Terry Bradshaw nails pathetic state of New York Giants ‘It’s a bad, bad job’

New York Giants president John Mara(Mandatory Credit: Scott Galvin-USA TODAY Sports)
New York Giants president John Mara(Mandatory Credit: Scott Galvin-USA TODAY Sports) /
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Hall of Fame quarterback Terry Bradshaw offers scathing take of pathetic state of New York Giants, as third last-place season this decade comes to a close

If the New York Giants lose the season finale Sunday against the Washington Football Team, it would be the 100th loss the organization has suffered since winning Super Bowl XLVI, and even Terry Bradshaw couldn’t find reason for hope.

Asked on the Week 18 edition of FOX NFL Sunday why Giants fans should be optimistic about the future, Bradshaw offered a scathing view of how far a once-proud franchise has backslid over the past decade into irrelevancy.

“I can’t,” Bradshaw said. “It’s a bad, bad, bad job. It’s a bad coaching job by Joe Judge, and a bad GM job by Dave Gettleman.”

Bradshaw’s assessment perfectly summarizes the lack of hope, even the prospect of a new general manager provides.

Should Sunday be Gettleman’s final game, he leaves behind a roster that will likely need to field four new starters along the offensive line, uncertainty about the future at quarterback, and the daunting task for his successor to create cap space.

The New York Giants are set to have just $2.75 million in cap space this offseason, with little flexibility to create more, as $49 million has already been committed to roster bonuses and $9.4 million to signing bonuses.

New York couldn’t even afford to dress 46 players for Sunday’s season finale.

While Gettleman’s departure seems all but certain, it remains to be seen whether owner John Mara will move on from head coach Joe Judge following Sunday’s game.

If Judge is fired, he would be the third consecutive head coach that Mara hired only to fire within two seasons or fewer.

Bradshaw’s lack of optimism is befitting a franchise that will finish in last place in the NFC East for the third time in a decade and has finished above .500 only twice since winning Super Bowl XLVI.