The Morning Call (Sunday)

Manning jumps off hot seat, but for how long?

Veteran quarterbac­k uses two good performanc­es to tighten grip on his job.

- By Tom Canavan

EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — No one seems to be asking questions about Eli Manning remaining the quarterbac­k of the New York Giants these days.

The two-time Super Bowl MVP has quieted his critics, throwing for five touchdowns and no intercepti­ons in wins over the San Francisco 49ers and Tampa Bay Buccaneers the past two weeks.

In beating the Niners, Manning engineered a late fourth-quarter drive capped by a touchdown pass to Sterling Shepard with less than a minute to play. He was nearly perfect last Sunday, hitting 17 of 18 passes for 231 yards and three TDs in a 38-35 win over the Bucs.

His 94.4 completion percentage was a team record in a game with at least 10 attempts, and it was tied for third highest in a game in NFL history with a minimum of 15 passing attempts. Alex Smith, when he played with the 49ers, and Ryan Tannehill of Miami share the top mark at 94.7 percent.

“You give Eli time to throw and that's what you are going to get,” Shepard said Wednesday before the Giants (3-7) practiced for Sunday's game at Philadelph­ia (4-6). “The offensive line has been doing a great job blocking. He has been making the throws. The throws are on point.”

Manning tied his career high by completing his first 11 passes before failing to hook up with halfback Saquon Barkley on a wheel route.

The Eagles have had their way against the Giants. They have won four straight, including a 34-13 win at MetLife Stadium on Oct. 11, a game in which the Giants were down 24-6 at halftime and 31-6 midway through the third quarter.

Manning finished 24 of 43 for 281 yards. However, he was sacked four times and threw an intercepti­on on the second play from scrimmage, setting up the first of three touchdown passes by Carson Wentz.

“Last time we played them, I know exactly why they beat us,” coach Pat Shurmur said. “We didn't do anything that you need to do against any type of team to win. We turned the ball over, we gave them big plays, we just didn't play well enough to beat any team, so we have to fix that. That's more about us.”

The 37-year-old Manning didn't give much of an answer when asked about the Eagles' recent success against New York.

“They've been good teams and obviously hey, every time you play, you got an opportunit­y,” he said. “It's just about what matters is this game and this opportunit­y to go out there and get a win.”

The Giants are playing better. The two-game winning streak is their longest since December 2016 and they have made changes, particular­ly on the offensive line. Spencer Pulley is now the center and Jamon Brown has been excellent at right guard since being added to the lineup two weeks ago.

Tight end Evan Engram, who missed the Eagles game with a knee injury, is back and Barkley, the Whitehall High School product who was the No. 2 overall pick in the draft, had his best game last week, rushing for 142 yards and scoring three touchdowns: two running and one on a pass.

“I think we're running the ball better than we did, so I feel like we're playing better football, but we got to continue doing that,” Manning said. “They're a good team, they're a good defense, they got a good front four and they're a little banged-up in the secondary, but they'll have a good plan and we just got to go execute.”

 ?? ADAM HUNGER/AP ?? New York Giants running back Saquon Barkley (26) and quarterbac­k Eli Manning are both playing well heading into today’s game against the Eagles.
ADAM HUNGER/AP New York Giants running back Saquon Barkley (26) and quarterbac­k Eli Manning are both playing well heading into today’s game against the Eagles.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States