At last, our long national nightmare is over.
The 2024 Giants - at 3-14, somehow, worse than their record indicates - have finished their season-long pageant of incontinence.
Actually, they've been done since early October. If an NFL season could, like a Pauly Shore movie, go straight to home video, the Giants could have spared a million fans from wasting 17 Sundays. Sadly, many of us - the weak and frail - had to watch. I hang my head. Week after week, I tuned into their death channel, often reduced to rooting against them, in the hope that they could feel my pain.
What a joke. The truth is, a sports franchise is an organization, a company, a lifeless monolith... it cannot feel anything. It just goes on and on.
Today, without a doubt, the Giants are NY's worst sports franchise, no easy accomplishment. Yet they will suffer no financial consequences for their mediocrity. As an investment, as a money-maker, they are unbeatable - undefeated.
By the time you read this, owner John Mara may have decided the fate of GM Joe Schoen and coach Brian Daboll, who have overseen two of the worst seasons - back-to-back, and belly-to-belly - in NFL history. Both could go. Both could stay. One could go - all sorts of permutations, none that will matter.
The problem with the Giants is the problem with the Jets, which is the problem with the Yankees, and which has been problem with every top-down rotted NY sports team in this quarter century.
It is the generational lockjaw of nepotism, of old-money, pearl-clutching, status quo, country club owners, who view teams as family legacies - or toy ATMs - and who avoid the tough decisions that self-made oligarchs ruthlessly make. For the Giants, it's Mara - age 70 - the eldest son of Wellington. He grew up as a millionaire in a White Plains mansion, then effortlessly evolved into a billionaire labor lawyer, and who now represents the NFL's second longest running ownership family, after the Halas brood in Chicago. It's no coincidence that both teams suck.
I suspect Mara will feel bad about today's decision, whatever it is. He's never been fired, never been laid off, never wondered about his next paycheck. Often, in the owner's box, he looks genuinely pained. That's when we catch a glimpse of him. Today's owners enter and leave without facing the cameras, the riffraff.
For example, Hal Steinbrenner generally avoids the Yankee fan base in the way he avoids replacing his failed front office pals.
The NY media - which prides itself on aggression and toughness - accepts ownership stagnation, (especially those writers whose calls get returned.) And nothing changes.
What laid bare this problem is the emergence of mega-billionaire Steven Cohen, owner of the long-suffering, now all-powerful, Mets. Cohen is what George Steinbrenner used to be, and what Old George's son will never be. Cohen bought the Mets to win. Hal inherited the Yankees, more or less, as a boulder to carry.
This week, as Mara issues his decision, the Yankees will probably be losing out to the Mets in another auction. Cohen will outbid Hal for Roki Sasaki, the Japanese pitcher and the best free agent on the market. (There is a possibility that the Dodgers will cook their books and get him.) Sasaki could be the difference between the Yankees winning the AL East and/or merely competing for it. Hal will accept "competing."
That's because he's a New York owner, all the way.
And as long as the Maras run the Giants, let's face it: Hal looks pretty good, by comparison. And nothing's gonna change.
Edit: Looks like they're staying.