the future. The Giants picked up the fifthyear option on Amukamara’s contract, and he’s on the books for about $6.9 million in 2015 — an unwieldy salarycap figure that will not become reality. The team will look to strike a longterm deal with Amukamara and the terms of that deal will depend largely on his 2014 performanc­e.

“I always expect to be thrown at anyway so every play I think the ball’s coming my way,’’ Amukamara said. “That’s how Corey Webster told me to prepare and that’s how coach Giunta tells me.’’

 ?? AP ?? NOT SO FAST: Bills wide receiver T.J. Graham breaks up an intercepti­on by Giants cornerback Prince Amukamara in the first quar ter at the Hall of Fame Game on Sunday.
AP NOT SO FAST: Bills wide receiver T.J. Graham breaks up an intercepti­on by Giants cornerback Prince Amukamara in the first quar ter at the Hall of Fame Game on Sunday.

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