Post-Draft NFL Team Needs: New York Giants
Heading into the 2011 NFL Draft the New York Giants had serious needs along the offensive line and at linebacker but didn’t address either until the fourth and sixth rounds respectively. Instead, Tom Coughlin drafted based on talent and not need, taking arguably the best player on the board with just about every pick. Starting with the selection of Prince Amukamara with the 19th overall pick and ending with Da’Rel Scott in the seventh round, the Giants found immense value with just about every pick. Marvin Austin, who was projected by some to go in the first, was a steal with the 52nd overall pick and Greg Jones, taken in the sixth round, although undersized may be the most talented and definitely the most decorated middle linebacker in the entire draft class. Along with Jones, Iowa’s Tyler Sash and South Florida’s Jacquian Williams were home runs for the Giants in the sixth.
Even with the value they added the Giants still have holes to plug before the 2011 season begins. Amukamara and Austin should help solidify already deep positions on the Giants’ roster but the G-men failed to address their three key areas of need in the early rounds of last month’s draft.
Linebacker: Jones has the potential to be a solid linebacker in the league but you have to question his size and his ability to play right away. At 6’0, 240 pounds and a lack of elite speed and measurables, Jones needs some seasoning but could be a solid contributor down the road. With a lack of strong competition in front of him with the likes of Jordan Goff, Chase Blackburn and Gerris Wilkinson however, Jones could be thrust into an immediate roll before he’s ready. With the expiring contracts of Keith Bullock and possibly Mathias Kiwanuka the Giants are seriously lacking in depth as well.
Offensive Line: James Brewer was a great value pick in the fourth round and has the talent to push Kareem McKenzie and William Beatty for playing time almost immediately. Coughlin has however made it clear that he wants Brewer to come in and learn behind McKenzie for at least a year before he sees considerable playing time. His lack of experience (he didn’t start playing football until he was a senior in high school) is a cause for concern however and the Giants are starting to age across the line. Only Chris Snee will be under the age of 31 when the season starts and the line had durability concerns throughout the 2010 season. The Giants need to address depth at both guard positions with Kevin Boothe likely to become a free agent and behind an aging albeit solid Shaun O’Hara (34) at center.
Running Back: The selection of Scott in the seventh round was another nice value pick and he could develop into a pretty good third down/scat back. The Giants decided not to address the running back position in earlier rounds even though the contract situations of both Ahmad Bradshaw and Brandon Jacobs are questionable at best. The general thought is that Jacobs will be asked to take a pay cut in order to stay with the team and Bradshaw was only given a second round restricted free agent tender. You’d be hard-pressed to find a team with a need at running back not willing to give up a second round pick for Bradshaw who finished ninth in the league in rushing (1235 yards) while catching 47 passes in the process.
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People knock Jones for his (lack of) size
when he’s an inch taller than Gary Brackett and Stephen Tulloch, and two inches taller than London Fletcher. Jon Beason is 6’0", 237. Jonathan Vilma is 6’1", 230. I think if you look around the league, you’ll see a lot of guys with very similar size. I don’t know why it would be a problem for Jones when it’s not been a big problem for plenty of other MLBs.
The NFL and NFLPA? They can kiss my ass, OK? They can line up and kiss my ass.
Totally agree
I thought Greg Jones was a great pick. I was just making the case that he probably won’t be able to contribute right away. He could develop into a great player but there’s a reason he dropped to the sixth. His measurables weren’t great (and I know that’s such a cliche) but every team in the NFL passed on him 5-6 times. I hope he develops into a great player. He was a hard worker and accomplished eveything you could in college. There’s no doubt that he was a steal.
by KillerKowal on May 18, 2011 9:40 PM EDT via mobile up reply actions
Also
it’s Jonathan Goff, not Jordan.
The NFL and NFLPA? They can kiss my ass, OK? They can line up and kiss my ass.
by BigBlue21 on May 18, 2011 8:49 PM EDT reply actions 1 recs
and "role" not roll
Details of the operations of an interstate dog fighting ring were revealed, with some portions involving drugs and gambling. Gruesome details involving abuse, torture and execution of under-performing dogs ... He admitted to being involved in the destruction of 6–8 dogs, by hanging or drowning...
by Simms-McConkey on May 19, 2011 9:51 AM EDT up reply actions
Coughlin is a very patient coach
Players get time to develop. That is why they do not panic and put need over value.
LB is a concern, but they still have hope for Sintim at SAM, and Tracy will get an opportunity to challenge him. If they fail, and Jones plays well, the fans have thoughts that Goff could move to SAM.
Guard is not a problem, even with the anticipated release of Andrews for salary/lingering injury issues. With Seubert hurt early on, Diehl will probably play LG (his original position) and Snee at RG. Petrus showed promise last year. Boothe had his best year as a Giant, and I’m not sure he’s good enough to get interest from other teams. Add Seubert into the mix when healthy and we are fine.
Center is who is more healthy, O’Hara or Koets. Some concern there. At LT, Beatty gets his shot. I’m more confident there.
They like Bradshaw, he is going to get a good contract offer. It will be expensive for another team to poach him. If he leaves, it could be trouble.
"Good, bad, I'm the guy with the gun."
The contract situations of Bradshaw and Jacobs are not an issue
Jacobs bonus is already paid, so he’s at about $4mil for the next 2 seasons, not bad if he continues to play like he did in 2010. Bradshaw isn’t going to ask for the moon. THe GIants want to sign him, he wants to sign here, so most likely he’ll get what they feel he’s worth.
RB was never a need.
I also hate this idea they “failed” to address 3 “key” areas of need. How many needs to teams have? Are they just the ones beat into your head all year?
Amukamara, Austin and Jernigan all fit needs, unquestionably. The Giants CBs are good, not great and they got burned the last few weeks of the season when Webster was out. Barry Cofield might leave and they love their DL depth, and their special teams sucked. Sounds like they got 3 key needs right there.
LB, OC those positions are the ones everyone says they need, yet….there was no player there to draft to fill them. Mason Foster seems like the only one, but really Greg Jones vs. Mason Foster is relatively moot for me.
If they drafted Greg Jones in the 3rd round, would that be “addressing a key need”?
Last night, a comedian died in New York. Somebody knows why. Somebody knows
Coughlin high on Jones
on WFAN this morning (http://bit.ly/k8P5YP) coughlin said that he thinks jones will be a great LB and i know he is supposed to do that but i think he’s on to something. as a big ten fan, i always hated running against michigan state.

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