In a lost season, the best the Giants can hope for is to find some hidden gems tucked inside their roster, a young player or two worth keeping around for whoever is coaching the team in 2018.
B.J. Goodson does not exactly fit that profile as he plans his return from a high ankle sprain that up until now has ruined his second NFL season. There are, mercifully, just five games remaining before these Giants, as we know them, get blown up. Perhaps there is enough time for Goodson to get back onto the field and show that he is what everyone around the team expects from him, that he will be a quality middle linebacker and leader.
If it takes one to know one, Goodson is in good hands. Harry Carson, the Hall of Famer and former ferocious Giants inside linebacker, took a liking to Goodson as soon as he walked into the building as a rookie last year. Carson said he sees a little something of himself in Goodson, which is high praise, indeed.
“I’ve been talking to B.J. and I like him,’’ Carson recently told The Post. “I think he’s built a certain way, very humble, from the South. But he’s been hurt. I think he’s one of those guys that could be a really good leader, if that’s a role he chooses to do. You have to walk the walk and he has to keep things in perspective with his own life before he starts saying things to other guys.’’
Carson is not one of those former stars who injects his beliefs on the current players, but he does make it a point of speaking with Goodson as often as possible. Carson grew up in Florence, S.C., about 30 minutes from Lamar, S.C., where Goodson was raised. That shared background gives them something in common, other than the position Goodson plays and the team he plays for.