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Link to original content: http://wikipedia.org/wiki/2011_New_York_Giants_season
2011 New York Giants season - Wikipedia Jump to content

2011 New York Giants season

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

2011 New York Giants season
OwnerJohn Mara
Steve Tisch
General managerJerry Reese
Head coachTom Coughlin
Offensive coordinatorKevin Gilbride
Defensive coordinatorPerry Fewell
Home fieldMetLife Stadium
Results
Record9–7
Division place1st NFC East
Playoff finishWon Wild Card Playoffs
(vs. Falcons) 24–2
Won Divisional Playoffs
(at Packers) 37–20
Won NFC Championship
(at 49ers) 20–17 (OT)
Won Super Bowl XLVI
(vs. Patriots) 21–17
Pro BowlersSelected but did not participate due to participation in Super Bowl XLVI:
QB Eli Manning
DE Jason Pierre-Paul
AP All-ProsDE Jason Pierre-Paul (1st team)
WR Victor Cruz (2nd team)
Uniform

The 2011 New York Giants season was the 87th season for the team in the National Football League (NFL). They played all of their home games at MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey. Although the team failed to improve on their 10–6 mark from 2010, the Giants were able to qualify for the playoffs, and in another Cinderella run that paralleled what they did in 2007, they won Super Bowl XLVI, again versus the New England Patriots, their fourth Super Bowl win in franchise history.

Many analysts predicted a rough year for the Giants.[1] Despite highs and lows throughout the season, the Giants, with a 9–7 record, returned to the NFL playoffs for the first time since 2008, winning the NFC East and finished the season as the NFC's #4 seed. New York finished 10–6 in 2010 but failed to qualify for the playoffs due to not having any tiebreakers over any NFC playoff team. The Giants entered their week 17 match up with the Cowboys with both teams tied for the division lead with 8–7 records. The Giants took a 21–0 first half lead and while the Cowboys closed the gap to make the score 21–14 early in the 4th quarter, the Giants held on to defeat the Cowboys 31–14, clinching the divisional title and a playoff berth.

In the playoffs, the Giants defeated the Atlanta Falcons, Green Bay Packers, and the San Francisco 49ers to win the NFC championship. The Giants defeated the New England Patriots in Super Bowl XLVI, which was a rematch of Super Bowl XLII from 4 years earlier in which the Giants defeated the previously undefeated Patriots. As in 2007, 1990, and 1986, the Giants played their eventual Super Bowl opponent during the regular season. The Giants also played the Packers and 49ers during the season, losing both games in the final minutes of play.

The 2011 Giants were the first team in NFL history to reach the Super Bowl with a negative regular season point differential (minus-6, 394 points scored, 400 points allowed). With a 9–7 record, the Giants became the third NFL team to win fewer than 10 games in a 16-game season, and reach the Super Bowl.[2] but became the first of the three to win the Super Bowl. The previous teams to go 9–7 and reach the Super Bowl (the 1979 Rams, who only needed two playoff wins were the first, and the 2008 Arizona Cardinals) were both defeated by the Pittsburgh Steelers. Additionally, upon defeating the Patriots in Super Bowl XLVI the Giants became the first NFC East Division champion to win the Super Bowl since the Dallas Cowboys in 1995 (the Giants were a Wild Card team when they won Super Bowl XLII).

The 2011 Giants were an aberration from other great Giants teams of the past who were built around tough, physical defensive play and an offense built around a power running attack. Despite Jason Pierre-Paul having a breakout Pro Bowl season with 16.5 sacks, the defense was ranked in the bottom 10 in points and yards allowed and was top 10 in penalties. Their normally durable rushing attack of Brandon Jacobs and Ahmad Bradshaw was ranked last in the NFL with 89 rushing yards per game as a team. The standout of the year was the quarterback play of Eli Manning who threw a career-high and franchise record 4,933 passing yards with 29 touchdown passes. Manning engineered 6 regular season game-winning drives in 2011 and threw 15 touchdown passes in the 4th quarter, NFL records that still stand. He improved upon his interception total, lowering it to 16. He had 2 more game-winning drives in the playoffs, the NFC Championship and Super Bowl XLVI. Manning's 5 career game-winning drives in the playoffs are tied for third in NFL history with Joe Montana and became the fifth player to win multiple Super Bowl MVP awards. Manning's play subsequently led to the breakout of undrafted wide receiver Victor Cruz and the emergence of Cruz and Hakeem Nicks as the best wide receiver duo in the NFL. Cruz set a franchise record 1,536 receiving yards from 82 receptions, while Nicks had 76 receptions for 1,192 yards.

Some news organizations, among them The St. Louis Post-Dispatch, said that the Giants' victory in the Super Bowl made them the NFL's version of the 2011 World Series champion St. Louis Cardinals, saying that these two championship teams had been given the last rites by many near the end of the season, but emerged as champions at the end.[3] The 2012 Stanley Cup champion Los Angeles Kings also followed a similar path to the Cardinals and Giants a few months later, qualifying for the final playoff spot in the Western Conference in their penultimate regular season game[4] only to dominate in the playoffs, just losing a record-tying low of four playoff games, en route to the franchise's first championship.

This season was the last time the Giants qualified for the playoffs under Coughlin, and would not reach the playoffs again until the 2016 season and would not win a playoff game until the 2022 season. To date, 2011 is the last time the Giants have won the NFC East.

Offseason

[edit]

Draft Class

[edit]

Todd McShay (ESPN),[5] Steve Wyche (NFL.com),[6] Pat Kirwan of NFL.com, New Era Scouting, and DraftKing.com predicted that the Giants would use their first round pick (19th overall) to draft Gabe Carimi (who went 29th overall), a left tackle for the Wisconsin Badgers who won the 2010 Outland Trophy as the nation's top collegiate interior lineman, and was a Consensus All-American.[7][8][9] Charles Davis of NFL.com predicted that they would draft Mike Pouncey (who went 15th overall), a center/offensive guard from the University of Florida.[10] They instead drafted Prince Amukamara, an all-American cornerback from the University of Nebraska.

Round Selection Player Position College
1 19 Prince Amukamara CB Nebraska
2 52 Marvin Austin DT North Carolina
3 83 Jerrel Jernigan WR Troy
4 117 James Brewer OT Indiana
5 [a]
6 185 Greg Jones LB Michigan State
198 [b] Tyler Sash S Iowa
202 [b] Jacquian Williams LB South Florida
7 221 Da'Rel Scott RB Maryland
^[a] The Giants traded its fifth-round selection (#150 overall) and a 2012 conditional draft selection to the Minnesota Vikings in exchange for RB Darius Reynaud and QB Sage Rosenfels.
^[b] Compensatory selection.

Players

[edit]

Movement

[edit]

In the first week of the offseason the Giants signed some road free agents and former members of their 2010 practice squad to reserve/future contracts in order to bolster the roster for the 2011 season. In early March the team signed potential free agents to contract extensions: on March 2 the team signed running back D.J. Ware to a two-year extension and on March 3 they signed wide receivers Domenik Hixon and Darius Reynaud to one and two-year extensions, respectively. They also offered tenders to some of their restricted free agents but the effectiveness of these tenders rely on the ongoing CBA talks.

Free agents

[edit]
Position Player Free agency
tag
Date signed/released 2011 team
LB Chase Blackburn UFA November 29, 2011 New York Giants
CB Will Blackmon Released January 2, 2011 New York Giants
OT Kevin Boothe UFA New York Giants
TE Kevin Boss UFA August 5, 2011 Oakland Raiders
RB Ahmad Bradshaw UFA New York Giants
CB Courtney Brown RFA did not play
LB Keith Bulluck UFA did not play
WR Michael Clayton UFA New York Giants
DT Barry Cofield UFA Washington Redskins
S Deon Grant UFA New York Giants
WR Derek Hagan UFA Oakland Raiders
WR Domenik Hixon UFA March 3, 2011 New York Giants
S Michael Johnson UFA Detroit Lions
DE Mathias Kiwanuka UFA New York Giants
OT Jamon Meredith ERFA March 3, 2011 New York Giants
TE/FB Bear Pascoe ERFA March 3, 2011 New York Giants
WR Steve Smith UFA Philadelphia Eagles
QB Jim Sorgi UFA did not play
DE Dave Tollefson UFA New York Giants
RB DJ Ware RFA March 2, 2011 New York Giants
LB Gerris Wilkinson UFA Jacksonville Jaguars
RFA: Restricted free agent, UFA: Unrestricted free agent, ERFA: Exclusive rights free agent

Roster

[edit]
2011 New York Giants roster
Quarterbacks (QB)

Running backs (RB)

Wide receivers (WR)

Tight ends (TE)

Offensive linemen (OL)

Defensive linemen (DL)

Linebackers (LB)

Defensive backs (DB)

Special teams

Practice squad

Reserve

Rookies in italics
53 active, 14 reserve, 8 practice squad

Staff

[edit]

Staff changes

[edit]
  • On March 9, 2011 the assistant special teams Thomas McGaughey accepted a job at LSU as special teams/defensive line coach of their football team. He had been with the Giants since 2007.
  • On June 24, 2011 it was reported that Larry Izzo would become the Giants' new assistant special teams coach once the NFL Lockout had ceased.[11]
2011 New York Giants staff
Front office
  • President/CEO – John Mara
  • Chairman/executive vice president – Steve Tisch
  • Senior vice president/general manager – Jerry Reese
  • Vice president of player evaluation – Chris Mara
  • Assistant general manager – Kevin Abrams
  • Director of pro personnel – David Gettleman
  • Director of college scouting – Marc Ross
  • Assistant director of pro personnel – Ken Sternfeld

Head coaches

Offensive coaches

 

Defensive coaches

Special team coaches

Strength and conditioning

Schedule

[edit]

Preseason

[edit]

The Giants' preseason schedule was announced on April 12, 2011.

Week Date Opponent Result Record Game site NFL.com
recap
1 August 13 at Carolina Panthers L 10–20 0–1 Bank of America Stadium Recap
2 August 22 Chicago Bears W 41–13 1–1 MetLife Stadium Recap
3 August 29§ New York Jets L 3–17 1–2 MetLife Stadium Recap
4 September 1 at New England Patriots W 18–17 2–2 Gillette Stadium Recap
§ – Due to Hurricane Irene, the Week 3 preseason game against the Jets was moved up to 2:00 p.m. from the originally scheduled time of 7:00 p.m. (EDT). Then, later in the evening of August 26, the game was rescheduled to Monday, August 29 at 7:00 pm. EDT[12][13]

Regular season

[edit]
Week Date Opponent Result Record Game site TV NFL.com
recap
1 September 11 at Washington Redskins L 14–28 0–1 FedExField Fox Recap
2 September 19 St. Louis Rams W 28–16 1–1 MetLife Stadium ESPN Recap
3 September 25 at Philadelphia Eagles W 29–16 2–1 Lincoln Financial Field Fox Recap
4 October 2 at Arizona Cardinals W 31–27 3–1 University of Phoenix Stadium Fox Recap
5 October 9 Seattle Seahawks L 25–36 3–2 MetLife Stadium Fox Recap
6 October 16 Buffalo Bills W 27–24 4–2 MetLife Stadium CBS Recap
7 Bye
8 October 30 Miami Dolphins W 20–17 5–2 MetLife Stadium CBS Recap
9 November 6 at New England Patriots W 24–20 6–2 Gillette Stadium Fox Recap
10 November 13 at San Francisco 49ers L 20–27 6–3 Candlestick Park Fox Recap
11 November 20 Philadelphia Eagles L 10–17 6–4 MetLife Stadium NBC Recap
12 November 28 at New Orleans Saints L 24–49 6–5 Mercedes-Benz Superdome ESPN Recap
13 December 4 Green Bay Packers L 35–38 6–6 MetLife Stadium Fox Recap
14 December 11 at Dallas Cowboys W 37–34 7–6 Cowboys Stadium NBC Recap
15 December 18 Washington Redskins L 10–23 7–7 MetLife Stadium Fox Recap
16 December 24 at New York Jets W 29–14 8–7 MetLife Stadium Fox Recap
17 January 1 Dallas Cowboys W 31–14 9–7 MetLife Stadium NBC Recap

Standings

[edit]
NFC East
W L T PCT DIV CONF PF PA STK
(4) New York Giants 9 7 0 .563 3–3 5–7 394 400 W2
Philadelphia Eagles 8 8 0 .500 5–1 6–6 396 328 W4
Dallas Cowboys 8 8 0 .500 2–4 6–6 372 347 L2
Washington Redskins 5 11 0 .313 2–4 5–7 288 367 L2
# Team Division W L T PCT DIV CONF SOS SOV STK
Division winners
1 Green Bay Packers North 15 1 0 .938 6–0 12–0 .457 .458 W2
2[a] San Francisco 49ers West 13 3 0 .813 5–1 10–2 .449 .418 W3
3[a] New Orleans Saints South 13 3 0 .813 5–1 9–3 .441 .442 W8
4 New York Giants East 9 7 0 .563 3–3 5–7 .520 .465 W2
Wild cards
5[b] Atlanta Falcons South 10 6 0 .625 3–3 7–5 .480 .375 W1
6[b] Detroit Lions North 10 6 0 .625 3–3 6–6 .535 .394 L1
Did not qualify for the postseason
7[c] Chicago Bears North 8 8 0 .500 3–3 7–5 .527 .406 W1
8[c][d] Arizona Cardinals West 8 8 0 .500 4–2 7–5 .469 .391 W1
9[d][e] Philadelphia Eagles East 8 8 0 .500 5–1 6–6 .488 .398 W4
10[e] Dallas Cowboys East 8 8 0 .500 2–4 6–6 .473 .375 L2
11 Seattle Seahawks West 7 9 0 .438 3–3 6–6 .512 .438 L2
12 Carolina Panthers South 6 10 0 .375 2–4 3–9 .504 .313 L1
13 Washington Redskins East 5 11 0 .313 2–4 5–7 .477 .438 L2
14 Tampa Bay Buccaneers South 4 12 0 .250 2–4 3–9 .551 .438 L10
15 Minnesota Vikings North 3 13 0 .188 0–6 3–9 .559 .396 L1
16 St. Louis Rams West 2 14 0 .125 0–6 1–11 .590 .531 L7
Tiebreakers[f]
  1. ^ a b San Francisco clinched the NFC 2 seed instead of New Orleans based on better conference record (10–2 to 9–3).
  2. ^ a b Atlanta clinched the NFC 5 seed instead of Detroit based on a head-to-head victory.
  3. ^ a b Chicago finished ahead of Arizona based on record versus common opponents (4–1 against 3–2 versus Philadelphia, Seattle, Carolina and Minnesota)
  4. ^ a b Arizona finished ahead of Philadelphia based on a head-to-head victory.
  5. ^ a b Philadelphia finished in second place in the NFC East based on a head-to-head sweep over Dallas.
  6. ^ When breaking ties for three or more teams under the NFL's rules, they are first broken within divisions, then comparing only the highest-ranked remaining team from each division.

Regular season results

[edit]

Week 1: at Washington Redskins

[edit]
Week One: New York Giants at Washington Redskins – Game summary
Quarter 1 2 34Total
Giants 7 7 0014
Redskins 0 14 7728

at FedExField, Landover, Maryland

Game information

The Giants opened the 2011 season where they had finished the 2010 season, on the road at FedExField against their division rival Washington Redskins to mark the tenth anniversary of September 11, 2001; both teams' cities were attacked by the terrorists that day.[15]

New York had not lost to Washington in the regular season in their last six meetings, but fell in this meeting 28–14. After scoring two first-quarter touchdowns and taking a 14–7 lead, the Giants failed to score again. A Ryan Kerrigan interception return in the third quarter put the Redskins in front and a defensive stop gave the Redskins the ball back. They added an insurance score in the fourth quarter when Rex Grossman found Jabar Gaffney in the end zone and iced the game. Grossman threw for 305 yards and two touchdowns, while Eli Manning threw for 268 with the one interception.

Week 2: vs. St. Louis Rams

[edit]
Week Two: St. Louis Rams at New York Giants – Game summary
Quarter 1 2 34Total
Rams 6 0 10016
Giants 7 14 7028

at MetLife Stadium, East Rutherford, New Jersey

Game information

The Giants' home opener was played on Monday night and they took a 28–16 victory over the NFC West runners-up from the previous year. The Rams, coached by former Giants defensive coordinator Steve Spagnuolo, took an early lead on a Josh Brown field goal, but that would be their only lead as Eli Manning hit Hakeem Nicks and Domenik Hixon for touchdowns. A Michael Boley fumble return added to that and gave New York a 21–6 lead at the half. St. Louis' only touchdown came in the third quarter as Bradford found Alexander to cut the Giants' lead to 28–16, where the game finished. Manning finished with 200 yards passing and threw his first two touchdown passes of the season while Bradford threw for 331 and one score. After the game, it was announced that Hixon would be lost for the year with a torn ACL.

Week 3: at Philadelphia Eagles

[edit]
Week Three: New York Giants at Philadelphia Eagles – Game summary
Quarter 1 2 34Total
Giants 14 0 01529
Eagles 0 13 3016

at Lincoln Financial Field, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

Game information

Taking to the road to face another divisional rival, the Giants took care of the Eagles in Philadelphia for the first time since 2008 after having lost the previous five meetings. It was the teams' first meeting since the infamous finish to their second matchup in 2010 which saw DeSean Jackson return a punt for a touchdown as time expired. Giants receiver Victor Cruz had a breakout game with 3 receptions for 110 yards and 2 touchdowns. Manning threw for 254 yards and four touchdowns. Jason Pierre-Paul added two sacks and Ahmad Bradshaw ran for 86 yards. Michael Vick threw for 176 yards and an interception and was knocked out of the game.

Week 4: at Arizona Cardinals

[edit]
Week Four: New York Giants at Arizona Cardinals – Game summary
Quarter 1 2 34Total
Giants 0 10 02131
Cardinals 3 3 14727

at University of Phoenix Stadium, Glendale, Arizona

  • Date: October 2
  • Game time: 4:05 pm. EDT/1:05 p.m. Arizona Time
  • Game weather: Played indoors (retractable roof closed)
  • Game attendance: 60,496
  • Referee: Jerome Boger
  • TV announcers (Fox): Kenny Albert, Daryl Johnston and Tony Siragusa
Game information

After trailing the Cardinals for most of the game, the Giants scored two touchdowns in the final 100 seconds of the game for their second comeback victory in as many games. Arizona led 20–10 entering the fourth on the strength of two Beanie Wells rushing touchdowns and two Jay Feely field goals. The Giants were aided by a controversial play on their final drive when Victor Cruz appeared to fumble the ball without being tackled. However, upon review it was determined that he had willfully given himself up before he fumbled and as such, he was considered to be down. On the next play Eli Manning snapped the ball before the Cardinals defense was set and threw the game-winning touchdown pass to Hakeem Nicks. Kolb drove the Cardinals into field goal range on their final drive, but a sack by Osi Umenyiora and pass breakup by Corey Webster sealed the win for the Giants. Wells rushed for 138 and three scores while Larry Fitzgerald caught eight of Kevin Kolb's passes for 102 yards. Manning finished 27-40 with 321 passing yards and 2 touchdowns, both in the 4th quarter. Nicks finished with 10 grabs for 162 yards and a touchdown.

Week 5: vs. Seattle Seahawks

[edit]
Week Five: Seattle Seahawks at New York Giants – Game summary
Quarter 1 2 34Total
Seahawks 14 0 22036
Giants 7 7 01125

at MetLife Stadium, East Rutherford, New Jersey

  • Date: October 9
  • Game time: 1:00 pm. EDT
  • Game weather: 81 °F (27 °C), Sunny
  • Game attendance: 78,650
  • Referee: Ed Hochuli
  • TV announcers (Fox): Thom Brennaman, Troy Aikman and Pam Oliver
Game information

The Giants could not contain their momentum from the previous week's comeback and lost a mistaken-laden game to the Seahawks. Cruz had a play-of-the-year candidate touchdown catch in the third quarter as he caught the ball off his own deflection and ran it 68 yards to give the Giants a 22–19 lead in the fourth. Marshawn Lynch led all rushers with 98 yards and a touchdown while Cruz recorded 161 receiving yards. Seahawks wide receiver Doug Baldwin responded with a go-ahead touchdown of his own, to give his team a 29-25 lead. While the Giants were in the red zone to win the game, Victor Cruz slipped on a pass from Manning, and the pass was intercepted by Brandon Browner, who returned it for a Seahawks touchdown, ending the game. Seahawks backup QB Charlie Whitehurst finished the game for an injured Tarvaris Jackson, who finished 15 for 22 for 166 yards. Baldwin and Victor Cruz tied for the game lead with receptions with eight and both recorded a touchdown. Despite Manning throwing three touchdowns and for over 400 yards, his three interceptions proved costly.

Week 6: vs. Buffalo Bills

[edit]
Week Six: Buffalo Bills at New York Giants – Game summary
Quarter 1 2 34Total
Bills 14 3 0724
Giants 7 10 7327

at MetLife Stadium, East Rutherford, New Jersey

Game information

The Buffalo Bills surprised the NFL world when they opened up to a 4–1 record coming into this game compared to the Giants' 3–2 record. The Giants bounced back from their loss to the Seahawks last week at Metlife Stadium by recording another last-minute win, beating the Bills 27–24 on a Lawrence Tynes field goal. Buffalo took an early 14–7 lead on two big offensive plays, an 80-yard run by Fred Jackson and a 60-yard pass from Ryan Fitzpatrick to Naaman Roosevelt. Ahmad Bradshaw recorded three one-yard touchdown runs and recorded his first 100-yard game of the year while Jackson rushed for 121. Hakeem Nicks led all receivers in yards with 96 and Eli Manning threw for 292 yards with no touchdowns. Fitzpatrick recorded two passing touchdowns but also threw two interceptions.

Week 8: vs. Miami Dolphins

[edit]
Week Eight: Miami Dolphins at New York Giants – Game summary
Quarter 1 2 34Total
Dolphins 7 7 3017
Giants 3 7 01020

at MetLife Stadium, East Rutherford, New Jersey

  • Date: October 30
  • Game time: 1:00 pm. EDT
  • Game weather: 41 °F (5 °C), Sunny
  • Game attendance: 79,302
  • Referee: Ron Winter
  • TV announcers (CBS): Greg Gumbel and Dan Dierdorf
Game information

The Giants again found themselves trailing the winless Dolphins entering the fourth quarter. New York was down 17–10 behind two rushing touchdowns, one by wildcat quarterback Steve Slaton and the other by starter Matt Moore, and a Dan Carpenter field goal. Lawrence Tynes recorded a field goal of his own while Eli Manning threw a touchdown to Mario Manningham in the second quarter. After Tynes recorded his second field goal in the fourth, Manning found Victor Cruz for a 25-yard touchdown with 2:30 left to give the Giants the victory. Cruz recorded 99 yards on seven receptions while Manning threw for 349 yards and two touchdowns. Reggie Bush led all runners with 103 yards and Moore threw for 138 and an interception.

Week 9: at New England Patriots

[edit]
Week Nine: New York Giants at New England Patriots – Game summary
Quarter 1 2 34Total
Giants 0 0 101424
Patriots 0 0 31720

at Gillette Stadium, Foxborough, Massachusetts

  • Date: November 6
  • Game time: 4:15 pm. EST
  • Game weather: 54 °F (12 °C), Sunny
  • Game attendance: 68,756
  • Referee: Pete Morelli
  • TV announcers (Fox): Joe Buck, Troy Aikman, and Pam Oliver
Game information

In the rematch of Super Bowl XLII and Super Bowl XLVI preview, Tom Brady was picked off two times in this game. With the ball at the New York 29, Brady's pass was tipped by Michael Boley and intercepted by Mathias Kiwanuka, who returned it to the Giants 28, for Brady's 2nd pick of the game. However, the next possession had the Patriots drive down to the Giants 12. Stephen Gostowski's 27-yard field goal went slight left, making this the first time the Patriots had no score at halftime since December 10, 2006. In this game, turnovers marred both teams. First, Lawrence Tynes kicked a 22-yard field goal that put them on 3–0. Then Brandon Jacobs ran it in 10 yards to put the Giants up 10–0. After that, Aaron Ross muffed the punt, giving the Patriots the ball at the Giants 33. However, they could only muster a 32-yard field goal. Devin Thomas muffed his punt, but scooped it up. Then, Julian Edelman fumbled the punt in Giants territory. Driving in the red zone, Manning got picked off by Kyle Arrington in the end zone. Seven plays later, Brady hit Aaron Hernandez for a 5-yard touchdown, tying the game at 10 just 32 seconds into the fourth quarter. With 7:08, Gostkowski's 45-yard field goal gave the Pats their first lead of the game, 13–10. Manning then led the Giants on an 85-yard march to a 10-yard touchdown pass to Mario Manningham with 3:03 remaining, putting the Giants on top 17–13. It looked like the Pats would win with a comeback of their own when Tom Brady threw a 14-yard pass to Rob Gronkowski, making it 20–17 with 1:36 to go. However, leading the New York Giants 80 yards in just over a minute, Manning hit Jake Ballard for a 1-yard touchdown with 15 seconds left for a 24–20 win on Sunday, repeating a come-from-behind victory similar to the 2008 title game between the teams. They were helped by a 20-yard pass interference penalty against safety Sergio Brown of the Patriots (5–3) that put the ball at the 1 with 30 seconds left. The Giants shocked the NFL and opened up to a 6–2 record. Eli Manning was praised by critics for his recent comeback victories. This was the first time the Patriots lost at home with Tom Brady as their quarterback in 31 regular season starts, and it was also the first Patriots loss at home where they had a 4th quarter lead in the Tom Brady era.

Week 10: at San Francisco 49ers

[edit]
Week Ten: New York Giants at San Francisco 49ers – Game summary
Quarter 1 2 34Total
Giants 3 3 7720
49ers 3 6 31527

at Candlestick Park, San Francisco, California

  • Date: November 13
  • Game time: 4:15 pm. EST/1:15 p.m. PST
  • Game weather: 58 °F (14 °C), Sunny
  • Game attendance: 69,732
  • Referee: Tony Corrente
  • TV announcers (Fox): Joe Buck, Troy Aikman and Pam Oliver
Game information

The Giants' winning streak came to an end in San Francisco but they once again had the game in doubt into the final minutes. Field goals comprised the first half scoring, with Lawrence Tynes hitting two and the 49ers' David Akers recording three. The Giants took their only lead in the third quarter as Eli Manning found Mario Manningham for 13 yards to complete an 84-yard drive. The 49ers recorded two touchdowns on a pass to Vernon Davis and a run by Kendall Hunter, while Manning hit Hakeem Nicks for a 32-yard touchdown late in the game. New York received the ball late in the game and drove inside the 49ers' red zone, but Manning's last pass was deflected at the line of scrimmage to preserve the San Francisco win. Manning threw for 311 yards and two touchdowns but also recorded two interceptions, while Alex Smith threw for 242 and the touchdown pass to Davis. Brandon Jacobs rushed for 55 yards to lead the runners while Victor Cruz's 84 yards was tops for the receivers.

Week 11: vs. Philadelphia Eagles

[edit]
Week Eleven: Philadelphia Eagles at New York Giants – Game summary
Quarter 1 2 34Total
Eagles 0 10 0717
Giants 0 3 0710

at MetLife Stadium, East Rutherford, New Jersey

Game information

Playing on Sunday night for the first time all season, the Giants could not take advantage of three Vince Young interceptions and fumbled on their final drive, allowing the Eagles to salvage a split in the season series. New York fell behind 10–0 on an Alex Henery field goal and a touchdown pass from Young to former Giant Steve Smith. Trailing 10–3 entering the fourth, Eli Manning sought out Victor Cruz who caught a pass for 24 yards and the tying touchdown. However, they allowed Young to put together an 18-play drive finishing with a Riley Cooper touchdown pass. The Giants got the ball and Manning completed a pass to Cruz for 47 yards. The next play, Manning was stripped of the ball, sealing the Eagles victory. Despite his three interceptions Young threw for 258 yards in his relief effort for the injured Michael Vick. Manning threw for 264 yards, 128 of which went to Cruz. LeSean McCoy again rushed for 100 yards, recording 113 on 23 carries.

Week 12: at New Orleans Saints

[edit]
Week Twelve: New York Giants at New Orleans Saints – Game summary
Quarter 1 2 34Total
Giants 0 3 71424
Saints 0 21 141449

at Mercedes-Benz Superdome, New Orleans, Louisiana

  • Date: November 28
  • Game time: 8:30 pm. EST/7:30 p.m. CST
  • Game weather: Played indoors (dome stadium)
  • Game attendance: 73,068
  • Referee: Gene Steratore
  • TV announcers (ESPN): Mike Tirico, Ron Jaworski, Jon Gruden and Wendi Nix
Game information

The week 12 Monday night matchup with the Saints in New Orleans was perhaps the lowest point of the Giants' season. New York fell behind 21–3 at halftime and New Orleans cruised to a huge victory. Eli Manning threw for 406 yards and two touchdowns, both to Victor Cruz, but by that time the game had long been decided. Drew Brees recorded 363 yards and 4 touchdowns, two of which were recorded by Jimmy Graham, and rookie halfback Mark Ingram II picked up 80 yards on the ground and scored the game's final touchdown on a 35-yard run. The 49 points were the Giants' most given up to that point in the season.

Week 13: vs. Green Bay Packers

[edit]
Week Thirteen: Green Bay Packers at New York Giants – Game summary
Quarter 1 2 34Total
Packers 7 14 71038
Giants 10 7 71135

at MetLife Stadium, East Rutherford, New Jersey

  • Date: December 4
  • Game time: 4:15 pm. EST
  • Game weather: 52 °F (11 °C), Fair
  • Game attendance: 80,634
  • Referee: Jeff Triplette
  • TV announcers (Fox): Joe Buck, Troy Aikman and Pam Oliver
Game information

Looking to snap their losing streak, the Giants took on the undefeated Super Bowl champion Packers at home following their blowout loss in New Orleans. New York rebounded from their poor offensive effort against the Saints by putting up 35 points on the defending Super Bowl Champions and had the lead three separate times during the course of the game. With 58 seconds remaining in the game and Green Bay leading 35–27, the Giants tied the game on a touchdown and two-point conversion by Eli Manning, Hakeem Nicks, and DJ Ware. The Giants could not stop Aaron Rodgers from leading the Packers back down the field, however, and Mason Crosby's field goal as time expired kept the hopes for an undefeated season in Green Bay alive for the moment. Manning threw three touchdown passes, with Nicks recording two and backup tight end Travis Beckum the other, and recorded 347 yards passing while Victor Cruz added 119 yards on seven catches. Rodgers recorded 369 yards and four touchdowns, two of which went to Donald Driver.

Week 14: at Dallas Cowboys

[edit]
Week Fourteen: New York Giants at Dallas Cowboys – Game summary
Quarter 1 2 34Total
Giants 5 10 71537
Cowboys 7 10 31434

at Cowboys Stadium, Arlington, Texas

  • Date: December 11
  • Game time: 8:20 pm. EST/7:20 pm. CST
  • Game weather: Played indoors (roof closed)
  • Game attendance: 95,952
  • Referee: Scott Green
  • TV announcers (NBC): Al Michaels, Cris Collinsworth and Michele Tafoya
Game information

The Giants went to Arlington, Texas for their first meeting with the division rival Cowboys. Once again, the Giants were able to record a victory in the final minutes. Trailing late in the fourth quarter, Eli Manning recorded a touchdown pass to tight end Jake Ballard to pull the team within five. After Tony Romo failed to hit Miles Austin on a third down and short on the Cowboys' next drive, the Giants drove down the field in 1:26 and Brandon Jacobs scored to give the Giants a 35–34 lead, extended to 37–34 when DJ Ware converted the two-point play. Dallas drove down the field and got into position for a Dan Bailey field goal that would have tied the game. Just before he kicked the ball, however, Giants coach Tom Coughlin called timeout, negating Bailey's successful kick. On the retry, Jason Pierre-Paul recorded a blocked field goal by tipping the kick as it was coming up, securing the win and finishing what was a huge night for the second-year defensive end; Pierre-Paul recorded two sacks, a forced fumble (recovered by Deon Grant), and a safety as well. NBC color analyst Cris Collinsworth praised Eli Manning for generating yet another fourth quarter comeback. Manning threw for 400 yards and two touchdowns while Romo recorded 321 yards and four scores. Laurent Robinson caught one of those passes as part of his four-catch, 137-yard day while Hakeem Nicks recorded 154 yards on seven catches. Jacobs scored two rushing touchdowns, while recording his first 100-yard rushing game of the season. This game was ranked #2 on NFL.com's Top 20 Games of 2011, the highest regular season game on the list.[16]

Week 15: vs. Washington Redskins

[edit]
Week Fifteen: Washington Redskins at New York Giants – Game summary
Quarter 1 2 34Total
Redskins 3 14 3323
Giants 0 3 0710

at MetLife Stadium, East Rutherford, New Jersey

  • Date: December 18
  • Game time: 1:00 pm. EST
  • Game weather: 29 °F (−2 °C), Sunny
  • Game attendance: 78,861
  • Referee: Alberto Riveron
  • TV announcers (Fox): Joe Buck, Troy Aikman and Pam Oliver
Game information

The Giants failed to capitalize on their win from the week before and once again were defeated by the Redskins for the season sweep. Washington never trailed in this game and forced Eli Manning into three interceptions. Although the Giants recorded two off of Rex Grossman, they never were able to get into any sort of offensive groove and lost 23–10. Washington led 17–3 at halftime and never looked back. Grossman threw for 185 yards and a touchdown to Santana Moss. Jabar Gaffney led the Redskins with 85 yards receiving while Hakeem Nicks recorded 73 for the Giants. Manning finished with 257 yards.

This was the last time the Giants were swept by Washington until 2021.

Week 16: at New York Jets

[edit]
Week Sixteen: New York Giants at New York Jets – Game summary
Quarter 1 2 34Total
Giants 0 10 71229
Jets 7 0 0714

at MetLife Stadium, East Rutherford, New Jersey

  • Date: December 24
  • Game time: 1:00 pm. EST
  • Game weather: 35 °F (2 °C), Sunny
  • Game attendance: 79,088
  • Referee: Pete Morelli
  • TV announcers (Fox): Kenny Albert, Daryl Johnston and Tony Siragusa
Game information

This matchup on Christmas Eve against the crosstown rival New York Jets was considered the most important ever. Both teams needed to win their last two games to make the playoffs and Jets coach Rex Ryan, while trying to motivate his players, added fuel to the fire. He publicly claimed the Jets were the better New York team, saying he didn't get hired to be anybody's "little brother." He went on and covered the Giants three Super Bowl logos in the locker room hallway leading up to the game and sent former Giants Super Bowl hero and current Jet Plaxico Burress as the only captain for the coin toss. The Jets scored a touchdown on their opening drive on a Mark Sanchez touchdown pass to fullback Josh Baker, aided by the Giants having 12 men on the field on a 4th down earlier in the drive. Trailing 7–3 in the second quarter and facing 3rd & 10 from their own 1-yard line, Eli Manning threw a short out pass to Victor Cruz. Cruz broke two tackles and then took off for the end zone, outrunning the remaining Jet defenders on his way to a record-tying 99-yard touchdown reception and a 10–7 lead which the Giants never looked back from. Ahmad Bradshaw had a punishing touchdown run near the end of the third quarter. Down 20-14 and with an opportunity to march down the field to take the lead, Chris Canty forced an intentional grounding penalty in the endzone on Sanchez resulting in a safety. Bradshaw had a 19-yard touchdown run on the next play to seal the 29-14 victory and set up a winner-take-all season finale against the Cowboys. Manning recorded 225 yards and a touchdown, while Cruz's three receptions garnered him 164 of those. Sanchez threw a career-high 59 passes for 258 yards and two total touchdowns but was intercepted twice and Dustin Keller led all receivers with eight receptions.

Week 17: vs. Dallas Cowboys

[edit]
Week Seventeen: Dallas Cowboys at New York Giants – Game summary
Quarter 1 2 34Total
Cowboys 0 0 7714
Giants 7 14 01031

at MetLife Stadium, East Rutherford, New Jersey

  • Date: January 1
  • Game time: 8:20 pm. EST[17]
  • Game weather: 48 °F (9 °C), Rain Showers
  • Game attendance: 81,077
  • Referee: Walt Anderson
  • TV announcers (NBC): Al Michaels, Chris Collinsworth and Michele Tafoya
Game information

With the NFC East title on the line the Giants-Cowboys game was moved to Sunday night, marking the first time in the history of prime-time television that both meetings between division rivals were played on the showcase game of the week. The Giants finished off the Cowboys to record the season sweep and win the division. This time, the Giants got out to a 21–0 halftime advantage on a 74-yard hookup from Eli Manning to Victor Cruz and two touchdowns from Ahmad Bradshaw. The Cowboys rallied to within a touchdown when Tony Romo found Laurent Robinson for a second time in the game, but the Giants put the game away with clutch 4th quarter play from Manning and put the nail in the coffin with a 4-yard touchdown pass to Hakeem Nicks, his fifteenth 4th quarter pass of the season, an NFL record. Manning finished with 346 yards and three touchdowns, finishing with a career-high 4,933 passing yards and 29 touchdown passes. Cruz again had a huge game with 178 receiving yards and a touchdown, finishing with 1,536 yards, a franchise record, and nine touchdowns.

Playoffs

[edit]

Schedule

[edit]
Playoff Round Date Opponent (seed) Result Record Game Site NFL.com
recap
Wild Card January 8, 2012 Atlanta Falcons (5) W 24–2 1–0 MetLife Stadium Recap
Divisional January 15, 2012 at Green Bay Packers (1) W 37–20 2–0 Lambeau Field Recap
NFC Championship January 22, 2012 at San Francisco 49ers (2) W 20–17 (OT) 3–0 Candlestick Park Recap
Super Bowl XLVI February 5, 2012 vs. New England Patriots (A1) W 21–17 4–0 Lucas Oil Stadium Recap

NFC Wild Card Game: vs. #5 Atlanta Falcons

[edit]
NFC Wild Card Game: Atlanta Falcons at New York Giants – Game summary
Quarter 1 2 34Total
Falcons 0 2 002
Giants 0 7 10724

at MetLife Stadium, East Rutherford, New Jersey

  • Date: January 8
  • Game time: 1:00 pm. EST
  • Game weather: 44 °F (7 °C), Partly Cloudy
  • Game attendance: 79,909
  • Referee: Carl Cheffers
  • TV announcers (Fox): Joe Buck, Troy Aikman, Pam Oliver and Chris Myers
Game information

NFC Divisional Game: at #1 Green Bay Packers

[edit]
NFC Divisional Game: New York Giants at Green Bay Packers – Game summary
Quarter 1 2 34Total
Giants 10 10 01737
Packers 3 7 3720

at Lambeau Field, Green Bay, Wisconsin

  • Date: January 15
  • Game time: 4:30 pm. EST/3:30 pm. CST
  • Game weather: 31 °F (−1 °C), Sunny
  • Game attendance: 72,080
  • Referee: Bill Leavy
  • TV announcers (Fox): Joe Buck, Troy Aikman, Pam Oliver and Chris Myers
Game information

NFC Championship Game: at #2 San Francisco 49ers

[edit]
NFC Championship Game: New York Giants at San Francisco 49ers – Game summary
Quarter 1 2 34OTTotal
Giants 0 10 07320
49ers 7 0 73017

at Candlestick Park, San Francisco, California

  • Date: January 22
  • Game time: 6:30 pm. EST/3:30 pm. PST
  • Game weather: 52 °F (11 °C), Rain
  • Game attendance: 69,732
  • Referee: Ed Hochuli
  • TV announcers (Fox): Joe Buck, Troy Aikman, Pam Oliver and Chris Myers
Game information

Super Bowl XLVI: vs. New England Patriots

[edit]
Super Bowl XLVI: New York Giants vs. New England Patriots – Game summary
Quarter 1 2 34Total
Giants 9 0 6621
Patriots 0 10 7017

at Lucas Oil Stadium, Indianapolis, Indiana

  • Date: February 5
  • Game time: 6:30 pm. EST
  • Game weather: Played indoors (retractable roof closed)
  • Game attendance: 68,658
  • Referee: John Parry
  • TV announcers (NBC): Al Michaels, Cris Collinsworth, Alex Flanagan and Michele Tafoya
Game information
Trailer honoring the Giants for winning the Super Bowl

In winning the Super Bowl, the Giants became the first team to have won Super Bowl games broadcast on all four U.S. national networks (CBS, ABC, Fox, and now NBC), as well as the first team to win Super Bowls in four different decades. The Giants-Patriots game was the 11th time that there was a rematch in a Super Bowl. In doing so, the 2011 Giants became the first team with fewer than 10 wins (9 wins – 7 losses) in the regular season to win a Super Bowl. Furthermore, Super Bowl XLVI marked just the second time in Super Bowl history that opening score of the title game occurred with a safety when Justin Tuck pressured Tom Brady, and he was called for intentional grounding; the first instance was Super Bowl IX, when Pittsburgh registered a safety on Hall of Fame coach Bud Grant's Vikings. Eli Manning won his second Super Bowl MVP award in four years after orchestrating another game-winning touchdown drive in the game's final moments.

Season facts

[edit]
  • This is the fourth time that the Giants played a team that they would later play in the Super Bowl. The Giants are 2–2 in regular season and 4–0 in the Super Bowl in these games.
  • The Giants' overall Super Bowl record is 4-1.
  • The Giants are 5–0 in NFC Championship Games.
  • The Giants scoring defense was the lowest of Super Bowl winners, ranking 25th after allowing an average of 25 points per game.[18]
  • Also notable is that the Giants' rushing offense was ranked 32nd (dead last) in the NFL with 1,427 yards, or an average of 89.2 rushing yards per game.[19]
  • The Giants finished the regular season with a -6-point differential (394 scored, 400 allowed), the worst differential of any Super Bowl champion.
  • With a 9-7 regular-season record, the 2011 Giants were the first, and are the only, sub-10-win team to win the Super Bowl. They are the third 9-7 team to compete in the Super Bowl, with the 1979 Los Angeles Rams and 2008 Arizona Cardinals both falling to the Pittsburgh Steelers in Super Bowls XIV and XLIII.
  • The 2011 New York Giants won their first playoff game at home since the 2000 NFC Championship against the Minnesota Vikings during the Wild Card game.
  • The 2011 Giants were the first team to win the Super Bowl as the NFC's 4th Seed, with the second being the 2021 Los Angeles Rams.[20] The 2008 Cardinals and 1979 Rams were also 4th seeds when they went to the Super Bowl, but lost.
  • When the Giants played the New England Patriots in Super Bowl XLVI, the Patriots were 13-3. The Giants also beat them in Foxborough.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "2011 NFL Preview". sportsecyclopedia.com. Retrieved January 15, 2017.
  2. ^ The previous teams to do so were the 1979 Los Angeles Rams and 2008 Arizona Cardinals, Football Outsiders: Conference Championship DVOA Ratings
  3. ^ Miklasz, Bernie (February 5, 2012). "Giants look good, but Pats have the goods". St. Louis Post-Dispatch. p. C1. The Giants seemingly are the NFL's version of the 2011 St. Louis Cardinals: a rather ordinary team, prematurely counted out, only to launch an improbable and magical comeback to a world championship.
  4. ^ "NHL Hockey Standings | NHL.com". www.nhl.com. Retrieved February 11, 2024.
  5. ^ Wes O'Donnell (April 20, 2011). "Todd McShay 2011 NFL Mock Draft: McShay Pegs N.Y. Giants with OT Gabe Carimi". Bleacher Report. Retrieved April 26, 2011.
  6. ^ Wyche, Steve (April 25, 2011). "Mock Draft 2011". Nfl.com. Archived from the original on April 29, 2011. Retrieved April 26, 2011.
  7. ^ Pat Kirwan (March 13, 2011). "Defense rules early in a look at the first two rounds". Nfl.com. Retrieved October 27, 2021.
  8. ^ "Mock Draft". New Era Scouting. March 28, 2011. Archived from the original on April 6, 2011. Retrieved April 2, 2011.
  9. ^ "2011 NFL Mock Draft". Draft King. Retrieved March 26, 2011.
  10. ^ Charles Davis (March 2, 2011). "Post-combine projection has Panthers taking aim at Newton". NFL. Archived from the original on March 7, 2011. Retrieved October 27, 2021.
  11. ^ Mike Garafolo (June 24, 2011). "Giants to hire former Jet, Patriot Larry Izzo as assistant special teams coach". nj.com. Retrieved July 16, 2011.
  12. ^ Begley, Ian; Youngmisuk, Ohm (August 26, 2011). "Hurricane postpones Jets-Giants game". ESPN.com. Retrieved October 30, 2021.
  13. ^ NFL.com Staff (August 26, 2011). "Giants-Jets postponed until Monday night". NFL.com. Retrieved August 26, 2011.
  14. ^ "2011 Conference Standings". NFL.com. Retrieved December 8, 2013.
  15. ^ Vacchiano, Ralph (April 19, 2011). "Giants will open in Washington on 9/11". New York Daily News. Retrieved April 19, 2011.
  16. ^ Harrison, Elliot. "Top 20 NFL Games of 2011". NFL.com. Retrieved January 15, 2017.
  17. ^ https://www.giants.com/news/giants-vs-dallas-game-moved-to-8-20-p-m-6676619 Archived 2012-01-07 at the Wayback Machine Giants vs. Dallas Game Moved to 8:20 pm
  18. ^ "Mind-blowing stats for Week 8 of the 2013 season". National Football League. October 23, 2013. Retrieved October 23, 2013.
  19. ^ "2011 NFL Standings, Team & Offensive Statistics: Rushing Offense". Pro Football Reference. December 16, 2013. Retrieved January 9, 2015.
  20. ^ "Graphic: Which NFL Playoff Seeds Succeed?". January 3, 2013.