New York Post

WILLIS: NOW THEY GOTTA GO TO JONES

Coach forces his own hand to sit Manning with needless admission

- George Willis george.willis@nypost.com

PAGES 68-69

BY NOT making a decision on his starting quarterbac­k for Sunday’s game in Tampa, Pat Shurmur has made the decision. Daniel Jones needs to be the starting quarterbac­k when the winless Giants play the well-rested Buccaneers at Raymond James Stadium.

Shurmur opened the door to change on Monday less than 24 hours after the Giants dropped to 0-2 for the sixth time in the last seven years. A 28-14 loss to the Bills on Sunday afternoon has Shurmur evaluating all aspects of the Giants approach, which he should. But his indecision on whether Eli Manning will remain the starting quarterbac­k has opened a door that cannot be closed.

“He’s been our starter to this point and I don’t want to talk about anything else moving forward from that standpoint,” Shurmur said. “I’m not ready to discuss that.”

The more Shurmur didn’t want to talk, the more it became clear Manning’s days are numbered if not over. At the very least, his status as the starter has been undermined. That’s why the franchise must move on to Jones.

“We’re looking at everything we can do to get better,” Shurmur said. “That’s what we do every week. To this point what we’ve done hasn’t been good enough.”

That kind of coach-speak might fly in a smaller market, but not in this city where the spotlight has been on the quarterbac­k situation since Jones was drafted with the sixth pick as the heir apparent to the 38-year-old two-time Super Bowl MVP.

Though Jones was impressive during preseason, Shurmur has been steadfast in his proclamati­on Manning is the team’s starting quarterbac­k. That never wavered until Monday, and Shurmur is smart enough to know any hint of change is going to be interprete­d as big news to the media and frustrated fans. “I understand that. I do,” he said. Yet, Manning seemed caught off

guard when told Shurmur left open the possibilit­y of making a change at quarterbac­k. Of course, Manning showed no emotion and stayed profession­al.

“I have to get ready g a me,” he said. “Nothing changes.”

But it does. At the very least, it means if Ma n - ning does start in Ta mpa and the Giants lose again, a change will be expected. In essence, Sunday will be Manning’s last chance ... if he gets that chance.

“We are 0-2 and we are looking for answers,” Manning said. “I get it.”

There is plenty not to like about the Giants offensive performanc­e this season: fewer than 20 points in each of their first two games and just 5-of-23 in third-down conversati­ons. Manning has played to a 78.7 quarterbac­k rating, having completed 63 percent of his passes for 556 yards, two touchdowns and two intercepti­ons. Though he isn’t the lone reason the Giants are winless.

His receiving corps is without its top two talents in Sterling Shepard (concussion) and Golden Ta t e (suspension); and when Frank Gore has more rushing attempts (19 for 68 yards) than Saquon Barkley (18 for 107 yards) there’s a problem.

The Giants defense hasn’t been helping Manning either, getting destroyed by the Cowboys and dominated in the red zone by the Bills.

“We’re going to address all areas and try to find ways to put a winning performanc­e on the f ield,” Shurmur said.

Once Shurmur goes to Jones, then the Giants become his team for the remainder of the season, and Manning becomes a ve r y expensive backup. There can be no turning back. Shurmur made it clear on Monday the Giants are already thinking about making the move or why open the door?

The preference here would have been to wait for at least four games before seriously entertaini­ng making a switch. That would give Jones time to watch and learn from the sidelines and also give Manning a fair chance to make something of this season. But Shurmur’s indecision has made the decision. Manning deserves better than being in limbo. It’s time to move forward with Jones as the starting quarterbac­k.

 ?? N.Y. Post: Charles Wenzelberg ?? WHAT A HEADACHE: Giants coach Pat Shurmur knows he may have created a firestorm when he declined to name Eli Manning the star ter for Sunday’s game in Tampa.
N.Y. Post: Charles Wenzelberg WHAT A HEADACHE: Giants coach Pat Shurmur knows he may have created a firestorm when he declined to name Eli Manning the star ter for Sunday’s game in Tampa.
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