New York Post

Playoff goal or not, Giants are fighting for their future

- Paul.schwartz@nypost.com

Joe Judge said he has purposely been hard on Daniel Jones as the head coach and quarterbac­k get to know each other and work together for the first time. It has been an exceedingl­y hard season for the Giants, in many ways, and Jones is not the only individual in the program who is under Judge’s intense scrutiny.

All season, it felt as if Judge were giving tests and setting traps. For his players. For the assistants on his staff. All season, it felt as if Judge had one eye directly on what was in front of him and another eye on the long game. Of course he wants to make the playoffs in his first year. More than almost anyone you will meet in the business, though, Judge refuses to acknowledg­e aloud that this is a priority.

“Anything that may or may not come after that doesn’t even exist yet,’’ he said. “Wasting mental energy and focus on something that doesn’t exist, to me, is just wasted time.’’

The man is consistent. Three weeks ago, the Giants were in control of the NFC East, having upset the Seahawks in Seattle, with backup Colt McCoy subbing for the injured Jones. The Giants, winners of four straight games, were alone in first place, in control of their playoff destiny with four games to go.

It turned out to be far too long of a sprint for the Giants to maintain their slim lead. They lost the last two games by a combined 46-13. They have been bounced from first place and will be eliminated from playoff contention if they get beat Sunday by the Ravens at M&T Bank Stadium and if Washington (6-8) beats the Panthers, or if Washington loses and the Eagles (4-9-1) beat the Cowboys. If the Giants (5-9) win, they cannot be eliminated this weekend and are assured of going into Week 17 with something to play for in the New Year.

The Ravens are 9-5 and need help to make it into the postseason in the AFC.

Jones, after missing two of the past three games with a strained right hamstring and then a sprained left ankle, returns not a moment too soon. He was terrible his last time out, an immobile mess in a 26-6 loss to the Cardinals.

Judge said he did not make anything easy on Jones because he wanted to see what he had in his 23-year-old quarterbac­k. Jones was not alone in this trial.

“We try to make everything challengin­g on all of our players,’’ Judge said. “Without going too into detail internally, look, this was something I had to see from all the players this year. Who they really are, how they are as players, how they respond to hard coaching, how they perform under pressure, how they handle situations inside and outside the building. Are they a guy who can block out external factors and come in every day and focus?

“Look, we created a situation with Daniel. I wanted to see how he performed at practice, within games, how he responded to things. He’s earned my respect all the way."

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