New York Post

Saquon never really had a chance to soar with Giants

- Steve Serby steve.serby@nypost.com

ONE day, if Joe Schoen executes a successful rebuild that brings the Giants back, perhaps John Mara will be able to look back on the day he lost Saquon Barkley to the hated Philadelph­ia Eagles and laugh.

There was no laughing inside 1925 Giants Drive on the day that Barkley decided to take the money — three years, $37.75M, $26M guaranteed — and run to daylight down the Turnpike to sing “Fly

Eagles Fly.”

The Saquon

Barkley Era ended at 2:42 p.m. Monday, when he tweeted a photo of a pair of Eagles side by side.

Once A Giant ...

Not Always A Giant.

Not Only A Giant.

He wanted to be a Giant For Life more than they wanted him to be. He never had a chance here. He and the Giants were the Quad Couple.

It was the wrong time and the wrong place for him, then and now.

Fly, $aquon, Fly.

When it wasn’t his own body that betrayed him, it was the Giants who betrayed him, and long before the sides failed to reach a long-term deal.

They never fixed the offensive line. He played for three different head coaches. He never got to play with an elite quarterbac­k. Once Odell Beckham Jr. was traded in November 2021, he never played with a No. 1 receiver to take the pressure off him. He was never used enough as a passing-game weapon. He is gone now and safety Xavier McKinney (Packers, 4 years, $68M) is gone now and Daniel Jones is going, going gone.

The devaluatio­n of the running back sealed his fate.

It is a sad day for all the men and women and boys and girls who have littered the MetLife Stadium stands in their No. 26 jerseys. Barkley was often the only New York Giant worth watching.

Don’t begrudge Barkley: Mark

Bavaro played six years as a Giant and his last two years as an Eagle and everyone forgave him.

As much as he wanted to stay as a forever Giant, and be like Eli Manning and Michael Strahan and Lawrence Taylor and Phil Simms, good for him that his Escape From New York gets him to a better football place with enough money to buy out Pat’s and Geno’s.

He leaves New York as Saquon. He arrives in Philly as $aquon.

“Thank you to everyone who has shown me love and support over the past 6 years ... forever grateful!

“Excited for the next chapter,” Barkley tweeted.

The Eagles said to hell with The Curse of the NFL Running Back: They do not impact winning the way the franchise quarterbac­k does. Or a $30M edge rusher like Brian Burns, acquired from the Panthers for one of the Giants’ two second-round draft picks and a fifth as a sidekick for Kayvon Thibodeaux. Barkley was a luxury the Giants could not afford.

Barkley has immense value to the Eagles, who watched D’Andre Swift sign with the Bears, as the missing piece to a championsh­ipready team. The Giants, through no fault of his own, have not been a championsh­ip-ready team in over a decade. Barkley can put a team like the Eagles over the top.

He could not carry a team like the Giants.

His low-cost replacemen­t, exBill Devin Singletary (3 years, $16.5M) won’t be able to.

Barkley took our breath away with a 39-yard gain the very first time he touched the ball in the preseason, and everyone around the Giants believed that he could be the running back outlier who could help a fading Eli ride off into the sunset with a third Super Bowl on his own way to Canton.

It was an illusion and a delusion. There were occasions when it seemed as though Barkley was touched by the hand of God, just never enough of them as the second overall pick of the 2018 NFL Draft to drag the Giants out of the desert of despair except for one fleeting oasis that was that 2022 wild-card playoff win in Minnesota. It was his lone playoff win.

Barkley still has tread left on his 27-year-old tires following these six unfulfille­d years, but time is running out for him to realize a legacy that will be remembered as legendary.

Barkley, who always drinks from the half-full glass, has to look at it this way:

He gets to go home — Coplay, Pa., is 66 miles from Philadelph­ia — to chase a Super Bowl and give himself a better chance to run his gold jacket race to Canton.

The fateful day in 2020 when he crumpled to the ground in Chicago Week 2 with that torn ACL essentiall­y cost him two years of his prime. As doggedly as he rehabbed from it, and from other less severe setbacks, only in 2022 did he come close to could replicatin­g his Offensive Rookie of the Year season.

Barkley was something to see as a rookie, with those legendary quads, a 230-pound specimen with the breathtaki­ng moves of a smaller man. We called him Saquad.

He worked tirelessly at his craft, wasn’t afraid to be a vocal leader as a rookie and never stopped being one as captain, whether the coach was Pat Shurmur or Joe Judge or Brian Daboll.

He was class every step of the way, everything Mara craves to be the face of the franchise. Walter Payton Man of the Year nominee two years running. A chance to be a modern-day Frank Gifford. Barkley was the fourth Giant with 5,000 rushing yards and 2,000 receiving yards with 5,211 and 2,100, respective­ly, joining Tiki Barber, Alex Webster and Gifford.

Now? All we can say is thanks for the memories, 26. A shame there weren’t more of them, a shame there won’t be more of them as a New York Giant. On this day, the Giants are a lesser team and a lesser organizati­on without him. SaGone, but not forgotten.

 ?? N.Y. Post: Charles Wenzelberg; USA TODAY Sports ?? THIS IS THE END: Saquon Barkley won’t be taking off his Giants 26 jersey again as the fan favorite agreed to a big-money deal with the Eagles. The Giants, unwilling to pay big for a running back, instead landed Devin Singletary (right) as his replacemen­t.
N.Y. Post: Charles Wenzelberg; USA TODAY Sports THIS IS THE END: Saquon Barkley won’t be taking off his Giants 26 jersey again as the fan favorite agreed to a big-money deal with the Eagles. The Giants, unwilling to pay big for a running back, instead landed Devin Singletary (right) as his replacemen­t.

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