Tiki Barber: New York Giants trying to establish ‘Old School Giants’ identity

Tiki Barber: New York Giants trying to establish ‘Old School Giants’ identity
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Barber thinks Joe Schoen, Brian Daboll are leaning into the way the best Giants’ teams of old were built

After a pair of wayward seasons, former New York Giants great Tiki Barber believes the team is en route to forming an “Old School Giants” identity.

A guest on the ‘GoLongTD’ podcast with Tyler Dunne, Barber spoke at length recently about his frustrations with a team he said had become “unwatchable,” and how this offseason’s course correction has him feeling better about the team’s outlook.

“I see what they’re attempting to do identity-wise and it starts old school: “We’re going to run the football. We’re going to take some shots. And we’re going to play great frickin’ defense,” Barber told Dunne. “It feels Old School Giants in a way, and I kind of love that.”

Barber said that after going 9-25 the last two seasons after winning a playoff game in the first year of the Joe Schoen-Brian Daboll regime, it was clear that the Giants had to establish what kind of football team they were going to be.

Barber said the over-achieving Giants of 2022 knew what they were.

“It was coaching that got them to that point. And so we knew that they were going to play games tight and hope that one of their “stars” — whether it was Julian Love, whether it was Saquon, whether it was Daniel Jones, whoever — was going to make a play in the fourth quarter that would get them a victory,” Barber said. “And it worked for them. They got to the postseason. They beat the Minnesota Vikings. Dabes won coach of the year. It was a great stepping stone. The problem is, the plan fell apart in the subsequent two years.

“A lot of that was because of injuries. Maybe some of it was Dabes overextending himself in taking over playcalling duties from Mike Kafka. And so they lost themselves in those two years and it became a really unwatchable product. I called a couple of those games and it was just like, ‘What am I even looking at right now?’”

Before bringing Schoen back as GM and Daboll as head coach after an embarrassing 3-14 season, owner John Mara wanted to hear their plan for fixing the mess the team had become. He liked what he heard enough to give them a fourth season.

Daboll admitted that being tougher was part of the plan.

“Toughness all the way through the draft was something that we have talked about, both mental and physical,” the coach said following the draft. “I think you always add that element to your team in both areas. Mentally, the challenges that go with playing professional football and playing in New York, quite frankly, and toughness on the field. I think we did that in free agency and we did that in the draft.

“It’s something that we covet. I thought we did a good job of acquiring players that demonstrate both...