What a difference a couple of years can make in the life of an NFL quarterback. Two years ago, New York Giants QB Daniel Jones was the toast of the Big Apple. Alongside running back Saquon Barkley, Jones and his teammates surprised the football world by making it to the postseason and winning an upset victory on the road in Minnesota against a Vikings team that won 13 games.
About to become a free agent, Jones had hit the jackpot. He threw for a career-high 3,200 yards and accounted for a total of 22 rushing and passing touchdowns. He threw only five interceptions. Giants fans and team management were in love with “Danny Dimes.” That offseason, the Giants rewarded Jones with a four-year contract worth $160 million.
What has followed can only be described as a nightmare for both Jones and the G-Men.
Jones asked for and was granted his release by the Giants on Friday after being demoted to the fourth-string QB spot on the roster.
NFL quarterbacks get paid more than pretty much any other position in professional team sports. And if they’re successful, the prestige that comes with those fat paychecks is immense. But it’s also a position where loyalties shift quickly, with seasons and tens of millions on the line. Jones is just the latest example.
Jones asked for and was granted his release by the Giants on Friday after being demoted to the fourth-string QB spot on the roster. The decision to move on from Jones followed an injury-plagued 2023 season and a statistically dismal 2024 campaign that has left the Giants sitting at 2-8 coming into their game Sunday against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. (Jones’ inability to carry his team past the lowly Carolina Panthers in Munich on Nov. 7 was a particularly noteworthy low.)
Since signing his lucrative deal, Jones had a win-loss record of just 3-13, with 10 touchdowns and 13 interceptions. He missed most of last year after a neck injury and returned in 2024 to a team sorely missing its top offensive weapon, Barkley, whom the Giants allowed to walk away in free agency to the rival Philadelphia Eagles. Adding insult to injury, Barkley is having arguably his best season for an Eagles team sitting atop the NFC East division.
Despite still having seven games left to play, the postmortem on the 2024 Giants has already begun. Who is to blame? Is it Jones? Is it head coach Brian Daboll? General Manager Joe Schoen? Honestly, the full answer might just be all of the above.
The Giants clearly bought into the hype surrounding their Cinderella-adjacent 2022 postseason. The unexpected playoff berth and a good, but not great, season from Jones, created the impression of momentum that quickly dissipated. So starved for success after the retirement of Eli Manning, the Giants thought the combination of Jones, Barkley and the coaching of Daboll could lead to glory. Management pushed their chips to the center of the table thinking they had a winning hand, only to realize they had completely misread their cards.









