The end of the offseason work in the spring for the Giants arrives this week, with a two-day mandatory minicamp set for Tuesday and Wednesday, followed Thursday by meetings and a team barbecue. This is the culmination of a voluntary program that began April 15.
Here are five observations from the organized team activity practices that we will be paying close attention to in the two-day minicamp:
Is DJ a team guy?
So far, so good for Daniel Jones.
He has participated in individual and seven-on-seven drills but was taken off the field for the 11-on-11 drills. It is not known whether Jones will be let loose for the full-team periods in this camp.
Here’s a question: Does it really matter?
A quarterback in 11-on-11 drills is hardly under duress but there are offensive and defensive linemen in close proximity and thus there is increased risk for something going awry.
Jones is moving well coming off ACL surgery and his arm looks strong. After this camp, the Giants are off for close to six weeks before reporting to training camp and there will be ample opportunity for Jones to be pushed along this summer.
Backfield in motion
There is Devin Singletary and then there is, um, well, um … who?
Singletary was signed as the immediate response after Saquon Barkley’s defection to the Eagles. In five years in the NFL, Singletary has averaged 177.6 rushing attempts per season and topped 200 rushing attempts only once, in 2023 in his first year with the Texans after four with the Bills.
Barkley averaged 255 rushing attempts in four of his six years with the Giants.
