Tag Archives: brian daboll

Giants’ Marcus McKethan carted off field during scrimmage

Observations from Friday’s Giants training camp session.

Better safe than sorry

They called it a Blue-White scrimmage Friday night at MetLife Stadium but there was no live tackling allowed by the Giants’ first and second teams. That was a good move by first-year head coach Brian Daboll. Sometimes scrimmages can get overheated, with players overanxious to hit someone. Reducing the risk of injury was the way to go.

Daniel groans

The first pass Daniel Jones threw in the team period should have been turned into a pick-six by Adoree’ Jackson. It got only a bit better after that for Jones, as he had trouble locating open targets and was under too much pressure and was forced to tuck it and run too often.

Caught my eyes

On a third-and-8, defensive coordinator Wink Martindale had rookie LB Kayvon Thibodeaux drop in coverage on a pass from Jones to rookie Wan’Dale Robinson for 28 yards. Have a feeling that will not be the norm this season.

Thibodeaux all summer has shown an explosive burst as a pass rusher and he drew several holding penalties — one on LT Andrew Thomas — in the scrimmage.

Medical report

Giants rookie offensive lineman Marcus McKethan is carted off the field during the Giants’ Blue-White scrimmage.
Robert Sabo

Rookie OL Marcus McKethan, a fifth-round pick from North Carolina, went down while pass blocking and had to be carted off the field.

It has been a rough go of it for new TE Ricky Seals-Jones, who missed a sixth straight practice.

WR David Sills V worked on the side, as did newly acquired DB Nate Meadors. CB Rodarius Williams and WR Robert Foster also did not practice. Adoree’ Jackson appeared to cramp up during an extended drive.

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Brian Daboll must help Daniel Jones become Giants’ franchise QB

The Giants’ hiring of Brian Daboll as their new head coach means it truly is Put Up or Shut Up for Daniel Jones. Last Chance Saloon to be The Mann. 

Everybody knows that Daboll worked magic with Josh Allen in Buffalo. While no one should expect the apple of former general manager Dave Gettleman’s eye to automatically join the upper echelon of elite quarterbacks, this will be his opportunity, once and for all, to make the franchise believe in earnest that he can truly be the franchise quarterback who followed Eli Manning. 

Daboll isn’t just a creative and innovative offensive mind whose time is past due, he is a builder of relationships and a man of empathy and compassion whom Allen — and Buffalo’s offensive players — respected and adored. 

“Players don’t care how much you know,” Daboll said once, “until they know how much you care. I think that’s an important quality that I try to be better at every year.” 

Daboll wasn’t hired strictly to lift Jones higher. The Giants want and need him to be the CEO and leader they believed Joe Judge to be before the clown show arrived at the end of this past season. 

But Daboll marching in lockstep as a partner with new GM Joe Schoen promises to give Jones a warm and fuzzy feeling — and it doesn’t hurt that Daboll just might be able to bring the Giants’ offense back from the dead and find the end zone without the need for a Seeing Eye dog. 

The Giants named Brian Daboll their new head coach Friday night.
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The Real Daniel Jones must stand up in his fourth season, or Daboll will be whispering sweet nothings to a different quarterback in 2023. 

Ready, Willing and Daboll. 

“I’d like to say that I’m a leader,” Daboll said once. “You have to develop relationships with your players, but you also have to set a standard and an expectation that you are going to hold them accountable to. Once a player can trust you and you earn their respect, they’re more accountable to you.” 

There were times when Daboll showed Allen tough love on the sideline, and their bond was unbreakable. 

“I think teams would be foolish not to offer Brian Daboll a job,” Allen said Monday. “I’m praying they don’t, because I want him back here, but I love him and his family too much to really think that. 

“I think he’s one of the best coaches in the league.” 

Josh Allen (right) called Brian Daboll (left) ‘one of the best coaches in the league.’
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The jury remains out on Jones following the neck injury that cost him the final six games of this past season. Judge’s offensive coordinator woes and the wretched state of the Giants’ offensive line both helped sabotage his career. The Giants — from John Mara to Schoen on down — love Jones’ dual-threat physical tools and intangibles, and they will hope and pray that Daboll will be able to unlock the promise Jones showed as a rookie under Pat Shurmur. 

In Mara’s mind, Jones is not a 12-25 quarterback. 

When Daboll lost his grandmother in September, Allen and the Bills rallied behind him and for him with a 43-21 win over Washington. 

“He’s a guy that I love dearly and to go out there and play the way we did for him, the guys understood that, and we wanted to go and execute and play well for him,” Allen said. 

Daniel Jones missed the final six games of the season due to a neck injury.
Charles Wenzelberg/New York Post

Sometimes you just know, or you believe you know. Mike Tomlin, Kyle Shanahan, Sean McVay, John Harbaugh, Sean Payton, Jimmy Johnson, Andy Reid. Somebody knew. 

Or somebody got lucky. Because there is always an element of luck involved. There have been countless can’t-miss hotshots who missed, for example. The Giants haven’t been lucky lately. Ben McAdoo, Shurmur, Judge. Ray Handley right after Bill Parcells. 

So while it is impossible to shout “Super Bowl, here we come!” from the top of the Empire State Building — the top of the Quest Diagnostics Training Center is far more realistic — Daboll’s hiring by the bright new GM signals the dawn of a new day, and a time for whipsawed Giants fans to trust that Schoen got it right, and keep their fingers crossed that the merciless football gods will now concede that the law of averages is on their side. 

After too many years of Dumb and Dumber, the glass-half-full Giants fan is saying today: “So you’re telling me there’s a chance.” 

Yes, I’m telling you there’s a chance. 

I would have told you there was a chance with Brian Flores, too. 

Brian Daboll
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Schoen has to evaluate the hell out of the players in the draft, and Daboll has to coach the hell out of his players — and hire better offensive coaches than Judge did. 

“Always hire somebody you know,” the late George Young said once. “That way you have a good idea of what the person’s like. No surprises.” 

Schoen hired someone he knew. Parcells and Bill Belichick weren’t options. The Giants landed two Bills anyway. 

“You hire somebody with a high energy level,” Young also said. “And something to prove.” 

Daboll, who will turn 47 in April, has plenty to prove. That he is more than an offensive coordinator. That he is more than just a quarterback whisperer. That the lessons he learned under Belichick and Nick Saban will steel him to weather the inevitable storms. 

Here’s your shot, Danny Boy. Your last shot to be The Mann.

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On the move: Bills offensive coordinator Brian Daboll named New York Giants’ new head coach | Buffalo Bills News | NFL

The question now is, what do the Bills do to replace him? General manager Brandon Beane said Wednesday he has met with coach Sean McDermott to discuss plans if Daboll and/or Frazier depart.

“The rules are such that no matter what, you have to interview from the outside anyway for a coordinator position,” Beane said. “So we would follow all of those. We have a list of some guys. We’re kind of in this wait-and-see mode because, at this point, Brian and Leslie are still in the interview mode and it’s hard, because we’re kind of like, ‘Is he getting one or is he not?’

“We’re rooting for them both to get one. We really appreciate what they’ve done, but until it happens, we can’t start our process of interviewing for offensive coordinator, defensive coordinator. But yeah, we always want to look inside, too. We would want to look at what do we have, whether on the defensive side of the ball or the offensive side of the ball, what do we have on staff here that we think could handle Brian’s job or Leslie’s, and then who are the candidates out there that we’ve coached against, played against, whatever it is, and ‘that system I really like, I wonder what it would be like, let me bring him in and pick his brain and see if he would be a fit.’ So we’ll definitely look inside and look outside.”

The leading in-house candidate figures to be Ken Dorsey, the team’s current quarterbacks coach. He received a strong backing from Allen on Monday during the quarterback’s season-ending news conference.

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Bears already looking at coaching replacements for Matt Nagy (Report)

Remember, remember, it’s only the fifth of November. But according to one NFL insider, the Chicago Bears are already lining up potential candidates to succeed Matt Nagy. At the top of the list? Buffalo Bills offensive coordinator Brian Daboll.

NFL insider Benjamin Allbright joined Jon Zaghoul on Sports Talk Chicago this week and says the Bears are getting a list together of potential head coaching candidates they would like to interview, even though Nagy still has a job.

Allbright says Nagy is “100 percent” fired at the end of the season though.

“From my conversations with people, the [Bears] have already started doing backgrounds on potential replacements,” Allbright told Zaghoul. “I’ll say Brian Daboll would be the leader in the clubhouse.”

The report that the Bears are already getting names together for if/when Nagy is fired isn’t all that surprising, but is welcoming news. Regardless if a change is made or not, the team should have a short list put together for potential interviews when that time eventually comes.

It’s also notable that Allbright mentioned Daboll as the top name in mind. Two weeks ago, he tweeted a similar claim that the longtime coach would likely be the Bears’ top choice if a change were to be made.

Daboll has coaches various positions with multiple NFL and college teams over the last 20 years, including stints with the New England Patriots, New York Jets, Cleveland Browns, Alabama Crimson Tide, and now with the Bills. He’s currently coordinating the top scoring offense in the NFL with MVP-candidate Josh Allen and has been with the team since the 2018 season.

His offenses with Buffalo have ascended in each consecutive year, as well Allen’s development from a project quarterback into a superstar. Last season, the Bills finished with a top-five offense in nearly every statistical category as they captured the NFC East division for the first time since 1995 with a 13-3 record.

Daboll is an excellent offensive coordinator, but would he be an effective NFL head coach? Allbright seems to think so.

“I’ve spoken with coach Daboll a few times, he’s a nice guy…I believe in him,” he said. “I think he’s probably the best hire in this coming offseason.”

Allbright also mentioned the Bears could give an interview to Arizona Cardinals defensive coordinator and former Denver Broncos head coach Vance Joseph, but maintains his belief that Daboll would be their top choice.

There’s still half a season to go and nothing is truly certain in the NFL, but perhaps the Bears make a quick work of their head coaching decision this winter.



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