INJURY REPORT
The final injury report will be released Friday afternoon.
The final injury report will be released Friday afternoon.
HOW TO WATCH, LISTEN, & STREAM
Channel: CBS | Paramount+
Announcers: Andrew Catalon (Play-By-Play),Charles Davis (Analyst), Jason McCourty (Analyst), and AJ Ross (Sideline)
Announcers: Bob Papa (Play-by-Play), Carl Banks (Analyst), Howard Cross (Sideline)
Pre- and Postgame: John Schmeelk, Tiki Barber
Pregame: Giants Gameday begins at 11:00 AM, presented by Hackensack Meridian Health.
Postgame: Giants Extra Point
DART HITS THE ROAD
Jaxson Dart’s first NFL start was nothing short of a success. The 22-year-old quarterback completed 11 of 20 passes (65.0 percent) for 111 yards, one touchdown and no interceptions for a passer rating of 96.0. He added an additional 54 yards on 10 carries as well as scoring a touchdown on the ground. Dart became the first rookie quarterback to beat a team 3-0 or better in his first career start since Phil Simms defeated the 5-0 Buccaneers in 1979.
On Dart’s first drive as the starter, he led the offense 89 yards down the field, completing both of his pass attempts for 20 yards and rushing for another 28 yards, including his 15-yard touchdown run to get the Giants on the board. He became the first quarterback since Patrick Mahomes in 2017 to lead a touchdown drive of 80 or more yards on the first possession of his first career start.
While New Orleans has had some struggles slowing down opposing quarterbacks this season, especially on the ground, it’s always a challenge to go into the Superdome and pick up a win as the road team.
“Offensively, we’re going to have to do a good job of communicating,” Daboll said. “From getting the play in, to Jaxson communicating to whatever snap counts we choose to use relative to how the sounds are there, which is usually loud. You simulate it and try to do the best you can here at practice, but it’s definitely one of the keys in terms of being able to communicate and operate and stay on track and eliminate some of the pre-snap things that when you play in a dome stadium that’s loud like this. So, we’re going to work at it out here, blasting it as loud as we can, and just make sure we’re on point with our communication.”
FILLING IN FOR NABERS
You can’t just replace Malik Nabers in the offense. The young wideout quickly established himself as one of the NFL’s premier talents, and his loss is undoubtedly a tough blow to the Giants’ passing game. With that said, the show must go on, and now the Giants must call upon the team’s other pass-catchers to step up in Nabers’ absence.
Wan’Dale Robinson exploded for eight receptions and a career-high 142 yards against the Cowboys in Week 2, showcasing his ability to line up both in the slot and on the outside. Veteran Darius Slayton has been the most consistent player in the team’s aerial attack for years, while tight end Theo Johnson has shown flashes over the first 16 games of his young NFL career. Between those three players and the rest of the team’s wide receiver corps, the Giants are going to need some guys to step up.
“(Wide receivers coach) Coach Groh does an awesome job of getting the guys prepared,” assistant head coach/offensive coordinator Mike Kafka said Thursday. “It’s really just a next-man-up mentality, whether it’s Beaux (Collins), Jalin (Hyatt). Again, the roster moves as we get moving, if there’s a guy coming up or not. But I think those guys just step up into their roles, Wan’Dale, Slay, the leaders that they are, and continue to kind of carry the torch. Because I think we have some explosive guys in that room and the more the ball can get spread out to those guys, the better.”