Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Newsday
Newsday
Sport
Tom Rock

Pat Shurmur named new Giants head coach

Pat Shurmur has been the Giants' coach-in-waiting for about a week. That ended Monday afternoon.

Shurmur became the 18th head coach in franchise history, the team announced.

"We are pleased to welcome Pat to our organization and look forward to the leadership he will provide for our team," said Giants co-owners John Mara and Steve Tisch in a news release. "He has an outstanding track record in developing young players, and it is clear his players respond to his guidance and direction. We interviewed six talented and qualified candidates, and we feel like Pat, with his vision and experience, is the right person to lead our team."

Shurmur first interviewed for the position on Jan. 6 but was unable to officially communicate with the Giants until the Vikings _ for whom he served as offensive coordinator _ were eliminated from the postseason. That happened Sunday when the Eagles won the NFC Championship.

Shurmur returned to Minnesota with the Vikings following that loss and spent most of Monday tying up the loose ends of the Vikings' 2017 season with the players and coaching staff.

"I want to thank John Mara and Steve Tisch for giving me the opportunity to be the head coach of the New York Giants," Shurmur said. "I am looking forward to getting to work with Dave Gettleman and Kevin Abrams and starting the process to once again build a championship team. I have been fortunate to work with many great coaches and players, and I am thankful for those relationships. I would like to thank my family and friends for their tremendous support."

Shurmur was guarded when he spoke in the losing locker room at Lincoln Financial Field on Sunday night. He never mentioned the Giants directly despite several questions about his immediate future.

A number of immediate issues face Shurmur with the Giants. The first will be building a staff, and a league source told Newsday that former Raiders head coach Jack Del Rio is a strong candidate to be named defensive coordinator. Former Panthers special teams coordinator Thomas McGaughey is expected to be named to that position with the Giants. Other coaching vacancies will be filled in the coming days and weeks.

Shurmur also will have to weigh in on the future of Eli Manning, although he is expected to support the quarterback's return to the team for the 2018 season. Manning met with Gettleman on Jan. 12 to discuss his future with the team and ESPN reported on Sunday that Gettleman's preference is to keep Manning on the team with two years remaining on his contract. That does not, of course, guarantee Manning the starting job, only a chance to compete for it. With the second overall pick in the upcoming draft and Shurmur's reputation for guiding young quarterbacks, the Giants may decide to invest in their quarterback of the future in April. When that future begins could be September 2018 or anytime after.

Shurmur was one of six candidates to interview for the job with the Giants, which became open when they fired Ben McAdoo on Dec. 4. Steve Spagnuolo, the Giants' defensive coordinator last season, served the final four games as interim head coach and was one of the candidates who interviewed for the full-time position. Other candidates to interview with the Giants were Patriots offensive coordinator Josh McDaniels, Patriots defensive coordinator Matt Patricia, Panthers defensive coordinator Steve Wilks and former Broncos associate head coach Eric Studesville (who has since been hired by the Dolphins as their running backs coach). McDaniels and Patricia are expected to be named head coaches of the Colts and Lions, respectively. Wilks was named head coach of the Cardinals on Monday.

"I can't wait to start working with Pat," Gettleman said. "I know he will provide the type of leadership we need to take our team back to where it belongs. I have followed Pat's career for many years, and he has had great success wherever he has been. What struck me during our conversation is that being the head coach of the New York Giants is not too big for him. He is made for this moment and this opportunity."

Shurmur, 52, has 19 years of NFL coaching experience and served two years as head coach of the Browns in 2011 and 2012 with a 9-23 record.

Shurmur's tenure with the Vikings did not end well with the Vikings being shutout by the Eagles over the final 55:14 of the NFC title game, nor did it endear him much to the Giants' fanbase by allowing an NFC East rival to advance to Super Bowl LII. But this season he helped a team that lost both its starting quarterback and starting running back finish 10th in the NFL in scoring (23.9 points), 11th in total yardage (356.9), and seventh in rushing yardage (122.3). Minnesota also was third in the league in third-down conversion percentage (43.5, with 94 successes on 216 attempts).

"He's one of the best coaches I ever played for," Vikings tight end Kyle Rudolph said on Sunday after the team lost. "They're getting a really good coach, and as good of a coach as he is he's an even better human being. If he is going there we'll miss him."

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.