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2024 New York Giants season

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2024 New York Giants season
100th season anniversary patch
Owner
General managerJoe Schoen
Head coachBrian Daboll
Offensive coordinatorMike Kafka
Defensive coordinatorShane Bowen
Home fieldMetLife Stadium
Results
Record2–4
Division place4th NFC East
Uniform

The 2024 season is the New York Giants' 100th in the National Football League (NFL) and their third under the head coach/general manager tandem of Brian Daboll and Joe Schoen—the first time since Tom Coughlin was the coach since a tandem lasted three or more seasons. This is the first season since 2017 without Saquon Barkley on the roster, as he signed a three-year deal with the Philadelphia Eagles during the offseason.[1] A commorative 100th anniversary patch was made for the season.

Offseason

[edit]

Free agency

[edit]

Players with the New York Giants in 2023

[edit]
Position Player Tag Date signed 2024 team Notes
RB Saquon Barkley UFA March 13[1] Philadelphia Eagles 3 years, $37.75 million[2]
G Ben Bredeson UFA March 15[3] Tampa Bay Buccaneers 1 year, $3 million[4]
RB Matt Breida UFA
LB Cam Brown UFA April 17[5] Miami Dolphins 1 year, $1.29 million[6]
K Randy Bullock UFA
TE Lawrence Cager RFA March 15[7] 1 year, $1.05 million[8]
WR Parris Campbell UFA March 21[9] Philadelphia Eagles 1 year, $1.29 million[10]
LB Carter Coughlin UFA March 14[11] 1 year, $1.29 million[12]
LB Jarrad Davis UFA
G Wyatt Davis RFA June 7[13] Cleveland Browns 1 year, $1.12 million[14]
QB Jacob Eason ERFA
C Sean Harlow UFA August 3[15] Miami Dolphins 1 year, $1.12 million[16]
C J.C. Hassenauer UFA
WR Isaiah Hodgins RFA March 24[17] 1 year, $1.03 million[18]
CB Darnay Holmes UFA March 22[19] 1 year, $2 million[20]
CB Adoree' Jackson UFA August 31[21] 1 year[22]
LS Casey Kreiter UFA March 13[23] 1 year, $1.37 million[24]
G Shane Lemieux UFA April 30[25] New Orleans Saints 1 year, $1.05 million[26]
CB Nick McCloud RFA Tendered March 13[27]
Signed April 15[28]
1 year, $2.98 million[29]
S Xavier McKinney UFA March 14[30] Green Bay Packers 4 years, $67 million[31]
WR Gunner Olszewski UFA March 14[32] 1 Year, $1.29 million[33]
OT Matt Peart UFA March 20[34] Denver Broncos 1 year, $1.29 million[35]
OT Tyre Phillips UFA
G Justin Pugh UFA
DE A'Shawn Robinson UFA March 13[36] Carolina Panthers 3 years, $22.5 million[37]
WR Sterling Shepard UFA June 10[38] Tampa Bay Buccaneers 1 year, $1.37 million[39]
LB Isaiah Simmons UFA April 5[40] 1 year, $2 million[41]
QB Tyrod Taylor UFA March 14[42] New York Jets 2 years, $12 million[43]
OLB Jihad Ward UFA March 20[44] Minnesota Vikings 1 year, $1.79 million[45]
OLB Benton Whitley ERFA March 13[46] 1 year, $985,000[47]
Player re-signed by the Giants Player signed by another team Retired

Source:[48][49][50][51]

Players with other teams in 2023

[edit]
Position Player Tag Date signed 2023 team Contract
LB Matthew Adams UFA April 12[52] Cleveland Browns 1 year, $1.29 million[53]
WR Miles Boykin UFA April 9[54] Pittsburgh Steelers 1 year, $1.29 million[55]
OT Jermaine Eluemunor UFA March 14[56] Las Vegas Raiders 2 years, $14 million[57]
FB Jakob Johnson FA August 16[58] Las Vegas Raiders 1 year, $1.12 million[59]
QB Drew Lock UFA March 14[60] Seattle Seahawks 1 year, $5 million[61]
CB David Long Jr. UFA May 1[62] Green Bay Packers 1 year, $1.12 million[63]
TE Chris Manhertz FA March 16[64] Denver Broncos 1 year, $1.37 million[65]
WR Isaiah McKenzie UFA March 14[66] Indianapolis Colts 1 year, $1.37 million[67]
RB Dante Miller FA April 5[68] Did not play 3 years, $2.69 million[69]
S Jalen Mills UFA March 14[70] New England Patriots 1 year, $1.37 million[71]
OT Matt Nelson UFA March 22[72] Detroit Lions 1 year, $1.29 million[73]
NT Jordan Phillips UFA April 11[74] Buffalo Bills 1 year, $1.79 million[75]
WR Allen Robinson FA May 9[76] Pittsburgh Steelers 1 year, $1.41 million[77]
G Jon Runyan Jr. UFA March 14[78] Green Bay Packers 3 years, $30 million[79]
C Austin Schlottmann UFA March 18[80] Minnesota Vikings 2 years, $2.79 million[81]
RB Devin Singletary UFA March 14[82] Houston Texans 3 years, $16.5 million[83]
G Aaron Stinnie UFA March 18[84] Tampa Bay Buccaneers 1 year, $1.29 million[85]
TE Jack Stoll UFA March 15[86] Philadelphia Eagles 1 year, $1.1 million[87]

Source:[48][51][88]

Trades

[edit]
Position Player Date signed Previous team Trade details Note
LB Brian Burns March 13[89] Carolina Panthers Carolina received: Second- and fifth-round selection
(39th and 141st) and 2025 fifth-round selection

NY Giants received: (LB) Brian Burns &
fifth-round selection (166th)
New contract: 5 years, $141 million[90]

Roster transactions

[edit]
Position Player Date Details
G Mark Glowinski March 4 Released[91]
TE Tyree Jackson August 16 Waived/injured[58]
TE Darren Waller June 10 Retired[92]

Draft

[edit]
2024 New York Giants draft
Round Selection Player Position College Notes
1 6 Malik Nabers WR LSU
2 39 Traded to Carolina Panthers[A]
47 Tyler Nubin S Minnesota from Seattle[B]
3 70 Andru Phillips CB Kentucky
4 107 Theo Johnson TE Penn State
5 141 Traded to Carolina Panthers[A]
166 Tyrone Tracy Jr. RB Purdue from San Francisco via Carolina[A]
6 183 Darius Muasau LB UCLA
7 226 Traded to Arizona Cardinals[C]

Trades

  1. ^ a b c The Giants traded a second- and fifth-round selection (39th and 141st) and 2025 fifth-round selection to Carolina for (LB) Brians Burns and a fifth-round selection (166th).[89]
  2. ^ The Giants traded (DL) Leonard Williams to Seattle in exchange for a second-round selection (47th) and a 2025 fifth-round selection.[93]
  3. ^ The Giants traded a seventh-round selection to Arizona in exchange for (LB) Isaiah Simmons.[94]
2024 New York Giants undrafted free agents
Name Position College Ref.
Ayir Asante WR Wyoming [95]
John Jiles WR West Florida
Alex Johnson CB UCLA
Marcellus Johnson OT Missouri
Jake Kubas G North Dakota State
Jude McAtamney K Rutgers
(IPPP)
Ovie Oghoufo DE LSU
Casey Rogers DE Oregon
Elijah Chatman DT SMU [96]

Staff

[edit]
Front office
  • President/CEO – John Mara
  • Chairman/executive vice president – Steve Tisch
  • Senior vice president & general manager – Joe Schoen
  • Assistant general manager – Brandon Brown
  • Senior vice president of football operations & strategy – Kevin Abrams
  • Senior personnel consultant – Chris Mara
  • Director of player personnel – Tim McDonnell
  • Assistant director of player personnel – Dennis Hickey
  • Director of pro scouting – Chris Rosetti
  • Assistant director of pro scouting – Nick La Testa
  • Director of football operations – Ed Triggs
  • Director of coaching operations – Laura Young
Head coaches
Offensive coaches
  • Quarterbacks/passing game coordinator – Shea Tierney
  • Assistant quarterbacks – Christian Jones
  • Running backs – Joel Thomas
  • Wide receivers – Mike Groh
  • Tight ends – Tim Kelly
  • Offensive line – Carmen Bricillo
  • Assistant offensive line – James Ferentz
  • Offensive assistant/game manager – Cade Knox
  • Offensive assistant – Christian Daboll
  • Offensive assistant – Angela Baker
 
Defensive coaches
  • Defensive coordinator – Shane Bowen
  • Defensive line – Andre Patterson
  • Assistant defensive line – Bryan Cox
  • Outside linebackers – Charlie Bullen
  • Inside linebackers – John Egorugwu
  • Defensive backs/passing game coordinator – Jerome Henderson
  • Safeties – Michael Treier
  • Assistant secondary coach – Mike Adams
  • Defensive assistant – Ben Burress
  • Defensive assistant – Zak Kuhr
Special teams coaches
  • Special teams coordinator – Michael Ghobrial
  • Assistant special teams – Stephen Thomas
Strength and performance
  • Executive director of player performance – Aaron Wellman
  • Director of strength and conditioning – Frank Piraino
  • Assistant director of strength and conditioning – Drew Wilson
  • Performance manager/assistant strength and performance – Sam Coad

Coaching staff
Front office
More NFL staffs

Current roster

[edit]
Quarterbacks (QB)

Running backs (RB)

Wide receivers (WR)

Tight ends (TE)

Offensive linemen (OL)

Defensive linemen (DL)

Linebackers (LB)

Defensive backs (DB)

Special teams

Practice squad

Reserved


As of October 12, 2024. Rookies in italics.

53 active, 7 reserved, 16 practice squad (+2 exempt)

Preseason

[edit]
Week Date Opponent Result Record Venue Recap
1 August 8 Detroit Lions W 14–3 1–0 MetLife Stadium Recap
2 August 17 at Houston Texans L 10–28 1–1 NRG Stadium Recap
3 August 24 at New York Jets L 6–10 1–2 MetLife Stadium Recap

Regular season

[edit]

Schedule

[edit]
Week Date Time (ET) Opponent Result Record Venue TV Recap
1 September 8 1:00 p.m. Minnesota Vikings L 6–28 0–1 MetLife Stadium Fox Recap
2 September 15 1:00 p.m. at Washington Commanders L 18–21 0–2 Northwest Stadium Fox Recap
3 September 22 1:00 p.m. at Cleveland Browns W 21–15 1–2 Huntington Bank Field Fox Recap
4 September 26 8:15 p.m. Dallas Cowboys L 15–20 1–3 MetLife Stadium Prime Video Recap
5 October 6 4:25 p.m. at Seattle Seahawks W 29–20 2–3 Lumen Field CBS Recap
6 October 13 8:20 p.m. Cincinnati Bengals L 7–17 2–4 MetLife Stadium NBC Recap
7 October 20 1:00 p.m. Philadelphia Eagles MetLife Stadium Fox
8 October 28 8:15 p.m. at Pittsburgh Steelers Acrisure Stadium ESPN/ABC
9 November 3 1:00 p.m. Washington Commanders MetLife Stadium Fox
10 November 10 9:30 a.m. at Carolina Panthers Germany Allianz Arena (Munich) NFLN
11 Bye
12 November 24 1:00 p.m. Tampa Bay Buccaneers MetLife Stadium CBS
13 November 28 4:30 p.m. at Dallas Cowboys AT&T Stadium Fox
14 December 8 1:00 p.m. New Orleans Saints MetLife Stadium Fox
15 December 15 1:00 p.m. Baltimore Ravens MetLife Stadium CBS
16 December 22 1:00 p.m. at Atlanta Falcons Mercedes-Benz Stadium Fox
17 December 28/29 TBD Indianapolis Colts MetLife Stadium TBD
18 January 4/5 TBD at Philadelphia Eagles Lincoln Financial Field TBD

Notes

  • Intra-division opponents are in bold text.
  • Networks and times from Weeks 9–16 are subject to change as a result of flexible scheduling.
  • The date, time and network for Week 17 will be finalized at a later date.
  • The date, time and network for Week 18 will be finalized at the end of Week 17.

Game summaries

[edit]

Week 1: vs. Minnesota Vikings

[edit]
Week 1: Minnesota Vikings at New York Giants – Game summary
Quarter 1 2 34Total
Vikings 7 7 14028
Giants 3 0 306

at MetLife Stadium, East Rutherford, New Jersey

Game information

The Giants had an atrocious start to the 2024 season. Graham Gano got the Giants on the board first after rookie CB Andru Phillips forced a fumble. From that point it was all Vikings. Adoree' Jackson was flagged for a controversial pass interference on a third and long, setting up the Vikings first touchdown. The Vikings went on a 99-yard drive capped by a Justin Jefferson touchdown to take a 14-3 halftime lead.

The second half wasn't much better for the Giants. The Vikings opened the third quarter with a touchdown drive to make it 21-3, then Daniel Jones threw a screen pass that Andrew Van Ginkel intercepted at the line of scrimmage and walked in for a touchdown. The Vikings won 28-6.

Jones struggled in his first start since his ACL tear 10 months prior and finished with a 44.3 passer rating. LB Darius Muasau had an interception in his NFL debut.

Week 2: at Washington Commanders

[edit]
Week 2: New York Giants at Washington Commanders – Game summary
Quarter 1 2 34Total
Giants 6 6 0618
Commanders 3 6 6621

at Northwest Stadium, Landover, Maryland

Game information

After kicker Graham Gano suffered an injury on the opening kickoff, the Giants became the first team to lose a game in which they scored three touchdowns and allowed none.[97] Except for the kneel down to end the first half, the Commanders scored field goals on all their possessions.

Malik Nabers scored his first NFL touchdown in the second quarter, but had a critical 4th down drop late in the 4th quarter to give the Commanders the ball back to win the game. Head coach Brian Daboll was heavily criticized for not signing a second kicker and undermanning the Giants for being unable to kick extra points and field goals that could have changed the outcome of the game.

Week 3: at Cleveland Browns

[edit]
Week 3: New York Giants at Cleveland Browns – Game summary
Quarter 1 2 34Total
Giants 7 14 0021
Browns 7 0 0815

at Huntington Bank Field, Cleveland, Ohio

  • Date: September 22
  • Game time: 1:00 p.m. EDT
  • Game weather: Cloudy, 76 °F (24 °C)
  • Game attendance: 68,016
  • Referee: Craig Wrolstad
  • TV announcers (Fox): Kenny Albert, Jonathan Vilma and Megan Olivi
  • Recap, Game Book
Game information

Eric Gray fumbled the opening kickoff, and Deshaun Watson found Amari Cooper on the first play from scrimmage to give the Browns a 7-0 lead 11 seconds into the game. Staring down the possibility of an 0-3 start, the Giants found their composure and their pass rush got to Watson, sacking him 8 times during the game.

On the Giants second drive Daniel Jones threw an interception that was negated by a roughing the passer penalty. After that play, the offense immediately got going and tied the game on a Devin Singletary 1-yard touchdown run. In the second quarter, Malik Nabers took over, snatching a deep ball from a defender, then capped the drive off with an acrobatic touchdown catch to give the Giants a 14-7 lead. On the Browns next drive, Brian Burns made his first impact play as a Giant, strip-sacking Watson with to give the Giants the ball back with 32 seconds left in the half. Nabers scored his second touchdown of the quarter 4 plays later, and the Giants went into the locker room with a 21-7 halftime lead to a stunned Browns crowd.

Singletary fumbled again on the Giants second half opening half drive, but the Browns couldn't capitalize on the field position. Safety Jason Pinnock sacked Watson on the next drive, and Dustin Hopkins missed the ensuing field goal attempt. The Giants offense stalled for the rest of the game, and the Browns took advantage of a short field on a 4th quarter drive; Watson connected with Cooper for his second touchdown of the game, and Jerry Jeudy hauled in the two-point conversion to make the score 21-15 Giants. However, the Giants defense buckled down, forcing a fumble and two fourth down stops on the Browns last 3 drives. Singletary had a lane to score at the end, but kneeled down at the 1-yard line to run out the clock. The Giants won 21-15 and saved their season.

Week 4: vs. Dallas Cowboys

[edit]
Week 4: Dallas Cowboys at New York Giants – Game summary
Quarter 1 2 34Total
Cowboys 7 7 3320
Giants 3 6 3315

at MetLife Stadium, East Rutherford, New Jersey

Game information

16.22 million people watched the Giants-Cowboys game, setting a record for the most viewed game in NFL history.[98] The fans were treated to a penalty-filled game, with 11 being called on the Cowboys. On the Giants opening drive, while in field goal range, TE Daniel Bellinger was inexplicably called for a facemask while replay showed it was his facemask being grabbed. On the Cowboys first touchdown of the game, the referees picked up a holding penalty on TE Jake Ferguson despite him grabbing a Giants defender, paving the lane for Rico Dowdle to score.

The Giants moved the ball well, but failed to get in the end zone, instead settling for five field goals, and lost an anticlimactic affair 20-15.

Malik Nabers, despite finishing for 12 receptions and 115 yards receiving, suffered a concussion late in the 4th quarter. RB Devin Singletary also got hurt in the loss.

Week 5: at Seattle Seahawks

[edit]
Week 5: New York Giants at Seattle Seahawks – Game summary
Quarter 1 2 34Total
Giants 0 10 10929
Seahawks 7 3 3720

at Lumen Field, Seattle, Washington

Game information

Before the game, WR Malik Nabers and RB Devin Singletary were ruled out of the contest. RB Eric Gray got the starting nod and had 3 receptions on the opening drive, but fumbled on 4th & Goal, which Seahawks S Rayshawn Jenkins recovered in the end zone and returned it untouched for a 101-yard touchdown for Seattle. Gray thought he crossed the plane, but the ruling on the field was a fumble and stood upon review. Rookie Tyrone Tracy Jr. stepped in and gave the Giants offense life in the second quarter. Daniel Jones found Wan'Dale Robinson on a 7-yard pass to tie the game at 7-7. Despite the Giants outgaining the Seahawks 220-90 at halftime, both teams were tied 10-10.

On the Seahawks opening drive of the third quarter, Deonte Banks stripped DK Metcalf in field goal range, and Jones immediately responded with two deep balls to Darius Slayton, the latter a 30-yard touchdown to take a 17-10 lead. In the fourth quarter and leading 20-13, Brian Burns sacked Geno Smith and the Giants took a two-score, 23-13 lead with time slipping in the fourth quarter. The Seahawks found rhythm on a late fourth quarter drive capped off with a Jaxon Smith-Njigba touchdown and then forced a three-and-out to get the ball back with 1:40 to play. On the first play of the drive, Smith ran for 32 yards to put the Seahawks in field goal range to tie the game. On the field goal attempt, Isaiah Simmons jumped over the A-gap without making contact with the long snapper, blocked the kick, and WR Bryce Ford-Wheaton recovered the ball and ran untouched for a Giants touchdown, sealing the 29-20 victory.

The Giants defense had 7 sacks of Smith, and their 22 sacks through 5 weeks were the most in the NFL. Tyrone Tracy finished with 129 rushing yards after taking over for Gray. Darius Slayton had 8 receptions for 122 receiving yards and a touchdown.

After the game, Brian Daboll revealed that Special Teams coach Michael Ghobrial drew up the blitz for the game-winning field goal block on Tuesday and waited until all game to use that play for the first time. Isaiah Simmons received the game ball and was named the NFC Special Teams Player of the Week for his performance.[99]

Week 6: vs. Cincinnati Bengals

[edit]
Week 6: Cincinnati Bengals at New York Giants – Game summary
Quarter 1 2 34Total
Bengals 7 0 3717
Giants 0 0 707

at MetLife Stadium, East Rutherford, New Jersey

Game information

Week 7: vs. Philadelphia Eagles

[edit]
Week 7: Philadelphia Eagles at New York Giants – Game summary
Quarter 1 2 34Total
Eagles 0 0 000
Giants 0 0 000

at MetLife Stadium, East Rutherford, New Jersey

Standings

[edit]

Division

[edit]
NFC East
W L T PCT DIV CONF PF PA STK
Washington Commanders 4 2 0 .667 1–0 2–1 178 145 L1
Philadelphia Eagles 3 2 0 .600 0–0 2–2 106 112 W1
Dallas Cowboys 3 3 0 .500 1–0 1–2 126 168 L1
New York Giants 2 4 0 .333 0–2 1–3 96 121 L1

Conference

[edit]
# Team Division W L T PCT DIV CONF SOS SOV STK
Division leaders
1 Minnesota Vikings North 5 0 0 1.000 1–0 3–0 .552 .552 W5
2[a][b] Atlanta Falcons South 4 2 0 .667 3–0 4–0 .559 .435 W3
3[a] Washington Commanders East 4 2 0 .667 1–0 2–1 .417 .292 L1
4[c] San Francisco 49ers West 3 3 0 .500 1–2 1–3 .424 .353 W1
Wild cards
5 Detroit Lions North 4 1 0 .800 0–0 4–1 .448 .391 W3
6[b][d] Tampa Bay Buccaneers South 4 2 0 .667 1–1 4–1 .588 .591 W1
7[d][e] Green Bay Packers North 4 2 0 .667 0–1 2–2 .469 .318 W2
In the hunt
8[e] Chicago Bears North 4 2 0 .667 0–0 2–0 .353 .182 W3
9 Philadelphia Eagles East 3 2 0 .600 0–0 2–2 .500 .389 W1
10[f] Dallas Cowboys East 3 3 0 .500 1–0 1–2 .486 .389 L1
11[c][f] Seattle Seahawks West 3 3 0 .500 0–1 0–3 .441 .353 L3
12[g][h] Arizona Cardinals West 2 4 0 .333 2–0 2–3 .576 .364 L1
13[g][i] New Orleans Saints South 2 4 0 .333 1–2 2–3 .588 .333 L4
14[h][i] New York Giants East 2 4 0 .333 0–2 1–3 .514 .333 L1
15[j] Los Angeles Rams West 1 4 0 .200 1–1 1–4 .586 .500 L2
16[j] Carolina Panthers South 1 5 0 .167 0–2 0–3 .486 .333 L3
Tiebreakers[k]
  1. ^ a b Atlanta wins tie break over Washington based on conference record.
  2. ^ a b Atlanta wins tie break over Tampa Bay based on head-to-head victory.
  3. ^ a b San Francisco wins tie break over Seattle based on head-to-head victory.
  4. ^ a b Tampa Bay wins tie break over Green Bay based on best win percentage in conference games. Division tie break was initially used to eliminate Chicago (see below).
  5. ^ a b Green Bay wins tie break over Chicago based on common record.
  6. ^ a b Dallas wins tie break over Seattle based on conference record.
  7. ^ a b Arizona wins tie break over New Orleans based on strength of victory.
  8. ^ a b Arizona wins tie break over NY Giants based on conference record.
  9. ^ a b New Orleans wins tie break over NY Giants based on conference record.
  10. ^ a b LA Rams wins tie break over Carolina based on conference record.
  11. ^ When breaking ties for three or more teams under the NFL's rules, they are first broken within divisions, then comparing only the highest-ranked remaining team from each division.

References

[edit]
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