Bill Belichick is on to New York.
It would have been easy, and perhaps expected, for the head coach of the 5-0 Patriots to leave it at that when he dialed in for Monday morning's conference call with Giants reporters. But he didn't. He was asked about everything from the Giants' quarterback change to Saquon Barkley, and the defending Super Bowl champion shared his thoughts.
Whether it was because of his history with the Giants organization or the fact he only has to speak to this particular beat once every four years, it doesn't matter. What matters is Belichick weighed in on the Giants' future (and their past) ahead of Thursday night's meeting in Foxborough.
Here were the highlights:
Q: Did you have a reaction a few weeks ago when you heard Eli Manning was benched? Obviously Eli Manning has been around a long time, he has history with the Giants, certainly has history with your team. What are your thoughts on Eli, his situation and what he's done in his career?
Belichick: I have a ton of respect for Eli, he's a great person, very professional, team oriented. I spent over a decade with the Giants (1979-1990), I have an appreciation for playing quarterback for that franchise in that environment. He's done a tremendous job, and certainly had a lot of success against us. I have a great deal of respect for him. I'm really focused on trying to coach our team and I need to do a better job of my job and not really looking to evaluate what anybody else is doing. I have my own full plate here, I'm trying to coach the Patriots.
Q: What is different about the Giants offense with Daniel Jones at quarterback?
Belichick: Offensively, it's probably the same plays. Eli is very good at the line of scrimmage of making adjustments and protections and occasionally signaling routes against pressure and things like that. He may have done a little more of that on the line than Jones has. Jones is fast, and he's made plays with his legs outside the pocket. The Tampa game comes to mind right off the bat. He's got the ability to extend plays and also run for yardage to score or pick up critical first downs. He has kind of the sixth receiver element. Both guys are very accurate passers, see the field well, make good decisions. They are at different stages of their career, but both guys are outstanding players. Any team would like to have either one of them and they are fortunate they have both.
Q: I know you guys had Jones up there for a visit pre-draft and I'm just curious what your impressions were of him before the draft, and has he looked like the player you thought he could be?
Belichick: Yeah, we had a great visit. He spent most of the day here, actually spent a lot of time with our offensive coaches, with Josh (McDaniels) and Mick Lombardi, guys that work with that position on the offensive side of the ball. We had a great conversation, talked about a lot of things. He's very mature, certainly a good understanding of the Duke offense and Coach Cutcliffe and the things that they were doing there. Again, a good grasp of the offensive system—protections, routes, route concepts and why they're used in different combinations and in certain situations. Actually, I think it was kind of a change of plans, but at the end of his visit, I think he said he had to go somewhere, but then he ended up going to the Giants from here, so even I could figure out there was something going on there. He's an impressive player and a very impressive person. We had a great visit, and again, playing quarterback in New York is not the easiest thing in the world, but he's got a lot of maturity and a good head on his shoulders and has good perspective on football and the overall leadership position that comes with that role on and off the field. So, I'm sure he's done well and will continue to do well.
Q: You've never faced Saquon Barkley, but you've seen him on film, and I guess his availability is in question for Thursday—what kind of dynamic does he bring to the Giants to change their offense?
Belichick: He's an outstanding player. You're right, we haven't faced him, and I hope we don't, but we need to be ready for him. He's a very competitive guy, I'm sure he's doing all he can to get ready to go. He was close last week, so we'll probably get him. He can do it all. He's got great power, speed, they use him well in the passing game. He's very hard, obviously, to tackle in the open field, he's hard to tackle anywhere. He's got good vision, good quickness, he can play in space, he's elusive, he's got power, he had 2,000 yards from scrimmage last year. That pretty much says it all right there. Plus, we know he can return kickoffs and everything else, so he's got a ton of skill, as good as any back we've seen on film. We watched a lot of him last year, we didn't expect him to play in preseason, but just kind of getting ready for the Giants in the preseason we saw a lot of last year's film and what a player he was for them. And he was an explosive player and a dynamic player this year. I'm sure he's either going to be back or is close to being back, so we have to be ready for him.
Q: What made Nate Solder such a valuable member of your organization when he was there?
Belichick: Nate did a great job for us. His first year, he played behind (Matt) Light, played right tackle, played tight end, and so forth, he played about half the time, but it was in a variety of positions. Then, after that, he took over at left tackle and gave us really solid play there for a number of years.
Q: What is your impression of how your defense is playing this early and seemingly this well?
Belichick: We've had our moments. Right now, it's about focusing on the challenge ahead with the Giants. The Giants have so many weapons on offense, a great tight end, two great quarterbacks, probably the best running back in the league, very good receiving group. They are very experienced on the offensive line, they added a lot of players there in the last couple of years. Solder, Zeitler, Remmers and, of course, Hernandez, Halapio has done a good job for them. Those guys have played together, they are in there every week, they haven't really had any changes all year. They have (Golden) Tate back now, they have a ton of weapons offensively. Well coached, they have a great scheme, they are a well-balanced offense. That's a lot for me, a lot for us to handle, to try to prepare for and for our players to get ready for all the things that they do and do well. They can run it; they can throw it, throw it deep, throw it to the backs, throw it to the tight end, catch and run plays, play action drop back, misdirection, you name it. It's a lot to get ready for.
Q: I know you focus on your team exclusively, but are you mindful at least that two of your quarterbacks (Jacoby Brissett and Jimmy Garoppolo) with the Colts and 49ers are having a lot of success this year, and you had them and did a lot to develop them?
Belichick: Well, that's kind of the way it is in the National Football League. Every team has players that were on their team that are playing somewhere else and some of them are doing well, and maybe some of them aren't playing anymore, but that's the league. There's plenty of movement throughout the league at all positions with every team. If you follow the NFL, that's pretty much the same for every team.
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