HOG MOLLIES STILL RUNNING IN MUD
Saquon Barkley: Playing Truth or Dare
Daniel Jones needs help, and truth be told, it's incumbent upon Saquon Barkley to supply much of it. After all, that was Dave Gettleman's original vision, was it not? Upon drafting Barkley, he said teams will stack the box and thus open up downfield opportunities.
'Memba? I 'memba ...
Saquon Barkley has rushed 52 times for 186 yards through four games, averaging 13 carries for 46.5 yards per game. Meanwhile, Daniel Jones is averaging 36 attempts per game.
His sixteen attempts against Atlanta are to date a season-high. However, his two best efforts arguably came against Washington and New Orleans, in which he averaged over four yards per rush.
Barkley has caught 14 of 19 targets out of the backfield for 130 yards, giving him 66 total touches for 316 yards or 16.5 touches for 79 yards per game.
That's simply not enough.
First, we are forced to ask, is Saquon still playing through the lingering effects of last year's injury and recovery efforts? We also have to decipher whether we're witnessing a lack of confidence and hesitancy on Saquon's part versus an ability to instinctually pound the ball between the tackles? We just don't know.
If Saquon is indeed feeling 100%, then it's the offensive line that is still nowhere near creating enough daylight. While Andrew Thomas is developing into an outstanding tackle, Nate Solder remains a liability at the other end, Will Hernandez is still not back up to snuff. Ben Bredeson and Billy Price continue covering for the injured Nick Gates.
However, the biggest reason for the Giants inconsequential running game remains Jason Garrett's continued unbalanced attack, much less his play selection itself.
If they're building up Saquon Barkley's workload on an incremental basis, we should soon be seeing Saquon rush twenty and 25 times per game.
This doesn't even bring into question why Devontae Booker only has seven rushing attempts for 22 yards.
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