Long before the ink touched the paper in the offices of East Rutherford, John Harbaugh had already mentally assumed the position at the helm of the New York Giants. The revelation of his arrival did not take place at a press conference, but in a Freudian slip – or perhaps an intentional one – during a phone call.

Harbaugh’s arrival is not just a hiring; it is a desperate attempt to stop the bleeding of a franchise that lost its compass. Since lifting the Lombardi Trophy in 2011, the Giants have become synonymous with instability, accumulating 11 losing seasons and cycling through seven head coaches.

The dismissal of Brian Dabollafter another 4-13 season and a collapse against Chicago left the team, according to reports, “without identity” and with the second-worst record in the NFL (13-38) over the last three years.

Harbaugh arrives to impose the order that Joe Schoen’s front office was desperately seeking: leadership and accountability. His résumé in Baltimore speaks for itself, with a 180-113 record and status as the winningest coach in Ravens history.

“He’s a program builder,” a league source told SNY. “He sets the tone for the entire building. The team comes first. Tough. Detail-oriented… He loves the football. He cares about people.”

The immediate impact was felt during his visit on Wednesday. Harbaugh not only met with the team’s top executives, but also had his first interaction with quarterback Jaxson Dart, a central piece in the rebuilding process.

How Harbaugh revealed his arrival to the Giants

According to journalist Ian O’Connor of The Athletic, barely 48 hours after ending his 18-year working relationship with the Baltimore Ravens, the coach was already speaking like a Giant.

“Two days after being fired… John Harbaugh used the word ‘we’ when he spoke about the New York Giants. He didn’t stop or correct himself in our phone conversation, because it sounded right,” O’Connor recounted.

At that moment, Harbaugh was already picturing himself wearing the cap and jacket of one of the league’s most storied franchises, stating with conviction: “I believe we can win games next year with this roster and the players who are coming back.”

Sources from SNYconfirmed that Harbaugh made his first and only visit to the facilities at ‘1925 Giants Drive’ on Wednesday, where owners John Mara and Steve Tisch finalized the agreement for the Super Bowl XLVII winner to take the reins of the team.



Read the full article here

Share.
Leave A Reply

Exit mobile version