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Giants leave no doubt as they continue all-business approach

This could have gone differently. This could have gone sideways. The Giants had 14 days to stew about their last game, a disappointing showing in Seattle. During the bye week they’d lost an essential part of their emotional DNA when safety Xavier McKinney had an ATV accident

And the opponent … well, you’re not human if you don’t notice they aren’t very good. 

All of these things could have been in play on a windy day at MetLife Stadium, the first day when you had to admit to yourself that autumn had finally arrived, that winter is definitely on deck. All of these things could have conspired to sabotage the Giants, to impair their grinding journey toward the playoffs. All of these things could’ve been like stepping on a hidden mousetrap. 

None of those things happened. The Giants started the game as efficiently as you can: three-and-out on defense, touchdown on offense. The rest of the game may have been a grim slog, and it may even have been hard for the Giants to keep their home audience the whole way since the other 1 o’clock TV game in market was the extraordinary Bills-Vikings game. 

The Giants didn’t care. They took care of business. They beat the 1-7-1 Texans 24-16, they improved to 7-2 and they made sure there would be little mystery to the proceedings by leading wire-to-wire for the first time all year. 

“We did a lot of things well,” Giants coach Brian Daboll said. “Guys played hard, played physically, we had some timely turnovers. It was a good team win.” 

Brian Daboll reacts after the Giants' win over the Texans.
Brian Daboll reacts after the Giants’ win over the Texans.
Bill Kostroun/New York Post

Daboll had some extra motivation since his youngest daughter, Avery, was celebrating a birthday and had requested as her present a victorious game ball. 

“Talk about pressure,” he said. 

The Giants’ motivation came in simply playing a pitch-perfect game, which is what they did. Daniel Jones achieved the highest passer rating of his career — 153.3 — and he did that by completing 13 of his 17 passes (two for touchdowns) and turning around to hand the ball off 42 times. Thirty-five of those hand-offs went into the ultra-reliable hands of Saquon Barkley, who work-horsed his way to 152 yards and a touchdown. 

“It was fun,” Jones said of his afternoon. “To watch the guys upfront, they did a great job, controlled the line of scrimmage. We had a great plan coming in, and Saquon did a great job running it.” 

Daboll blanched a little bit when someone offered up the word “conservative” to describe the game plan he put together for Houston. 

“We tried to do what we thought we could do,” Daboll said. “Each week we do what we think we need to do for that particular game. If it’s 60 passes, it’s 60 passes. I wouldn’t give it a label, we just do the best we can to formulate a plan.” 

Daniel Jones hands the ball off to Saquon Barkley during the fourth quarter.
Daniel Jones hands the ball off to Saquon Barkley during the fourth quarter.
Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post

The truth is, it was exactly what the Giants needed to do against a Texans team that is every bit the reflection of their record. The Giants were good enough to overwhelm them on the defensive side of the ball, strong enough to overpower them on offense. So why risk mistakes, on either side, that would allow the Texans to stay in the game? 

So if it was a vanilla plan … well, vanilla can also be delicious, no? 

“We’ve got a lot of players with chips on their shoulders,” Giants defensive end Kayvon Thibodeaux said. “We have a lot of players who like to play with their backs to the walls.” 

They are also an interesting mix of veterans who’ve known nothing but failure with the Giants and newcomers who know nothing but success across this season’s first nine games. But even in tasting success they know how fragile it is. 

This was the first game in which they didn’t trail at some point. And even though there wasn’t one moment after Jones found Lawrence Cager for the touchdown that gave them a 7-0 lead that the Giants felt in any peril of losing, this wound up yet another one-score victory — same as all six of the ones that came before. 

Cager, the ex-Jet, represents another element of the Giants that has become a source of real strength: guys who seize opportunities when given them. Isaiah Hodgins, a recent pickup from Buffalo, was another (two catches, 41 yards), as was Dane Belton, subbing for McKinney, who picked off Houston quarterback Davis Mills — snuffing the Texans’ last legitimate hope of a miracle. 

The Giants? They need no miracles. They show up every week and they compete. Not every week will merit preservation by the historical society. At 7-2, there isn’t a soul clad in blue who cares about that. Not even a little.

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