EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — Pump the brakes on that illogical playoff talk. Hold off on the idea that the New York Giants offense is fixed.
At least that is obvious after watching them stumble their way through Sunday’s 17-0 loss in the steady rain to the Tennessee Titans. It was the second time the Giants were shut out in the span of less than a year. They were also blanked last December in Arizona.
It was the seventh time Manning was shut out as a starting quarterback, tying him with his father Archie for fifth-most all-time, according to ESPN Stats & Information.
In this flop, the Giants (5-9) dropped passes, committed penalties and Manning contributed both a costly interception deep in Tennessee territory and an awful fumble deep in his own territory. It was reminiscent of the struggles from earlier this season that contributed greatly to their 1-7 start. The Giants defense was hardly great, but they kept them in the game most of Sunday.
The ugly performance ended any Giants dream of reaching the postseason. The Giants held the slimmest playoff hopes entering Sunday’s game, less than 1 percent, according to ESPN analytics. They were officially eliminated from contention with their loss combined with a Minnesota Vikings win against the Miami Dolphins.
It was a total offensive collapse against the Titans (8-6). In recent weeks the Giants had leaned on running back Saquon Barkley and admittedly ran the offense through him. When that didn’t work on Sunday with the Titans keyed on the rookie, it all broke down completely. Barkley had 31 yards on 14 carries, including minus-8 in the first quarter. The Giants finished with 260 total yards.
There was no Odell Beckham Jr. (he missed his second straight game with a quad injury) to carry the load or ignite the dormant passing game. Manning wasn’t capable of putting them on his shoulders, either. He finished 21 of 44 passing for 229 yards with two turnovers.
Now, it’s all about the future for the Giants with two weeks remaining. Specifically, the future of the quarterback position. Manning’s string of five mostly positive outings (10 touchdowns, 2 turnovers) came to an end with this clunker. He’ll be 38 in a few weeks, and the Giants need to start making arrangements for their quarterback of the future. It’s an inevitability even they’ve conceded.
How Manning and this offense performs in the final two games against the Indianapolis Colts and Dallas Cowboys will likely go a long way in deciding how they handle the future of the most important position on their team and perhaps the greatest quarterback in franchise history. The Giants’ brass had been encouraged in recent weeks by the direction of the team, but most of the positive results came against inferior competition and backup quarterbacks.
The Titans were the first of three games against teams in playoff contention. It should be a more accurate barometer for the offense. They barely registered a heartbeat in this one, and they hardly appeared fixed.
General manager Dave Gettleman has a lot of work left to do. The offensive line — particularly the right side — still needs tweaking. Tackle Chad Wheeler and guard Jamon Brown struggled again Sunday in pass protection. Brown allowed a sack and committed a penalty.
The line also couldn’t open holes for Barkley on a wet afternoon when they needed to lean on the running game. This came after a string of positive results that included four straight 100-yard rushing games from the playmaking rookie. Three of Barkely’s seven first-half runs went for no gain or negative yards. His long in the contest was 17 yards.
It left the Giants, once again, without any offensive answers.