Let’s not sugarcoat it: the 2024 New York Giants are a dumpster fire. Forget any fleeting moments of hope earlier this season or the rare flashes of competence. Those were lies. This team has now lost 10 straight games, setting a new low in their 100-year history.
Ten. Straight. Let that sink in. Not only is this rock bottom—it’s somehow still trending downward.
The Giants' latest humiliation came at the hands of the Atlanta Falcons, a team that benched their $180-million-dollar quarterback and trotted out a rookie for his first NFL start. You’d think that would give the Giants at least a shot, right? Nope.
Instead, Drew Lock, a man who might not even be holding a clipboard in the NFL after this, handed the Falcons not one but two pick-sixes. The Falcons didn’t just beat the Giants; they used them as a punching bag in a 34-7 rout that wasn’t even as close as the score suggests.
It’s hard to pinpoint where to even start with how bad this team has been. The offense is a joke, the defense is nonexistent, and the coaching staff seems to be playing a completely different sport. But hey, there’s always next year, right? Right?!
The NY Giants couldn't be any more incompetent if they tried
This isn’t just a bad season for the Giants; it’s an outright embarrassment. They’re 2-13, the proud owners of the worst record in the NFL, and have only scored more than 20 points in a game three times all season.
Three times in 15 games. If offensive futility was a sport, the Giants would be gold medalists.
Sunday’s game was a perfect example of how far the Giants have fallen. Drew Lock managed 22 completions for 210 yards, but two of those landed right in the hands of Falcons defenders who cruised into the end zone without breaking a sweat. Jessie Bates and Matthew Judon didn’t just capitalize on errors—they exposed the Giants as completely overmatched.
And it’s not just Lock. This season, New York is the city of turnovers and unforced errors. Between injuries, bad decisions, and some of the worst offensive line play we’ve seen in years, this team has no identity other than being absolutely awful.
Even the bright spots feel hollow. Rookie wideout Malik Nabers breaking Odell Beckham Jr. and Saquon Barkley’s rookie reception record should feel like a huge deal, right? Unfortunately, that moment was fleeting. When you’re getting blown out every week, breaking records doesn't carry the same shine.
The Giants are staring into the abyss right now. They’ve got two games left: one against the Colts, a team somehow just as dysfunctional, and another against the Eagles, who might use that game as nothing more than a glorified scrimmage. If New York loses out, they’ll tie their worst season since 1974. The only silver lining? They might lock in the No. 1 overall pick if the Raiders screw up down the stretch.
But here’s the thing: even with a top draft pick, does anyone trust this team to rebuild? The current front office couldn’t build a sandcastle, let alone a functioning roster. And don’t get me started on the coaching staff. This isn’t about talent; it’s about culture. Right now, the Giants don’t have one worth saving.
At this point, there’s only one thing Giants fans can root for: a full teardown. Blow it all up. Fire everyone. Start from scratch. Because if this season has taught us anything, it’s that the current version of the New York Giants isn’t just bad—it’s broken beyond repair.
Fans deserve better. The franchise deserves better. And honestly, the NFL deserves better than whatever this team is pretending to be.