New York Post

0-2 not a death sentence, but sure will feel like one for Judge’s crew

- Mike Vaccaro

IT IS a fundamenta­l line of the team’s secular scripture, the “John 3:16” or “Luke 6:31” of all things written and believed about the very nature of the New York Football Giants: A season does not end at 0-2. It matters not how awful you look at 0-2, either. There is lots of football beyond 0-2. The proof is in the good book.

In this case, that would be the record book. In this case, as ever, it is about the 2007 season, which began about as dreadfully as a season can begin: a 45-35 schooling by the Cowboys in Dallas in Week 1, followed by a grisly 35-13 slaughter administer­ed by the Packers in the home opener in Week 2.

And ended with a parade. That, forever — or at least for 14 years — has been the Golden Rule, one of the basic pillars of Giants patience. Another is the fact that in three of the four years when the Giants won the Super Bowl, they began the season 0-1. It is a safeguard against panic, against the Overlords of Overreacti­on. See? We have evidence that a season isn’t over at 0-1. Or even at 0-2.

We have proof. It is a quartet of beautiful silver footballs, named after a former Giants offensive coordinato­r. So keep your panicky ways in a closet, Mister, as that fabled OC might’ve put it.

It is a smart, prudent, mature approach to modern sports, especially the modern NFL. It is the right way to think, the proper way to believe. No one will argue that. OK.

That said …

That said, the Giants really need to avoid going 0-2 this year. Sunday’s season-opening buzzkill loss to the Broncos was bad enough. But you can live with losing a non-conference game to a team with a quarterbac­k trying to shove all the lost seasons of his career into however many good Sundays his knee will allow. Losing to the Broncos is denting but it is not damaging, and doesn’t have to be damning.

But backing that up with a loss Thursday night against Washington (a division foe), which will be starting its backup quarterbac­k (Taylor Heinicke, a 28-year-old fourth-year journeyman out of noted football factory Old Dominion) and itself coming off a dispiritin­g 20-16 loss at home to the L.A. Chargers …

Well, look. The season wouldn’t be over. The NFC East may well

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States