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The New York Giants are fresh off a bye week as they host the struggling Washington Commanders for NFL Week 15 on Sunday, December 14 (12/14/2025) at 1 p.m. ET on FOX. Here’s what you need to know to watch the game.
New York is out for payback in this rematch from Week 1, where Washington embarrassed the Giants 21-6. Since then, neither side’s fortunes are much improved, with the Giants arriving at an abysmal 2-11, and Washington only a win ahead at 3-10 following a tragic 31-0 shutout loss to the Vikings in Week 14.
Commanders vs. Giants will air on FOX, which you can stream on fuboTV (free trial).
Here’s what you need to know:
What: NFL Week 15
Who: Washington Commanders vs. New York Giants
When: Sunday, Dec. 14, 2025
Time: 1 p.m. ET
Where: MetLife Stadium, East Rutherford, New Jersey
TV: FOX
Live stream: fuboTV (free trial), DIRECTV (free trial), Hulu + Live TV
Streaming serviceChannelsFree trial?Monthly pricefuboTVNBC, CBS, FOX, ABC, ESPNYes$84.99DIRECTVNBC, CBS, FOX, ABC, ESPNYes$84.99Hulu + Live TVNBC, CBS, FOX, ABC, ESPNYes$82.99
fuboTV is a live TV streaming service focused on live sports, including U.S. and international soccer, the NFL, MLB, NBA, NHL and more. It also includes its own fubo Sports Networks with exclusive programming. It offers over 200 channels starting at $48.99 (for one month, then $73), includes unlimited DVR, and streams on most devices. Right now you can try fuboTV free for five days.
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New York is -130 to win, according to DraftKings.
Here’s a recent NFL story via The Associated Press:
Coach Dan Quinn and the Washington Commanders hit a new low with their latest dismal showing, an eighth consecutive loss that officially eliminated them from playoff contention a year after they came within a victory of reaching the Super Bowl.
The 31-0 rout at the hands of the previously struggling Minnesota Vikings on Sunday featured a mediocre performance — and, continuing a troubling trend, early exit — by star quarterback Jayden Daniels, plus a bad-looking injury to tight end Zach Ertz for Washington (3-10).
“Baffling, frustrating, enraged,” Quinn said, summing up the day.
A season ago, Daniels was superb, leading Washington to a 12-5 record and earning AP NFL Offensive Rookie of the Year honors by completing 69% of his passes for 3,568 yards with 25 touchdowns and nine interceptions and running for 891 yards, at a clip of 6.0 per carry, with six TDs.
This season, he’s been just OK — nothing more.
After going 9 for 20 for just 78 yards passing plus a pick on Sunday, Daniels owns a completion rate of 60.6 with 1,262 yards, eight touchdowns and three interceptions. His passer rating slid from 100.1 to 88.1. He’s run for 278 yards, at 4.8 per carry, with two scores.
And after appearing in all 20 of the Commanders’ games last season, including the playoffs, he’s been in the lineup for only seven of 13, leaving before the end the past three times he played.
It was on the interception that Daniels got leveled by a Vikings defender and aggravated the dislocated left elbow that had sidelined him for more than a month.
“One of those fluke plays,” Washington linebacker Bobby Wagner said.
One game after seeming to play like a real NFL team in a tight overtime defeat to the Denver Broncos, prompting Quinn to say, “We lost, but we’re not lost anymore,” the Commanders were as inept as ever.
“I thought we took a step forward last week,” Quinn said after the disaster against Minnesota, which came in a four-game losing streak, “and tonight I thought we took three steps back.”
What’s working
On Sunday? Absolutely nothing. “That’s not even a tough day at the office,” receiver Terry McLaurin said. “That’s just bad.” From giving up three turnovers (backup quarterback Marcus Mariota had one fumble and one interception) to forcing none, from not scoring to an inability to slow Minnesota, and so on. “When you miss the mark like we did,” Quinn observed, “you’ve got to look at it all and question it.”
What needs help
The defense. After looking better during the past two games with defensive coordinator Joe Whitt Jr. stripped of play-calling duties, that unit was once again unable to do anything — even against a Vikings team that got shut out last week and had gone more than 20 consecutive possessions without a touchdown. And even against QB J.J. McCarthy, who came in with a 57.9 passer rating, a 54.1 completion percentage, six TD throws and 10 interceptions. All he did was go 16 for 23 for 163 yards and his first NFL game with three scoring passes and lead one ridiculous drive that lasted 19 plays, 98 yards and took 12:01 off the clock.
Stock up
Any tight end that faces Washington. On Sunday, it was Josh Oliver, who went into the day with seven catches all season and produced the first two-TD game of his NFL career. He only once finished any of his previous five seasons with a total of three scores.
Stock down
Quinn. The number of games in which the Commanders have failed to be competitive keeps rising.
Injuries
Quinn said he feared Ertz tore the ACL in his right knee; the No. 5 tight end in career receptions was expected to have an MRI exam on Monday. … Quinn said Daniels could have gone back into the game Sunday but the coach decided to keep him out.
Key number
Zero — The number of points for Washington; the club hadn’t been shut out since 2019.
Next steps
Four meaningless games against NFC East rivals remain, starting next Sunday at the just-as-terrible New York Giants (2-11). It’ll be worth monitoring how much Quinn and GM Adam Peters give extra playing time to some younger players to see what the roster contains — and, of course, what happens with Daniels the rest of the way.