Stamford Advocate (Sunday)

Giants and Washington not fighting for playoffs this year

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EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — Ron Rivera and Joe Judge exceeded expectatio­ns last season in their first year running their new clubs.

Rivera got Washington to the playoffs for the first time in five years, overcoming injuries and a pandemic to win the NFC East with a 7-9 record. Judge and the Giants were in the race until the final night of the season, finishing second with a 6-10 mark.

While many expected more, this season has been a disappoint­ment for both Washington (6-10) and the Giants (4-12), especially on the injury front.

The teams will meet Sunday at MetLife Stadium with little or nothing on the line. The following day, they will pack up and head home for the offseason, leaving frustrated fans unhappy.

Rivera said Washington was fortunate to win the division last year. They played hard, got hot at the right time and things fell their way.

“I think this year is a bit more of what I expected,“he said. “I didn’t expect to win the division right away, and I didn’t expect to win at 7-9, to be honest, but we won. Expectatio­ns here rose more than it should have. I think we have developed our football team and the things that we’ve done, I think we’re kind of heading the direction. Obviously, you love a better record.”

Rivera is in good position for next season. Judge has to hope Giants co-owners John Mara and Steve Tisch believe he has built a foundation that will deliver a first postseason berth since 2016 — SOON.

Judge seemed to make an impassione­d 11-minute plea after last weekend’s loss to the Bears, telling reporter and everyone who would read their stories or see his

WASHINGTON at GIANTS

Sunday, 1 p.m. (FOX)

video clip that the Giants have laid a foundation to end what is now five straight years of doubledigi­t losing seasons.

Whether he gets the chance remains to be seen.

FROMM II

With starter Daniel Jones (neck) and backup Mike Glennon (wrist) out for the season, second-year pro Jake Fromm will get his second start.

The Georgia product got his first the day after Christmas and was 6 of 17 for 25 yards before being replaced by Glennon in a 34-10 loss to the playoffbou­nd Eagles.

“You can’t change the past, so you just learn from it. You move on and try to do better next time,” Fromm said this week.

Practice squad quarterbac­k Brian Lewerke, who has never taken a snap in an NFL game, is expected to be the backup.

NON PRODUCTION

This has been a miserable season for the Giants’ wide receivers. The group has caught four touchdown passes in 16 games. The last was a 5-yard catch by Dante Pettis against Carolina on Oct. 24.

The other three TD catches by the receivers were by Sterling Shepard, Darius Slayton and John Ross. Of the team’s 14 TD catches, tight end Evan Engram has a team-high three.

Kenny Gollaway, who signed a $72 million contract to make big plays, does not have a TD catch. That puts him one behind left tackle Andrew Thomas.

YOUNG LBS

Giants linebacker­s Azeez Ojulari and Lorenzo Carter have been the key playmakers on the defense.

A second-round draft pick in late April, Ojulari ranks third among rookies with eight sacks.

Carter, who has battled a number of injuries in his four seasons with New York, has finally started to flash his talent lately. He has sacks in three straight games, along with two forced fumbles and three passes defended.

 ?? Corey Sipkin / Associated Press ?? The New York Giants’ Dante Pettis, left, makes a catch in front of the Dallas Cowboys’ Xavier Woods during the first half on Jan. 3.
Corey Sipkin / Associated Press The New York Giants’ Dante Pettis, left, makes a catch in front of the Dallas Cowboys’ Xavier Woods during the first half on Jan. 3.

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