New York Post

KICK IN THE GUT

Late penalty dooms Giants in crushing loss

- Steve Serby steve.serby@nypost.com

Washington kicker Dustin Hopkins had just missed a field goal that would deliver the Giants a victory. But alas, they were flagged for jumping offsides, giving Hopkins a second chance. He drilled a 43-yard game-winner, dealing Big Blue a heartbreak­ing 30-29 loss.

LANDOVER, Md. — The game was over. The Giants had won. Dustin Hopkins had missed a 48yard field goal wide right at the end and Daniel Jones and the euphoric Giants rushed off their sideline to celebrate.

Except Dexter Lawrence had lined up offside.

When Hopkins nailed the 43-yard field goal as time expired, the Washington Football Team, the 30-29 winner, rushed the field for the only celebratio­n that mattered.

“I’m not gonna put this on Dexter Lawrence,” Joe Judge said.

He could put it on just about everyone except Daniel Jones.

Jones had lofted a rainbow high and far, and the ball and the ballgame appeared destined to drop into the hands of Darius Slayton in the end zone. And Darius Slayton dropped the ball. Of course. The scoreboard clock showed 6:18 remaining. It should have been Giants 30, Washington Football Team 20. It would be Giants 26, Washington Football Team 20 instead. It took Taylor Heinicke two passes — first one 56 yards, second one 19 yards — to make it WFT 27, Giants 26. Of course. Jones had been heroic with his legs in the first half (9-95, 1 TD overall) and heroic with his arm in the second half (23 of 32, 249 yards, 1 TD overall).

“Everything you could ask of him he did tonight,” Sterling Shepard said. Now he needed to be heroic again. Get Graham Gano into field-goal range and save the night. He couldn’t do it. Couldn’t make the kind of championsh­ip drive that champions make. But just because his defense didn’t have his back didn’t mean the football gods couldn’t try to help. And James Bradberry darted in front of Terry McLaurin to intercept Taylor Heinicke at the WFT 20. Then the Giants went into a conservati­ve shell. Of course. Gano’s 35-yard field goal, his fifth of the night, with two minutes left should have made Jones and the Giants 29-27 winners. The Bad News Giants are 0-2 on merit. Jones had so much to overcome: The loss of captain Nick Gates in the first quarter to a gruesome lower leg fracture which further debilitate­d Jones’ ghastly offensive line.

His own defense, which has gone backwards under Patrick Graham and was letting Heinicke have his way.

He had gashed the Washington Football Team with his legs — Danny Wheels on this night, or Danny Lightning Bolt, or Crazy Legs Jones — and hadn’t lost a fumble, hadn’t been intercepte­d, and so he had managed to keep the Giants in the fight.

And then it was time for Danny Dimes.

He stood tall in the pocket. He delivered accurate passes. He was a battlefiel­d commander. He refused to blink. It was the third quarter when Jones had finally tried a deep shot towards the right sideline but Kenny Golladay reached out for it with one hand when two would have been advisable, and it fell incomplete.

Then he tried another one down the left sideline and this time he hit Slayton, who had beaten William Jackson III off the line, perfectly in stride for the 33-yard TD that made it NYG 20, WFT 14.

The referendum on Daniel Jones won’t be passed today, or tomorrow. He got off the canvas and Put Up in his Put Up or Shut Up Year 3. The year when he has no excuses not to get his team in the end zone and win games.

The Giants didn’t necessaril­y draft Jones sixth overall to be a gunslinger, even though he showed flashes of one as a rookie. They are asking him to be a point guard who can distribute the ball efficientl­y to the open man.

He did that on Thursday night. And more.

Jones had steamed down the left sideline on a read-option keeper in the second quarter, then he cut inside a block by C.J. Board to streak into the end zone with what would have been a 58-yard TD run. It was a 46-yard run because Board had been called for holding Jackson III. Of course. “The great thing about playing in our city,” Judge said, “is the fact that [fans] ride high and low every week with you.”

They are riding as low as you can ride today.

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 ?? Getty Images (2) ?? ALMOST HAD IT: Darius Slayton can’t hold on to a sure touchdown that would have given the Giants a bigger cushion in the fourth quarter. Instead it was one of the many letdowns for QB Daniel Jones, which led to a heartbreak­ing loss on a second-chance field goal (inset), writes The Post’s Steve Serby.
Getty Images (2) ALMOST HAD IT: Darius Slayton can’t hold on to a sure touchdown that would have given the Giants a bigger cushion in the fourth quarter. Instead it was one of the many letdowns for QB Daniel Jones, which led to a heartbreak­ing loss on a second-chance field goal (inset), writes The Post’s Steve Serby.
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