
A new quarterback is no quick fix for Giants
NY Post
Remember way back when — less than a week ago — when Malik Nabers opined, “It ain’t the quarterback” after the ninth loss in the first 11 games of his Giants career?
Nabers is not on the money about everything — saying he doesn’t care about dropped passes after the 10th loss in his first 12 NFL games sounded silly — but his contention that what ails the Giants goes far beyond one player was akin to a toe-tap reception on the sideline, as far as precise accuracy.
Of course, it is about the quarterback when it comes to analyzing why this franchise has taken a nosedive into the abyss of NFL feebleness and folly.
It is not, however, all about the quarterback, even though it is clear the Giants do not have one and that finding who’s next in line must be the top priority, once ownership determines if general manager Joe Schoen will be tasked with that search and if head coach Brian Daboll will be granted the assignment of shaping that quarterback.

Suddenly, someone had hit a rewind button and everyone had been transported back seven months. It was early spring instead of late fall, it was broiling hot outside the arena walls and not freezing cold. Everyone was back at TD Garden. There were 19,156 frenzied fans on their feet begging for blood, poised for the kill.












