Very interesting conversation. Brian Williams was a DB on the Giants team in 2011. He was released mid-season and was mainly a special teams player, but he had a very long and solid career in the NFL before coming to the Giants, mainly with the Vikes and Jags. I was in the Charlotte airport getting ready to go to the UK - he saw I was rooting for the team, he introduced himself and we talked for about an hour.
He had lots of interesting comments:
- Not a fan of the Giants. Didn't like the way the team handled his released, but he did say that they gave him a Super Bowl ring and he will always remember that.
- Not a fan of Perry Fewell. Said he was really poor at communicating gameplans, made fun of the way he would draw diagrams and felt he disliked him from the time he spurned Wake Forest for NC State while Jim Caldwell was HC at Wake. Said Caldwell and Fewell were close.
He felt that Fewell never really looked at him as an option to play on the D.
- Said the defensive players were divided on Eli. Tuck and Osi were Eli guys, but said it was frustrating that he'd throw a few balls a game that made guys shake their heads.
- Said the practices were a mess. He thought they were pretty bad in Jax his final year there, but he said in NY it was much worse. Not a whole lot of positive comments about the prep.
- Said Randy Moss was the best teammate he had
- Intimated that JPP wasn't the shapest knife in the drawer
- Thinks Barkley is amazing. Reminds him of AP in many ways
- Best athlete he ever played with - Matt Jones
- Always felt like the Giants FO was a mess. Didn't care too much 'for Jerry Reese. Basically said out of the team he played for, the Giants were his least favorite.
- Liked Mike Tice but said he was an example of a coordinator who was over his head as a HC.
- Tore his ACL when he was 30 and playing in Atlanta. Said it was a tough injury to come back from, and he never really had the same aggression after that.
Really good conversation. I came away with the impression that he is a guy who was able to take his success on the field and do some things off the field. He's still quite tight with many players and he said he still bleeds purple. We were talking about the officiating and he said it is pure crap and has been for some time.
Very enlightening to get the fairly anti-Giants take, similar to what we heard on the board from Bryan Kehl.
I would sign up for that again and again
Coughlin was a good coach, but as time passes the luster on him dulls for me more and more. On a given day he could coach with anyone - he's the winning head coach in three of the greatest upsets we've seen: BC over Notre Dame, Jacksonville over Denver, and Super Bowl 42.
But from a larger, more long term perspective there didn't seem to be the capability to elevate the team to a consistent winner. It's funny - Andy Reid has shown a better ability to crank out 10+ win seasons (13 out of 20 vs. Coughlin's 7 out of 20), but has fallen short in the area where Coughlin did not...being able to win the huge pressure game against top tier opponents.
I guess my point is as a Giants fan I am thirsting for an organization plan, model, whatever you want to call it to be put in place where we are in the mix every year. Had we been able to do that during Eli's prime, given his aptitude for the big game, I think we might have won another Super Bowl or two with him.
Sort of a free-for-all of sorts. Wasn't a lot of situational planning. Felt that Fewell didn't really prep the guys all that well.
Again - we won the SB that year, but Williams was released in the middle part of the year, so there may have been changes made or there may have been different ways they ran things at the end of the year, but I thought it was an interesting comment.
Maybe just the special teams practices were a mess - that I can believe.
I would sign up for that again and again
Neither of the teams that won the Super Bowl could honestly be called the best team in the league. Shit, the 2016 Giants with McAdoo won more regular season games than either the 2007 or 2011 teams.
The Coughlin era is a Patrick Crayton broken off route in 2007 and about a dozen plays that went our way in 2011 away from not being especially memorable. You never give back the Super Bowls, but when analyzing the era objectively for any information on how to move forward, I think it's important to be honest with ourselves.
His take on Reese was pretty prophetic.
Thanks for sharing Fatman, Cool story . And I really mean it👍
I appreciate some of his opinions though
As we all know, that team came into its own on Christmas Eve 2011. It's interesting insight, and perhaps a hint of what could have transpired if Victor Cruz hadn't won a footrace with Eric Smith...
The season before he turned the ball over 30 times. 2011 was far and away his best year, but he also had 20 turnovers. I can see how some could feel that way at the time.
Cool story. Thanks for sharing. I never thought I'd hear of the legendary Matt Jones again. Wasn't he one of the guys MiS used to laud?
He sounds a bit bitter with his time with the Giants - sans the ring - and sometimes players evaluate themselves much higher than what coaches see.
Sort of a free-for-all of sorts. Wasn't a lot of situational planning. Felt that Fewell didn't really prep the guys all that well.
Again - we won the SB that year, but Williams was released in the middle part of the year, so there may have been changes made or there may have been different ways they ran things at the end of the year, but I thought it was an interesting comment.
I can attest to this. I worked for Virginia Tech under Coach Beamer and our practices were scripted out period by period and organized down to the every minute. We had an airhorn that was blown to change periods and drills.
After I graduated I got a pass to watch a Giants training camp practice in the bleachers in 2007. The first thing that I noticed was how the practices felt like Chinese fire drills. They didnt seem organized at all coming from the structured environment I was used too.
Weird that someone is confirming it from the inside. I just chalked it up as the NFL being a different animal.
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practices were just a lot less organized than other places.
Sort of a free-for-all of sorts. Wasn't a lot of situational planning. Felt that Fewell didn't really prep the guys all that well.
Again - we won the SB that year, but Williams was released in the middle part of the year, so there may have been changes made or there may have been different ways they ran things at the end of the year, but I thought it was an interesting comment.
I can attest to this. I worked for Virginia Tech under Coach Beamer and our practices were scripted out period by period and organized down to the every minute. We had an airhorn that was blown to change periods and drills.
After I graduated I got a pass to watch a Giants training camp practice in the bleachers in 2007. The first thing that I noticed was how the practices felt like Chinese fire drills. They didnt seem organized at all coming from the structured environment I was used too.
Weird that someone is confirming it from the inside. I just chalked it up as the NFL being a different animal.
We hear mostly about how good and classy the organization is, but I can bet experiences on that vary a lot based on where you stand. All those guys you see us role on and off the bottom of the roster are real people Prusia dream in a tough league. Im sure a lot have his kind of experience.
The disorganized practice is interesting to me, but it may not mean much. More than 1 way to skin a cat.
That could cause somebody to be a little jaded to everything.
He can complain all he wants but that team won the Super Bowl! There are a lot of players would would have loved to be a part of that team and never get anywhere near that level. He has a ring and bitches.
Sour grapes from a guy how got cut and thus wasn't there to beat the Pats in the big game. Boo hoo.
Who the hell is Matt Jones? JPP + fireworks = stupid.
Coughlin was a good coach, but as time passes the luster on him dulls for me more and more. On a given day he could coach with anyone - he's the winning head coach in three of the greatest upsets we've seen: BC over Notre Dame, Jacksonville over Denver, and Super Bowl 42.
But from a larger, more long term perspective there didn't seem to be the capability to elevate the team to a consistent winner. It's funny - Andy Reid has shown a better ability to crank out 10+ win seasons (13 out of 20 vs. Coughlin's 7 out of 20), but has fallen short in the area where Coughlin did not...being able to win the huge pressure game against top tier opponents.
I guess my point is as a Giants fan I am thirsting for an organization plan, model, whatever you want to call it to be put in place where we are in the mix every year. Had we been able to do that during Eli's prime, given his aptitude for the big game, I think we might have won another Super Bowl or two with him.
Terps - this was discussed on another thread recently but, if Burress didn't shoot himself that year - I firmly believe we would have repeated. I guess any team could have gotten lucky against us but, the odds were in our favor that year.
But, I know what you are saying ... hate them or not, The Patriots have a good program going on up there in Foxboro.
10-6 and 9-7. I remember hearing in '07 that before week 17 the Pats coaches were telling people that the Giants were the most talented team they had seen on film that year.
What I really want to know is this...where did you find a decent bar to watch the game in the Charlotte airport? Most of the terminals look like Bombed out images of Beirut with all the renovations.
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That they went to win the super bowl.
I would sign up for that again and again
Neither of the teams that won the Super Bowl could honestly be called the best team in the league. Shit, the 2016 Giants with McAdoo won more regular season games than either the 2007 or 2011 teams.
The Coughlin era is a Patrick Crayton broken off route in 2007 and about a dozen plays that went our way in 2011 away from not being especially memorable. You never give back the Super Bowls, but when analyzing the era objectively for any information on how to move forward, I think it's important to be honest with ourselves.
True. But what's remarkable about this era is while it was lucky they won in 07 and obviously 11.... in 08 they were very clearly the best team in football, and got fucked with injuries and gun shots late ...
And in 2010, they are an eagles comeback away from a first round bye there too.
So it goes both ways.
The Giants contended pretty much consistently from 2005-2011. Since then they are a hot mess of an organization. Poor drafting, poor free agency, poor everything. I don't think yet more analysis of two runs a decade ago has anything with the current situafion
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This backs up what we've been seeing on the field for a while. The disorganization and poor football we see today was conceived years ago.
Coughlin was a good coach, but as time passes the luster on him dulls for me more and more. On a given day he could coach with anyone - he's the winning head coach in three of the greatest upsets we've seen: BC over Notre Dame, Jacksonville over Denver, and Super Bowl 42.
But from a larger, more long term perspective there didn't seem to be the capability to elevate the team to a consistent winner. It's funny - Andy Reid has shown a better ability to crank out 10+ win seasons (13 out of 20 vs. Coughlin's 7 out of 20), but has fallen short in the area where Coughlin did not...being able to win the huge pressure game against top tier opponents.
I guess my point is as a Giants fan I am thirsting for an organization plan, model, whatever you want to call it to be put in place where we are in the mix every year. Had we been able to do that during Eli's prime, given his aptitude for the big game, I think we might have won another Super Bowl or two with him.
Terps - this was discussed on another thread recently but, if Burress didn't shoot himself that year - I firmly believe we would have repeated. I guess any team could have gotten lucky against us but, the odds were in our favor that year.
But, I know what you are saying ... hate them or not, The Patriots have a good program going on up there in Foxboro.
You lost me at terps...
I'm not buying his story.
I admire yoiur integrity. Again thank you.
Practice seemed disorganized? Seemed like the Giants won two Super Bowls. That doesn't happen by accident over the course of a season and, to the chagrin of people trying to reconsile it all as a fluke, certainly not twice.
Actual games are chaos so perhaps the looseness was by design. I'll give the guy that got to and won big games multiple times on multiple teams the benefit of a doubt.
Jacksonville Jaguars (20062008) Jack Del Rio
Atlanta Falcons (20092010) Mike Smith
Giants were his last team.
JohnB : 12/3/2018 9:09 pm : link : reply
Seriously.
He can complain all he wants but that team won the Super Bowl! There are a lot of players would would have loved to be a part of that team and never get anywhere near that level. He has a ring and bitches.
Sour grapes from a guy how got cut and thus wasn't there to beat the Pats in the big game. Boo hoo.
I took it more as a guy who shared his playing experience and simply had a different take on his view of the Giants. He wasn't really trashing the team - just felt that his experience with them was not as good as other places. He was fully up front that after he injured his ACL that he wasn't the same player, and he still wanted to be a starter and felt he didn't get a chance. I think there was some frustration the he wasn't looked at to play D, but rather just ST, but it isn't like he holds a grudge against the team.
Mike in Ohio - I was in the A Terminal, which very much is a renovation zone, and the lone bar down that wing was pretty packed. I actually was able to have a conversation with him because we started off talking about being squeezed in the corner!
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That they went to win the super bowl.
I would sign up for that again and again
Neither of the teams that won the Super Bowl could honestly be called the best team in the league. Shit, the 2016 Giants with McAdoo won more regular season games than either the 2007 or 2011 teams.
The Coughlin era is a Patrick Crayton broken off route in 2007 and about a dozen plays that went our way in 2011 away from not being especially memorable. You never give back the Super Bowls, but when analyzing the era objectively for any information on how to move forward, I think it's important to be honest with ourselves.
I could not give a shit if our Super Bowl winning teams were the "best team in the league"- because they sure beat the "best teams in the league" on their way to both trophies. Did the better team lose? That's too bad.
And, you can point to those exact same lucky bounces/plays or circumstances in every team's championship season.
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In comment 14204438 FatMan in Charlotte said:
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practices were just a lot less organized than other places.
Sort of a free-for-all of sorts. Wasn't a lot of situational planning. Felt that Fewell didn't really prep the guys all that well.
Again - we won the SB that year, but Williams was released in the middle part of the year, so there may have been changes made or there may have been different ways they ran things at the end of the year, but I thought it was an interesting comment.
I can attest to this. I worked for Virginia Tech under Coach Beamer and our practices were scripted out period by period and organized down to the every minute. We had an airhorn that was blown to change periods and drills.
After I graduated I got a pass to watch a Giants training camp practice in the bleachers in 2007. The first thing that I noticed was how the practices felt like Chinese fire drills. They didnt seem organized at all coming from the structured environment I was used too.
Weird that someone is confirming it from the inside. I just chalked it up as the NFL being a different animal.
We had practices like that in HS, I'm 100% sure that a two time super bowl winning head coach known for his schedules and rules didn't run a chinese fire drill. I'm sorry this is all just totally the opposite of what we know of TC. I was up in Albany in 2012, those players knew exactly where to go and what to do and TC was a taskmaster in every single moment and drill.
Yeah, strange. Sounds as though Williams is just bitter person for whatever reason that happened to him. Bitter comments on things
I don't get the ragging on the '07 team as not being the best team in the country, of course New England were...but the '08 Giants lost Strahan and still dominated the 2008 regular season so we were clearly a team peaking at the right time. You can't call beating the Patriots a fluke as we went 3-1 over 4 years from 07 to 11 and the 1 was a 3 pt loss. The 2007 Giants took time to get used to Spags' D and once they did they looked like a hell of a team. 10 wins was a good return for a team with a new DC facing a tough schedule.
Now the '11 team is maybe a better conversation. That seemed a lot more like a veteran team that knew how to win getting hot.
As to Williams' comments I am sure that's how he viewed things and I can absolutely believe Fewell was a terrible DC. I am surprised to hear a Coughlin practice described in those terms but I do think TC did rely far too much on his DCs and it is clear from his time here when he had a poor DC the unit suffered.
Garbage.
I didn't know about Kehl, so this is the first I've heard an ex-Giants player complain about the org. Most praise their time w/the Giants....go figure.
He can complain all he wants but that team won the Super Bowl! There are a lot of players would would have loved to be a part of that team and never get anywhere near that level. He has a ring and bitches.
Sour grapes from a guy how got cut and thus wasn't there to beat the Pats in the big game. Boo hoo.
I tend to agree....cut from a team mid-season that won the SuperBowl? How would anyone feel about that?
I didn't know about Kehl, so this is the first I've heard an ex-Giants player complain about the org. Most praise their time w/the Giants....go figure.
If memory serves, Kehl posted here several years back and shared some negative perspective about the Giants - mostly about how they drafted guys who werent a fit for the scheme they were trying to run (I think he felt this happened to him).
Fewell, whom I recall was liked a lot by TC, came from Bills (iirc), and there were lots of head scratching blown assignments or coverage schemes. It's not implausible that Williams experience with practices there may have been run differently than the offensive side. A lot of red flags, many of which were widely shared by football watchers generally and lots here.
Funny that Kehl is brought up in this context, the guy Gil Brandt thought was the steal of the draft when the Giants picked him on Day 2 or whatever it was back then.