Big Blue View
The New York Giants are widely considered to have one of the top coaching vacancies among the teams on this year’s coaching carousel.
The Giants have quite a bit going for them when it comes to attracting top candidates. In addition to well-respected ownership, they have young and talented players at cornerstone positions like left tackle, edge defender, wide receiver, and cornerback. They also have young and talented pieces at running back, tight end, and safety, as well as a healthy salary cap to re-sign home-grown talents.
The Giants might have finished with just four wins, but they were had double digit leads as underdogs on five other occasions. It took a series of historic collapses by players who had previously played far better than they showed under Brian Daboll and Shane Bowen for the Giants to lose all five of those games. There’s a real argument that the Giants could have finished with a 9-8 record, and perhaps would have done so with better coaching.
But perhaps the Giants’ greatest asset is 22-year old quarterback Jaxson Dart.
Dianna Russinni of The Athletic is reporting that John Harbaugh is spending this weekend preparing for his (expected) interviews next week, and is watching tape of quarterbacks Jaxson Dart and Cam Ward in particular.
Only Harbaugh — well, Harbaugh and those in his inner circle — knows what he’s looking for in a quarterback. That said, the view from the outside is that there’s a lot to like when it comes to Dart.
He immediately assumed control of the team, with the charisma and magnetic personality we’ve heard about since the Senior Bowl galvanizing the team after veteran Russell Wilson was benched. Dart also quickly proved to be far more advanced mentally than we expected based on the Ole Miss offense.
Dart improved on an almost weekly basis and proved able to handle increasingly more sophisticated concepts. By the end of the season, Dart was playing from under center as well as executing full-field reads. Those are two things he never did in Lane Kiffin’s offense, but took to well with pro coaching. Dart also showed an impressive balance of aggression and discretion as a passer. He finished with a 15:5 touchdown to interception ratio that could have been even better if it weren’t for drops, penalties, and unlucky bounces.
He has the ability to throw from a wide variety of arm angles, as well as throw on the move. Dart is a former baseball player and his skill set shows itself in his arm talent as well as how he throws the ball off platform. He also shows an uncommon understanding of throwing with timing, touch, and anticipation for a young quarterback. Many young quarterbacks come into the NFL with a tendency to lean on their fastball, throwing as hard even when throwing with pace might lead to a better result. Dart throws a very catchable ball, despite the Giants finishing among the worst teams in catch rate. He also understands...