EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. – The Giants' offseason got off to a newsy start with the dismissal of two assistant coaches from Brian Daboll's staff.
Special teams coordinator Thomas McGaughey and offensive line coach Bobby Johnson will not return in 2024. They join the previously announced departures of running backs coach Jeff Nixon (who will be the offensive coordinator at Syracuse University) and director of strength and performance Craig Fitzgerald (who started today in the same position at the University of Florida).
McGaughey just completed his sixth season coaching the Giants' special teams. It was his second stint with the team and one in which he worked for three different head coaches. From 2007-10, McGaughey was the assistant special teams coach.
Johnson came to the Giants with Daboll two years ago. He was the Buffalo Bills' O-line coach from 2019-21, when Daboll was the team's offensive coordinator.
The Giants allowed 85 sacks, 20 more than any other team, and 23 more than the previous team record, set in 1966.
"I want to thank those guys for what they've done the last two years," Daboll said. "This is the hard part of the job; I have a lot of respect for them. Just felt we were going to move in a different direction, not going add anything to it. These were private conversations, but I do respect both of those guys and what they've done the last two years, their commitment to the team, their work ethic, but wanted to make a change."
Ben Bredeson started all 16 games he played this season – eight at right guard and four each at left guard and center. His 1,014 snaps were the most by a Giants offensive player.
"It's always going to be different with the O-line coach leaving," Bredeson said. "It'll be different, I'm sure. I appreciate Bobby. He helped me out a ton in my career, as a person and a player. He and I had a great relationship. I'm thankful for him for the two years that we got to spend together."
After much late-season speculation about the future of offensive coordinator Mike Kafka and defensive coordinator Wink Martindale, Daboll said he anticipates they will remain on the staff.
"My expectation is Wink and Kafka will both be back … but there's still conversations that are going to be had," Daboll said. "I think they're good coaches, so it'll be good to have some continuity and bring them back. I know Wink talks about this as a destination place and things like that, it's good. I appreciate how hard they work, their commitment to the team, so that's my plan."
Does Daboll expect Kafka will continue in his role as the offensive play-caller?
"Those are conversations we'll have here over the next few months of what direction we'll go," Daboll said. "And we'll make those decisions as we do a full evaluation."
Quarterback Daniel Jones wants his coordinator to return.
"I think I've really enjoyed working with Kafka," Jones said. "I think he's a great coach. I think for myself, I'm looking for areas to improve and studying what we're doing, what I'm doing and go from there. But Kafka is a great coach. I've enjoyed working with him."
The defensive players have been outspoken in their support of Martindale.
"He's a great coach, so I'm excited for next season," said edge rusher Kayvon Thibodeaux, who led the Giants with 11.5 sacks. "I think we got a good thing going. You have to keep getting better and keep coming together as a team."
Daboll will need to hire his third running backs coach in as many years. After the 2022 season, DeAndre Smith left to take the same position with the Indianapolis Colts. Nixon was hired from the Carolina Panthers, and he's gone.
"Jeff's done a great job," Daboll said. "Jeff and I go way back. He eventually wants to become a college head football coach. Got a chance to say goodbye to him yesterday, his family, great people. His son is actually in the national championship tonight. So, he's headed out there to watch him play." Will Nixon is a running back/wide receiver for the University of Washington.
*Perhaps the Giants' most prominent free agent is running back Saquon Barkley. Last year, the Giants placed the franchise tag on Barkley, who signed a one-year contract the week training camp began. The question now is whether a second tag is an option, or if the Giants will seek to sign Barkley long-term.
"Saquon and I will talk about that," general manager Joe Schoen said. "That's a tool (another tag) we have at our disposal. When we redid his deal before he came to camp, that wasn't taken out of that deal. It wasn't a 'Hey, we'll do this but no franchise tag' so that's an option that we have on the table. We'll have those conversations; I'm not saying we will, or we won't. A lot of those conversations will be had over the next month or so."
*Kicker Graham Gano, who missed the final nine games after undergoing surgery on his left knee, is on track to resume kicking in March.
"I'll be kicking in the offseason like normal," said Gano, who signed a three-year contract extension that begins in 2024. "I'm excited about it. I'm ahead of the game in recovery and everything's progressing the right way. I'm itching to get back on the field. I was down there on the sideline last night (for the season-ending 27-10 victory against Philadelphia), so I was definitely itching to play again."
Gano's forced inactivity reminded him how difficult it is to watch football when you should be playing it.
"It's frustrating," he said. "It's a game that I love to play and not being able to do it is frustrating, especially being one of the leaders on the team. I want to be out there for my guys and that's why I played with the injury for three or four weeks, just tried to tough through it. It got to that point where I just couldn't do it anymore and watching is hard. I want to be out there playing. I'm just eager to get back.
"I think it got to the point where the injury was beginning to affect how I was kicking. It was affecting the team in a negative way, and it's not worth it for the team to continue to do that. I'm looking forward to getting back healthy and getting back to the old ways of splitting the pipes."
*The Giants signed 10 players to reserve/future contracts. All of them were on the Giants' practice squad this season: running back Deon Jackson, wide receiver Dennis Houston, tackles Yodny Cajuste and Joshua Miles, guard Jalen Mayfield, defensive tackle Ryder Anderson, linebackers Dyontae Johnson and Jeremiah Martin, and defensive backs Kaleb Hayes and Stantley Thomas-Oliver.
View photos of every move made by the Giants during the 2024 cycle.