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Coordinator Corner: Gilbride on Cruz, Ballard

by John Fennelly on December 30th, 2011 at 7:06 am

Giants offensive coordinator Kevin Gilbride is preparing for the rematch with the Dallas Cowboys. The Giants scored 37 points in that game. Will they need that much again this Sunday…?

On the fact that Jake Ballard may not play…
“It is a big concern because obviously Jake had worked his way into being a very important part of the puzzle. In the game in Dallas he was huge and as the game went on at the end and that last drive, they started using a technique that I hadn’t seen until I happened to be watching television and saw Romeo Crennel do it in Kansas City and all of a sudden they were doing it. They were punting two guys in like a punt coverage against Victor and we couldn’t win with Victor so we had to win somewhere else. There were a couple things you could do but one of the things and easy solution was to see if Jake could win and he made a huge play for us and got it right down to the one-yard line. It is a concern obviously. You wish Jake was there and could play but we have been fortunate this year that when guys have been hurt, people stepped up and filled in and have done a good job for us. We are looking forward to seeing what Travis can do. When he has been healthy, he has made some plays and hopefully he or Bear will do it.”

What is clutch….?
“I wish I had an answer for that. I would say the good thing is that when it gets down to those critical situations, certain groups and certain people manage to tighten in their focus even more. Some guys, some groups and some teams get overwhelmed by it. Fortunately for us, that hasn’t been the case. I think the opposite has happened. We actually get more focused, more zoomed in and have responded more consistently with more big plays in those situations than we do throughout the course of the game.”

Have you noticed your players feeding off of Eli?
“I think having your quarterback that is obviously not a nerve bite is certainly beneficial. I don’t think there is any question about that. He is the unspoken leader out there, you have 10 guys looking at one guy so that guy that they are looking at, it is imperative that he has poise and belief that we are going to get this thing done. I think the fact that we have experienced some success, everybody feeds into that. There is no sense of panic or that we can’t get this thing done. The few times that we haven’t, it has not been because we didn’t move the ball, it has been a turnover here or a slip here or a tackle from behind there but in both those cases, we were moving down to score again.”

How much upside does Victor Cruz have?
“I have jokingly said that he giveth and taketh away on a play-to-play basis. In all honesty, he has grown over the last three or four weeks. There haven’t been any mistakes and he has made some terrific reads. It is really impressive to me to see the growth that has taken place. What I think is that there will be fewer and fewer mistakes as the year goes on providing that he stays healthy and everything else becomes faster. I don’t see any reason why he won’t continue to get better and better.”

Did his journey cause him to take so long to come along?
“Where he was at, they threw the ball a lot and there is a lot of terrific coaches at the 1AA level. He at least had a background that he could reference and I think those things helped. When you are in that inside position and that is where we needed somebody to be, there is a lot going on. It is so much easier outside because you have a corner and if the corner goes deep or roles up and the safety is over the top, that is it, but inside you have somebody over your head, you have a linebacker, a safety and the other safety across, you have so many more variables in the equation of you making the final decision it is hard to make that position. He has struggled but I just have seen so many fewer mistakes. He has really reduced the number of errors he makes and he is making a lot of good decisions and you saw the great plays. Even on the ones where he reads it right and his decision was right. He is doing the right things and I am really proud of him and what has taken place because I don’t know how fair it was to expect so much. We always knew we had a guy that we knew could do it but you never know if they are going to do it. He looked like he had the quickness and he had the ability to make some tough catches that he had shown in the preseason. He had the body type to withstand some of the hits that he was going to be taking inside but you never know. For example, the run after the catch, I was looking for a first down and we had a good call and made the first down but all of a sudden he goes for a touchdown so what was an 11 yard gain turned into a huge play.”

transcript courtesy Giants Communications Dept

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About John Fennelly

Managing Editor of SNY.tv's Giants Football Blog - the ultimate destination for New York Giants' news, opinion and entertainment. View all posts by John Fennelly →
  • Anonymous

    I felt like Buddy Ryan on the Houston Oilers sideline, when Gilbride calls a pass on 1st down
    with a lead, 13min left in 4th and the clock stopped. Why he didn’t run, get the clock rolling, is beyond me- I thought no wonder Buddy lost it-finally made sense.

    • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_AJF6EPRCJZJA2KCSJP5HJ7OQ2A DanielS

      I dislike Killdrive more than most, so it pains me to do this, but I have to actually stick up for him here. I read somewhere earlier in the week that he did call for a run, but Eli got to the line and saw how many guys they had stacked in the box, so he changed to a pass.

      With that said, this is a part of a bigger issue that I’ve had with the Giants for a very long time…. they have no idea how to put an opponent away!! Once the Giants have a lead they have a tendency to get very, very conservative with their playcalling. There was 13:00 minutes left in the game!! That is a lot of time! If they ran the ball 3 times in that situation and were stuffed every time, then the same people criticizing the pass call would be complaining that, once again, they were playing too conservative. It’s really a lose-lose situation for them.

      IMO, even if it was Killdrive who called the pass there, I still wouldn’t criticize him. No one would expect Brady and the Patriots to run the ball 3 times in that situation, so why should Eli and the Giants? 13:00 minutes leaves way too much time on the clock for us to run it 3 times and then punt it from deep in our own territory. Unfortunately, the pass turning into an INT, but if the Giants passed their way down the field and scored another TD then most fans would have applauded the Giants for finally showing a killer instinct. If the same thing happens this weekend, then I hope the Giants are ready to pass the ball again, because as we showed against Dallas, 13:00 minutes can be forever in football…

      • Anonymous

        Yes, I agree with your reply for the most part, BUT

        At this Eli should know better than to not call a run and get the clock moving.
        That’s part of putting the other team away, IMO – plus at this point the Giants
        should have much less issues in getting the plays in, that seem to be an Eli thing,
        maybe it’s Killdrive-

        I base nothing off what other people think of the Giants- 90% of it is BS to me .
        Let the Patriots do what they want, let GB and NO be drooled all over.
        Someone always loses that first playoff game after a first end bye.
        And for the record, Parcells was “vanilla” coach who had no imagination. Remember ?

        The Giants gotta win

        • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_AJF6EPRCJZJA2KCSJP5HJ7OQ2A DanielS

          They had a run called, but once he got to the line he saw that the Jets defensive scheme was going to blow up the play. With that being the case, I have no problem with Eli switching the play to something he thinks might work rather than keep the currently called play and potentially lose a few yards.

          Putting the game away means keeping the ball on offense and putting some more points on the board — hopefully taking a lot of time off the clock in the process. But there was 13 minutes left in the game!! If the Giants run 3 times and get stuffed every time, that still leaves the Jets with a LOT of time — not to mention the fact that the Giants were pinned, so the Jets would get great field position with about 11 minutes left.

          If there was just 2 or 3 minutes left in the game then I’d agree 100% with running the ball. At that point, even if they did go 3 and out, there’d be less than a minute left for the jets to score 12+ points… but you don’t start getting that conservative with your playcalling when there’s 13 minutes left!

          Thankfully this convo means nothing as the Giants won the game anyway!

          • Anonymous

            Again – you get the clock running, Eli can audible a
            running play. The most important thing is to get the
            clock running – you can lose a yard or two – 2 first downs
            will burn plenty of clock – The Giants have poor clock
            management , but they won AND have to win tonight.

            Eli AND KILLDRIVE should know better than pass in that
            situation no matter who did it.