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Giants G.M. Dave Gettleman to Retire; Coach’s Fate Uncertain

The Giants have had only five general managers since 1974, a spell of stability and patience illustrated by the four Super Bowl trophies on display at their headquarters in East Rutherford, N.J. But it has been 10 years since their last title — five since their last playoff appearance — and that sliver of time might as well be an epoch in their universe.

The day after another fiasco of a Giants season reached its merciful conclusion, with a 22-7 home loss to Washington that dropped their record to 4-13, the team embarked on another overhaul. The Giants announced that their general manager, Dave Gettleman, had retired, but issued no such clarity on the status of the coach, Joe Judge.

Judge addressed the team on Monday, as usual, but was not made available to the news media, and the team’s owners did not acknowledge his status beyond a brief allusion in a statement.

In outlining his ideal qualities for Gettleman’s successor, the co-owner John Mara said the team’s next general manager will oversee all aspects of the Giants’ football operations — which includes coaching. It seems possible, then, that whomever the Giants wind up hiring, could elect to bring aboard their own coach rather than submit to the sort of arranged marriage that rarely works out.

For all the Giants’ front-office continuity across the last several decades, they have struggled to identify a coach with the staying power — and success — of Tom Coughlin, who stepped down in January 2016 after 12 seasons. His replacement, Ben McAdoo, reached the playoffs in his first season but didn’t make it through a second. The next two coaches, Pat Shurmur and Judge, both hired by Gettleman, have gone 19-46, the team’s worst four-year stretch since 1975-78.

Gettleman, 70, a longtime Giants executive who built the 2015 N.F.C. champion Carolina Panthers, inherited a team at the end of the 2017 season that had uncertainty at quarterback, a porous offensive line and a vacancy at head coach. He leaves a team with uncertainty at quarterback, a porous offensive line and, perhaps, a vacancy at head coach. For the first time in a while, the Giants are in worse straits than their co-tenant at MetLife Stadium, the Jets, who also went 4-13 but have a promising quarterback in Zach Wilson and the sound leadership of Coach Robert Saleh and General Manager Joe Douglas.

The Giants’ plunge into disarray under Gettleman has been both gradual and not unanticipated, dating to his first draft, in 2018: With the second overall pick he dismissed the diminished value of running backs by selecting Saquon Barkley instead of a quarterback, or even the elite guard Quenton Nelson.

Compromised by injuries and hurt by the Giants’ poor run-blocking, Barkley missed 18 games the last two seasons and rushed for just 627 yards with two touchdowns.

After the 2019 season, Mara said that he hoped Gettleman would remain general manager for many years and that the owners thought he was capable of assembling a “great” team. He did not.

In free agency, Gettleman doled out major contracts that backfired to offensive tackle Nate Solder ($62 million), and receivers Golden Tate ($37.5 million) and Kenny Golladay ($72 million). He signed receiver Odell Beckham Jr. to a huge extension, making him the league’s highest-paid receiver, and then traded him for players — Jabrill Peppers, Dexter Lawrence and Oshane Ximines — who haven’t developed into stars.

Gettleman also invested the 2019 sixth overall pick in Daniel Jones, who, playing behind a meager offensive line, has neither flopped nor offered demonstrable evidence that he should be viewed as the team’s long-term quarterback.

Gettleman did make shrewd moves, such as signing cornerback James Bradberry before the 2020 season; drafting left tackle Andrew Thomas and receiver Kadarius Toney; and trading back in last April’s draft — for his first time as a general manager — to amass another first-round choice in the 2022 draft.

The two premium selections, at Nos. 5 and 7, now convey to an as yet undetermined Giants executive the same charge entrusted to Gettleman four years ago: restore a fading franchise — the franchise of George Young and Ernie Accorsi and Jerry Reese — to respectability.

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