Schedule Game summaries Week 1: vs. Philadelphia Eagles Despite being projected by many to finish last place in the NFC East after going 6–10 in
1996 and boasting the NFL's youngest roster, the Giants secured a victory in their first regular season game under new head coach
Jim Fassel on his 48th birthday against their division rivals the Eagles, whom they had lost to in four straight meetings. Although they were outgained in first downs (24–12), total yards (447–290) and time of possession (35:31–24:29), New York won the turnover battle (2–0) and controlled the game at the line of scrimmage. After posting one of the lowest-scoring offenses and having one of the most ineffective pass rushing units in '96, the Giants collected nine sacks against Philadelphia's quarterbacks, with
Michael Strahan picking up 2.5, while the offense hit big early with
Dave Brown finding
Charles Way out of the backfield for a 62-yard catch-and-run on their second possession; this led to Brown scoring a touchdown on a quarterback draw three plays later. After
Chris Boniol kicked a 48-yard field goal for the Eagles, the Giants maintained a 7–3 lead late in the first half, with a
Scott Galyon pass deflection and
Keith Hamilton's sack spoiling drives, before rookie
Tiki Barber—one of five Giant rookies starting the game—ran for a 21-yard gain and then caught a pass from Brown for 28 yards. With six seconds remaining, Brown then hit
Chris Calloway for a touchdown. The Giants continued their momentum on the opening kickoff of the third quarter, with
Thomas Lewis sprinting 84 yards to the Eagle 8-yard line; two plays later, Barber scored his first NFL touchdown. After a 39-yard
Brad Daluiso field goal made the score 24–3, the Eagles replaced starting quarterback
Ty Detmer with
Rodney Peete, who immediately led them on an 81-yard drive, capped off by a touchdown run by
Ricky Watters. In the fourth quarter, Peete completed five consecutive passes, finding
Kevin Turner on a contested pass for a 14-yard touchdown, cutting New York's lead to 24–17 with 8:15 remaining. After the Giants went three-and-out, Watters gained 25 yards on back-to-back carries to put Philadelphia on the edge of the red zone. But Peete's next pass was intercepted by rookie safety
Sam Garnes, who raced 95 yards for a back-breaking touchdown. Any comeback hopes were quelled on the next possession, as New York's pass rush of Strahan and fellow defensive end
Chad Bratzke combined to sack Peete three times, forcing a fumble that was recovered by Hamilton. The Giants' nine sacks marked nearly a third of their entire 1996 total (30), also marking a successful debut for new defensive coordinator
John Fox. With the win, Fassel became their third consecutive head coach to win his debut after
Dan Reeves and
Ray Handley, and the first NFL head coach to win his debut on his birthday.
Week 2: at Jacksonville Jaguars After an opening day victory, the Giants traveled south to face the Jaguars, the AFC Championship Game participants of a season ago, who were forced into playing their third-string quarterback, with starter
Mark Brunell and backup
Rob Johnson out with injuries. Former seventh-round draft pick
Steve Matthews was making his first and only NFL start, but New York stumbled through an eventual blowout due to a lethargic offense that was shredded in the time of possession battle (39:39-20:21). Neither team crossed midfield on each of their first three drives before
Keith Hamilton sacked Matthews and forced a fumble that was recovered by linebacker
Marcus Buckley, setting up the Giants at Jacksonville's 27-yard line. A sliding 23-yard catch by rookie wide receiver
Ike Hilliard led to a
Tiki Barber touchdown; however, Hilliard suffered a sprained neck ligament making the catch, which not only took him out of the game, but forced the seventh overall draft pick to miss the remainder of the season due to spinal instability. Very little went right for the Giants after that. A 43-yard pass to
Keenan McCardell led to a
Mike Hollis field goal at the start of the second quarter. On the next play from scrimmage, Barber fumbled the ball, which was recovered by safety
Travis Davis. Five plays later, Matthews's third-down pass was intercepted in the end zone by linebacker
Corey Widmer, but defensive back
Thomas Randolph was flagged for pass interference.
James Stewart then hurdled into the end zone to give the Jaguars a 10–7 lead. After a Giants punt, Matthews led Jacksonville on a 13-play, 82-yard drive, often victimizing Randolph—filling in for the ill
Phillippi Sparks and injured
Conrad Hamilton—with the passing game. On 4th-and-1 from the 9-yard line,
Natrone Means broke loose for a touchdown. With less than two minutes remaining in the first half, New York took over in Jaguars territory, and reached the 30-yard line. But on
Dave Brown's pass to tight end
Howard Cross, he was hit and fumbled the ball, and rookie defensive end
Renaldo Wynn recovered. A 21-yard pass to wide receiver
Willie Jackson led to a 52-yard Hollis field goal, stretching Jacksonville's lead to 20–7 at halftime. On Jacksonville's second drive of the third quarter, the running of Means and Stewart led to another Hollis field goal. After that, the Giants finally achieved a sustained drive, as Brown hit Barber down the left sideline for a 29-yard gain. A pass interference call on cornerback
Deon Figures put the ball at the 8, where Brown found
Chris Calloway for a touchdown; a failed two-point conversion kept the score 23–13. In the fourth quarter, the floodgates opened, as Matthews completed a 41-yard pass to
Jimmy Smith, who again beat Randolph on the play. That set up Hollis's fourth field goal; two plays later, Brown was intercepted by Davis, which led to Means scoring his second touchdown. Stewart added another of his own in the closing minutes to complete the scoring. After a successful debut, Barber only rushed for 17 yards on 11 carries, while Brown and the passing game were undone by drops and poor decision-making, with the offense only converting on 2-of-12 3rd downs and gaining 206 yards from scrimmage.
Week 3: vs. Baltimore Ravens Despite earning a season-high 29 first downs and winning nearly every major statistical category, the Giants dropped a 24-23 decision to the Ravens due to special teams blunders and a couple of late defensive breakdowns. Baltimore struck first on their initial drive, as
Earnest Byner gained 27 yards on four straight touches before
Vinny Testaverde completed a 22-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver
Derrick Alexander. Late in the first quarter,
Dave Brown completed three straight passes to put the ball on the 1-yard line, where
Tiki Barber scored his third touchdown in as many games; however,
Brad Daluiso's extra point attempt was blocked by
Rob Burnett. On the Giants' next drive, after an interception was nullified by penalty, a 27-yard pass to
Amani Toomer on 3rd-and-7 put them in field goal range; however, Daluiso's 41-yard kick missed wide right. Two plays later, Testaverde hit
Michael Jackson for a 34-yard gain, setting Baltimore up at the 1. New York stopped them on three plays before rookie running back
Jay Graham finally scored to extend their lead to 14–6. Late in the first half, Brown completed 8-of-9 passes on a 67-yard drive, the last one a touchdown toss to
Charles Way with 14 seconds left. Their two-point conversion attempt failed, so they trailed 14–12 at halftime. In the third quarter, the running of Barber and veteran
Tyrone Wheatley keyed a 61-yard drive, with the Giants benefitting when an apparent Barber fumble was ruled a stoppage of forward progress. Wheatley scored from the 1, and Brown completed a pass to Barber for two points, putting New York up 20–14. Later in the period, Testaverde was intercepted by safety
Percy Ellsworth; soon after, Brown hit
Howard Cross for 26 yards and wide receiver
Kevin Alexander for 20 to put the Giants in the red zone. A 27-yard field goal by Daluiso put the Giants ahead by nine early in the fourth. After both teams went three-and-out, Testaverde led the Ravens on an 83-yard march, including a 34-yard pass to tight end
Eric Green. Three plays later, he found Jackson in the corner of the end zone for a touchdown to make the score 23–21. On the ensuing drive, Barber was stopped on 3rd-and-1 at Baltimore's 24, and Daluiso missed another 41-yard field goal wide right. With three minutes remaining, Baltimore took over; Testaverde dropped the ball on the first play as he pulled back from center
Leo Goeas, but it bounced right back to him and he ran for an 11-yard gain. A 12-yard run by Byner and an 11-yard catch by Green set up Stover—a member of the Giants'
1990 Super Bowl roster—for a game-winning 37-yard field goal with 34 seconds left. The loss spoiled a solid game for Brown, who threw for 269 yards while completing passes to nine different receivers;
Chris Calloway led with eight catches for 79 yards. It was the Ravens' first road win since their move from Cleveland prior to the 1996 season.
Week 4: at St. Louis Rams An ugly defensive struggle saw the Giants fall 13–3 to the Rams, in their first season under head coach and old Philadelphia nemesis
Dick Vermeil, as they accumulated just 194 yards of total offense. Their first play from scrimmage was a busted exchange that resulted in
Dave Brown scrambling for seven yards and getting injured on the play. Two plays later, his replacement
Danny Kanell was sacked and fumbled, and defensive tackle
D'Marco Farr recovered for St. Louis. The defense forced a stop of
Lawrence Phillips on 4th-and-1, but
Tiki Barber was also injured on a hit that knocked the ball out shortly after; both he and Brown would return, however. Early in the second quarter,
Tony Banks completed passes to wide receivers
Eddie Kennison and
Torrance Small to drive the Rams into the red zone. He then hit tight end
Ernie Conwell for a contested touchdown, but left tackle
Wayne Gandy was flagged for illegal formation; they had to settle for a 23-yard
Jeff Wilkins field goal. On the ensuing drive, Brown hit
Charles Way on back-to-back plays for 34 yards; but it resulted in
Brad Daluiso missing a 42-yard field goal, his second miss of the game and fourth in two games. Powered by the running of Phillips and the passing of Banks, St. Louis drove to New York's 3-yard line before being forced to another Wilkins field goal, making the halftime score 6–0. A promising-looking drive at the start of the third quarter was ruined when left guard
Greg Bishop was flagged for a late hit on a play where Way picked up a first down into Rams territory; instead the Giants were forced to punt. On their next drive, Brown's deep pass for
Kevin Alexander was intercepted by safety
Keith Lyle; however, Banks fumbled the snap on the next play and
Chad Bratzke recovered, giving New York the ball at midfield. But after reaching the 32-yard line, right tackle
Scott Gragg was flagged for a false start and an illegal cut block, which knocked them out of field goal range; Gragg would be penalized four times on the day. Early in the fourth, a short field allowed the Giants to finally score on a 47-yard Daluiso field goal; with the score 6–3, the Rams burned six minutes off the clock on their next drive, as Banks hit Small for 31 yards and running back
Amp Lee for 22. But after reaching New York's 23, Banks was sacked by
Jessie Armstead and
Michael Strahan on consecutive plays to kill the possession. However, the Giants failed to capitalize, and a short
Brad Maynard punt put the Rams at New York's 36. After Banks connected with Conwell for 11 yards on 3rd-and-2, fullback
Craig Heyward powered into the end zone to clinch a St. Louis win. The loss dropped the Giants to 1–3, putting them in last place in the NFC East division, despite five sacks from the defense.
Week 5: vs. New Orleans Saints The Giants snapped their three-game losing streak with a workmanlike win over the Saints. Despite team statistics being mostly equal, the Giants used their advantage in 3rd down conversions (7-of-15 to 1-of-12) and a fourth-quarter rushing attack to earn the victory. On New Orleans's second drive, quarterback
Heath Shuler was intercepted by
Thomas Randolph in New York territory; however,
Brad Daluiso missed another field goal shortly after. But after a 44-yard punt return by
Amani Toomer,
Dave Brown hit
Kevin Alexander—starting for the injured
Thomas Lewis—down the sideline for a 32-yard touchdown on the next play. Shuler responded by completing five straight passes, setting up a 36-yard field goal by
Doug Brien. The score was still 7–3 in the second quarter before Brown led a 12-play, 84-yard drive by completing eight passes to six different receivers, the last a 14-yard touchdown pass to
Chris Calloway. Late in the first half, a 20-yard pass from Shuler to tight end
John Farquhar led to Brien's second field goal, this one from 32 yards out. In the third quarter, the Saints drove into Giants territory before Shuler fumbled the snap from center, and
Keith Hamilton recovered. Later on, Brown's pass for Alexander was intercepted by safety
Sammy Knight, and New Orleans drove to New York's 27-yard line; but the Giants held on 4th down, keeping the score 14-6 going into the fourth. After a Giants punt, the passing of Shuler and running of
Mario Bates put the Saints at the Giants' 26. But after a holding penalty on left guard
Andy McCollum, they were forced to settle for another Brien field goal. After that, New York started running the ball with
Tyrone Wheatley, with
Tiki Barber out with a knee injury. But on 3rd-and-6 from New Orleans' 40, Brown was sacked by cornerback
Alex Molden and fumbled, and defensive end
Darren Mickell recovered, returning the ball to New York's 35. A Shuler pass to wide receiver
Randal Hill took the Saints to the 24; but cornerback
Jason Sehorn dropped Bates for a two-yard loss, and
Corey Widmer sacked Shuler to set up 3rd-and-21; safety
Tito Wooten then broke up Shuler's pass for
Andre Hastings, and the Saints punted with 3:45 remaining. From there, the combined running of Wheatley and
Charles Way enabled the Giants to run the clock out and secure the win. Despite the victory, Barber would be out the next four games with a torn knee ligament, while undrafted rookie center
Derek Engler, filling in for injured longtime veteran
Brian Williams, suffered a broken ankle, and would miss the remainder of the season.
Week 6: vs. Dallas Cowboys The Giants remained home to face the Cowboys, winners of eight of their previous 10 meetings, who were 3–1 and held a share of the division lead with Washington. Despite Dallas dominating in first downs (27–13), total yards (428–166) and time of possession (40:37–19:23), New York edged out a win thanks to their red zone defense, Dallas self-inflicting with 11 penalties, and again winning the turnover battle (2–0). The tone was set on the first drive, as the running of
Emmitt Smith and passing of
Troy Aikman drove the Cowboys into the red zone. But a pass to Smith down to the 2-yard line was nullified by an illegal use of hands penalty on right tackle
Erik Williams, and they would settle for a
Richie Cunningham field goal. On their next possession, Aikman completed passes to
Michael Irvin and
Daryl Johnston as they reached New York's 24. But on 3rd-and-2, a pitch to Smith was stopped short of the first down, and Cunningham missed on his second field goal try. Midway through the second quarter, an 18-yard pass to
Anthony Miller set up Cunningham for a successful field goal, making the score 6–0. On the ensuing drive,
Dave Brown—who came into the game with a strained pectoral muscle—aggravated it on a hit, and was removed from the game.
Danny Kanell came in and promptly completed passes to
Tyrone Wheatley,
Kevin Alexander and
Chris Calloway for 53 yards. That led to a 27-yard
Brad Daluiso field goal just before halftime, trimming the Cowboys' lead to 6–3. A screen pass to Wheatley picked up 27 yards on the first play of the third quarter; than Kanell's deep pass for Calloway drew a pass interference on cornerback
Kevin Smith, which set up another Daluiso field goal. On the ensuing drive, Aikman hit Irvin deep for a 36-yard gain, putting Dallas back in the red zone. But again, the drive stalled at the 9-yard line, and Cunningham's third short field goal put the Cowboys back up 9–6. After a New York punt, Aikman's pass over the middle was intercepted by
Tito Wooten, who raced 61 yards for a go-ahead touchdown. Early in the fourth quarter, Wooten picked off another Aikman pass as the Cowboys approached midfield. It was still 13–9 with seven minutes left before
Amani Toomer returned a
Toby Gowin punt 37 yards to Dallas's 33; another interference call on Kevin Smith—given an additional flag for removing his helmet after the play—set up a
Charles Way touchdown run, putting New York up 20–9 with 6:18 to go. The Cowboys methodically drove back down the field, with Aikman completing 10-of-12 passes for 64 yards, the last one a 2-yard touchdown to Miller with 1:54 remaining. The two-point conversion was good on a pass to tight end
Eric Bjornson, cutting New York's lead to 20–17. With two time-outs left, Dallas kicked away deep, and undrafted rookie
David Patten muffed the ball, which scattered loose on the turf; but Wheatley jumped on it at the 14-yard line to save the possession. After a three-and-out,
Brad Maynard punted away from his end zone to
Deion Sanders, who attempted a reverse handoff to
Kevin Mathis; but Patten disrupted the exchange, and the Cowboys lost eight yards back to their own 36. A 3rd-and-10 pass to wide receiver
Stepfret Williams picked up 15 yards, putting the ball across midfield, where Aikman spiked the ball to stop the clock with 18 seconds to go. Aikman completed his next pass down the middle to Bjornson, who picked up 32 yards to the Giants' 17 with the clock running. The teams raced to the line of scrimmage, where Aikman snapped the ball and spiked it with one second remaining; but Erik Williams was not set before the snap, and was flagged for a false start, which required a 10-second runoff with no time-outs inside the last two minutes of the half, ending the game in a 20–17 final. With the win, the Giants moved to 3-3, a half-game behind the Cowboys and Redskins in the NFC East.
Jessie Armstead recorded 18 tackles, while the injured Brown would remain sidelined in favor of Kanell.
Week 7: at Arizona Cardinals Against a Cardinals defense sporting Pro Bowl-caliber players in defensive end
Simeon Rice, defensive tackle
Eric Swann and linebacker
Eric Hill, the Giants' offensive line dominated, allowing the running game to roll up a season-high 239 yards in
Danny Kanell's first start, a 27–13 win to put them back over .500. It was
Jim Fassel's first game back in Arizona, where he was the offensive coordinator in 1996. The first drive featured Kanell converting on a pair of third downs with passes to
Amani Toomer and
Charles Way, which eventually led to a 31-yard
Brad Daluiso field goal. Quarterback
Kent Graham failed to generate any offense for Arizona, completing just 4-of-14 passes for 40 yards and interceptions to
Tito Wooten and
Percy Ellsworth, the second pick coming after they reached New York's 24-yard line. But while the first pick led to another Daluiso field goal, Kanell answered Graham's turnover with one of his own, as cornerback
Aeneas Williams jumped in front of
Chris Calloway and returned the pass 30 yards for a touchdown. However,
Kevin Butler missed the extra point, so the score remained tied at 6. On their next drive, Graham suffered a sprained ankle, and was replaced by
Stoney Case just before halftime. In the third quarter, after Case fumbled on a sack by defensive tackle
Robert Harris and
Chad Bratzke recovered, Kanell found Calloway on a deep pass for a 47-yard gain; two plays later, he hit
David Patten for a touchdown, the first catch of his career. His next catch went for 23 yards, but a sack by safety
Kwamie Lassiter halted the drive. But after Case hit
Rob Moore for a 30-yard gain,
Scott Galyon forced a fumble on a sack; Arizona recovered, but the play lost 30 yards. Kanell hit Patten for another 34 yards to begin the fourth quarter, putting New York at the 8-yard line;
Tyrone Wheatley scored on the next play to give the Giants a 20–6 lead. After a Cardinals punt, the Giants took over at their own 15 and drove 85 yards on eight consecutive running plays, with Way and
Erric Pegram alternating carries. Pegram scored from the 18, and another Ellsworth interception kept Arizona from scoring any more than a meaningless Case touchdown. Wheatley rushed for a career-high 103 yards on 22 carries, while Way added 91 on 13 carries, and the defense added another five sacks, as the Giants bumped their record to 4–3 with their first road win.
Week 8: at Detroit Lions Danny Kanell's 68-yard pass to
Chris Calloway on the third play of overtime gave the Giants a 26–20 win over the Lions, putting them at 5-3 and in sole possession of first place for the first time since
1993. On New York's second possession of the game, Kanell's long pass for tight end
Aaron Pierce was intercepted by safety
Van Malone; however, Calloway managed to rip the ball out, and
Charles Way recovered it to maintain possession. Three plays later, Kanell faked a handoff to
Tyrone Wheatley and threw a touchdown pass to
Howard Cross.
Barry Sanders answered with a 37-yard run on the ensuing drive; but four plays later,
Scott Mitchell fumbled the snap, and
Robert Harris recovered. Mitchell atoned on their next possession by hitting
Johnnie Morton three times for 48 yards, and a 20-yard pass to
Herman Moore took Detroit into the red zone. But a near-touchdown pass to rookie wide receiver
Tommie Boyd was caught out of bounds, and they settled for a
Jason Hanson field goal. After a New York punt, Sanders gashed them for 37 yards on four carries, scoring in elusive fashion from the 8-yard line and giving the Lions a 10–7 lead. Kanell came back with a 39-yard completion to Calloway, but Wheatley was dropped for a four-yard loss and Kanell was flagged for intentional grounding to kill the series. But the defense forced a three-and-out, and Kanell completed passes to Calloway and
Erric Pegram, which led to a 52-yard
Brad Daluiso field goal with two seconds left in the first half, tying the game at 10. The Lions punted on their first possession of the third quarter, but when linebacker
Scott Kowalkowski was flagged for grabbing the face mask, the Giants elected to make them re-kick;
Amani Toomer responded by maneuvering 53 yards up the right sideline for the go-ahead touchdown, the third via punt return of his career. Both teams then traded field goals, with Detroit riding the arm of Mitchell and New York powered by the running of Way. With just over six minutes left in the fourth, the Giants punted back, still leading 20–13. Starting at their own 25-yard line, Mitchell was sacked by Harris on the first play but then hit Moore for 22 yards on 3rd-and-16; later he found fullback
Tommy Vardell for 28 yards on 3rd-and-10. The Lions dinked-and-dunked down to the 4 until Mitchell faked a handoff to Sanders and completed a pass to Morton for the tying touchdown with 1:55 remaining. The Giants picked up a first down on a run by Pegram, but ended up punting inside Detroit's 10, and the game went to overtime. On the first possession, a pass to Cross and a run by Way picked up a first down. Then Kanell threw long to Calloway down the right sideline, where he beat former Giant cornerback
Corey Raymond to the catch and sprinted all the way for the winning touchdown. With a career-high 145 yards and the game-winning touchdown on five catches, Calloway was named NFC Offensive Player of the Week, while Toomer was named NFC Special Teams Player of the Week. Sanders rushed for 105 yards, but only 25 of them came after halftime.
Week 9: vs. Cincinnati Bengals The Giants won their fifth straight game over the 1-6 Bengals, but the 29-27 outcome was not secure until
Jason Sehorn stopped a late two-point conversion attempt and
Chris Calloway recovered the ensuing onside kick. After a 35-yard
Brad Daluiso field goal on the opening drive, Cincinnati answered by handing off to
Ki-Jana Carter five times for 24 yards, while
Jeff Blake hit wide receiver
James Hundon for a 21-yard gain.
Corey Dillon then plunged in from the 1-yard line to give the Bengals the lead. Late in the first quarter,
Charles Way converted on 4th-and-inches, and a pass interference penalty on cornerback
Tito Paul set up Way for a short touchdown run. However,
Eric Bieniemy responded by taking the ensuing kickoff 102 yards for a touchdown; the score remained 14–10 Bengals in the final minute of the first half as Cincinnati took over at their own 27-yard line with one time-out left. Blake completed passes to
Darnay Scott,
David Dunn and
Brian Milne, putting the ball at New York's 39 with 14 seconds to go. On 4th-and-5, rather than try a long field goal, Blake passed down the middle to Dunn, who took advantage of a poor tackling angle by
Tito Wooten and went all the way to the end zone, giving Cincinnati a surprising 21–10 halftime lead. But New York's fortunes quickly changed in the third quarter, as Blake fumbled on a tackle by
Jessie Armstead, and
Percy Ellsworth returned it to the Bengals' 23. After four straight runs, Paul was called for another pass interference to put the ball at the 3; then on 3rd-and-Goal from the 1,
Danny Kanell threw incomplete to
Howard Cross, but linebacker
James Francis was called for holding, giving the Giants a first down. Two plays later, Way powered in for his second touchdown; but Kanell's two-point conversion failed, keeping the score 21–16. The Bengals crossed midfield on their next two possessions, but both drives ended without points, as Blake was intercepted by
Phillippi Sparks and then fumbled on a fourth-down sack by
Michael Strahan. Way then fumbled on his next carry, but he was able to recover it. An additional three straight Way runs picked up 19 yards, setting up 3rd-and-5 from Cincinnati's 24 at the start of the fourth quarter. Kanell hit Calloway on a quick out pass, and he dashed down to the 1;
Tyrone Wheatley scored on the next play, but the two-point conversion failed again. Trailing 22–21, Cincinnati reached New York's 40 on the ensuing series; but on 4th-and-1, the pitch to Carter was stopped short by Armstead. Midway through the period, Kanell hit
Kevin Alexander with a 40-yard pass, and then picked up a first down with a quarterback draw on 3rd-and-4. An interference penalty on cornerback
Ashley Ambrose led to Wheatley's second touchdown, putting the Giants up 29–21 with 3:24 remaining. From their own 38-yard line, the Bengals picked up 13 yards on a Wooten interference; Blake completed his next three passes, putting them into the red zone at the two-minute warning. A third-down completion to Hundon put the ball at the 4 with 1:43 and one time-out remaining; two plays later, Blake scrambled and stretched for a touchdown, cutting New York's lead to two. But on the two-point conversion attempt, Blake's left-corner fade pass for
Carl Pickens was intercepted by Sehorn, and the desperation onside kick was fielded by Calloway, securing a New York win and Cincinnati's seventh straight loss. Combined with losses by Washington and Dallas, the Giants gained a one and a half game advantage for first place in the division, going into their bye week at 6–3.
Week 11: at Tennessee Oilers Following the Giants' bye week,
Jim Fassel announced
Danny Kanell as the permanent starting quarterback, while
Tiki Barber returned from injury. But they lost a rough, physical 10–6 game in Tennessee to snap their five-game winning streak. On the Oilers' first possession, they mostly ran the ball with
Eddie George and
Steve McNair and took eight minutes off the clock, eventually settling for a 31-yard
Al Del Greco field goal. George fumbled on the first play of their next drive and
Tito Wooten recovered, but Kanell's next long pass off a flea-flicker was intercepted by safety
Marcus Robertson. However, cornerback
Darryll Lewis was called for pass interference, but
Greg Bishop was flagged for grabbing the face mask on the return, so rather than getting the ball at Tennessee's 1-yard line, the offsetting calls wiped out the play altogether; New York would soon punt. McNair hit wide receiver
Chris Sanders for a 34-yard gain; but after reaching the Giants' 34, he was intercepted by
Corey Widmer. However, New York's offense failed to capitalize, and the Oilers responded with a 14-play, 84-yard drive, as McNair overcame a 2nd-and-20 by finding wide receiver
Derek Russell twice for 30 yards. George eventually scored from the 1, putting them up 10–0 with 50 seconds left in the first half. However, a 27-yard completion from Kanell to
Chris Calloway led to a 42-yard
Brad Daluiso field goal as time expired. Midway through the third quarter, a 34-yard run by
Tyrone Wheatley on 3rd-and-2 put the Giants in the red zone; but
Amani Toomer and
Kevin Alexander both dropped potential first-down catches, and they kicked another field goal. George ran Tennessee back into field goal range, but Del Greco missed his next try, this time from 44 yards out, to keep the score 10–6. Neither offense could cross midfield throughout the majority of the fourth quarter, as Kanell was sacked twice by defensive tackle
Henry Ford, and
Michael Strahan and
Robert Harris combined to stop a Tennessee drive. With just over two minutes remaining, Kanell hit Toomer for nine yards on 4th-and-2; but on the next play, his pass hung in the air and was picked off by Robertson. One first down run by George iced the game for the Oilers. George rushed for 122 yards on 32 carries, as the Giants only gained 10 first downs and were 2-of-12 on third downs. It was the Oilers' first win against the Giants after losing all five meetings stationed in Houston. Coupled with a Washington win, the loss dropped New York into a 6–4 tie for first place in the division, while
Chad Bratzke suffered a season-ending knee injury.
Week 12: vs. Arizona Cardinals On a windy day, the Giants used a running game that produced over 200 yards and a defense that sacked rookie
Jake Plummer eight times and forced three turnovers to secure a pivotal 19–10 win. New York ran with
Charles Way and
Tyrone Wheatley to Arizona's 36-yard line on their first drive, but a holding call on center
Lance Scott thwarted the series; Plummer hit passes to
Frank Sanders and
Rob Moore to cross midfield, but a sack by
Scott Galyon on third down forced a punt. New York then used a combination of Way and
Tiki Barber to run six straight plays for 65 yards to reach the Cardinals' 3. But Way and Wheatley failed to score on their next three plays, and the fourth-down sweep to Barber from the 1 was stopped for a loss. Shortly after, a 4-yard gain by running back
Ronald Moore resulted in center
Mike Devlin cutting off
Keith Hamilton at the knees; Hamilton responded by kicking him while he was getting up, and was ejected from the game. However, Arizona's drive ended when
Leeland McElroy fumbled on a tackle by
Jason Sehorn, who also recovered the ball; that led to a 33-yard
Brad Daluiso field goal. Plummer came back to hit Sanders over
Tito Wooten for a 40-yard gain on 3rd-and-16, but three plays later, Sehorn and
Michael Strahan combined for a sack to force a punt. With less than two minutes remaining in the first half,
Danny Kanell called an audible at the line of scrimmage and launched a 56-yard touchdown pass to
Amani Toomer; a last-minute sack by
Jessie Armstead kept the Giants up 10–0 at halftime. But on the third play of the third quarter, Plummer scrambled out and threw deep to Sanders, who got behind the defense and raced 70 yards for a touchdown, the longest play from scrimmage the Giants had given up all year. Later in the period, Way rumbled 42 yards, New York's longest run of the season; but the drive stalled, and Plummer completed three straight passes to Sanders, which led to a tying field goal by
Joe Nedney. As the game moved into the fourth, the Giants put together a season-long 17-play, 80-yard drive, with Kanell completing three passes to Barber and finding
David Patten for a 26-yard gain against the pass rush. From the 1-yard line, Wheatley was stopped twice before Kanell faked to Barber and threw to
Howard Cross for the go-ahead touchdown with just over eight minutes left; however, Daluiso missed the extra point, so the score remained 16–10. On the ensuing drive, Plummer hit Rob Moore for 31 yards to cross midfield; but after a sack shared between Strahan and
Robert Harris, Plummer's long 3rd-and-21 pass was intercepted by Sehorn, who returned it 41 yards to Arizona's 20. That led to a Daluiso field goal to extend New York's lead to 19–10, which held up thanks in part to sacks from Strahan and Armstead, and a last-minute pick by Wooten. Way rushed for a career-high 114 yards on only 14 carries, while Strahan earned three sacks to give him 11 on the season, Armstead had 11 tackles, and Sehorn was named NFC Defensive Player of the Week. The win, coupled with a Washington loss to Dallas, put the 7-4 Giants a game ahead of both teams, setting up a crucial prime time game in Washington next week.
Week 13: at Washington Redskins The Giants and Redskins met on
Sunday Night Football for the former's only prime time game of the season, with first place in the NFC East on the line. In one of the more bizarre, unpredictable games of the year, the division rivals played to a 7–7 tie, keeping New York a game ahead of Washington in the standings. The game was dominated by defense from the opening kickoff, as
Tyrone Wheatley was stopped twice in 3rd-and-short situations in the first quarter, and despite
Conrad Hamilton giving the Redskins two first downs via penalty on the same drive on 3rd-and-15, tackles for loss by
Phillippi Sparks and
Jessie Armstead knocked them out of field goal range. After a
Matt Turk punt pinned the Giants at their 1-yard line,
Charles Way fumbled as he got out past the 5, but recovered; however, after back-to-back passes from
Danny Kanell to
Tiki Barber brought them out to the 34, Kanell was sacked on third down by linebacker
Ken Harvey—his second sack of the night—and fumbled, with rookie defensive end
Kenard Lang recovering. That led to quarterback
Gus Frerotte scrambling for a 1-yard touchdown with 2:16 left in the first half. But in a weird twist, after scoring, Frerotte head-butted the padded concrete wall behind the end zone in exuberance, and suffered a jammed neck, which kept him out for the second half of the game. Former Giant hero
Jeff Hostetler entered in the third quarter, and was intercepted by Sparks off a deflection on his fourth pass just beyond midfield. New York gave the ball to Way four times for 31 yards; then a 20-yard pass interference penalty on cornerback
Darrell Green led to Kanell finding
Chris Calloway in the back of the end zone for a toe-tapping touchdown. Each team's next drive was spoiled by a sack, with
Robert Harris and
Keith Hamilton getting to Hostetler, and defensive end
Jamal Duff—whom the Giants had cut before the season—nearly forcing a turnover before
Greg Bishop recovered the fumble. At the start of the fourth quarter,
Terry Allen found running room for the only time, breaking loose for 29 yards. Hostetler then hit wide receiver
Chris Thomas for 17 yards on 3rd-and-10; but Sparks knocked away his next third-down pass for
Henry Ellard, and
Scott Blanton's 45-yard field goal missed wide left. Midway through the period, after Way dropped what would have been a first-down pass on 3rd-and-2, Hostetler completed a pair of passes to
Michael Westbrook for 34 yards; but another sack by Hamilton killed the possession with 2:25 remaining. After another exchange of punts, New York gained possession on their own 18 with 43 seconds to go. Kanell completed passes to Barber, Calloway and
Erric Pegram, picking up 36 yards and putting them at Washington's 46 with one second left. After considering sending
Brad Daluiso out for an NFL-record 64-yard field goal,
Jim Fassel put the offense back on the field instead; Kanell's Hail Mary pass was disrupted by pressure and caught by
Amani Toomer, who was tackled well short of the end zone. On the first possession of overtime, Hostetler's third-down pass was intercepted by
Jason Sehorn; however, another sack by Harvey—who had abused left tackle
Roman Oben—forced a New York three-and-out. Passes to Ellard and tight end
Jamie Asher put the Redskins at the Giants' 39; but on 3rd-and-2, Hostetler scrambled around and as he was being tackled by
Michael Strahan, tried to pass the ball and fumbled it, with Harris recovering. But again the Giants went three-and-out, with Harvey picking up his fourth sack. Hostetler passed Washington to the 50-yard line; a throw to Westbrook was stopped a yard short on 3rd-and-10, and the Giants' defensive line did not yield the distance to Allen on fourth down. Kanell finally hit passes to Toomer and
Aaron Pierce; but they were stopped at the Redskins' 36, and Daluiso's 54-yard field goal hooked to the left. However, Hostetler was picked off again by Sparks on the next play, giving New York the ball back at the 49 with 3:12 remaining. Wheatley ran for 14 yards on the first play of the drive, but the Giants were again stopped at the 36, so Daluiso came back on for another 54-yard try; it was blocked, but linebacker
Marvcus Patton had called time-out before the snap, so the play was negated. Fassel then decided to send
Brad Maynard to punt with 2:20 to go; it was Maynard's 13th punt in the game, the most by any player since
John Teltschik had 15 in 1987. From their 20, Hostetler completed passes to Ellard and
Brian Mitchell, and then scrambled to the New York 38 with 48 seconds left. Hostetler's pass to Westbrook was caught out of bounds, and the incensed Westbrook took off his helmet in protest, drawing a 15-yard penalty and pushing the Redskins back to their own 47. Hostetler completed his next pass to Ellard at the 36, setting up fourth down with the clock running. Out of time-outs, Washington hurried the field goal team out for Blanton's own 54-yarder, which was wide right and short with two seconds left. Kanell's last-ditch heave was intercepted by Patton, ending the wild affair in a tie. It was the Giants' first tie since they drew 20–20 with the St. Louis Cardinals on October 24, 1983, while Washington last tied 7–7 with the Philadelphia Eagles on November 7, 1971, before overtime was implemented in the regular season. Coincidentally enough, the Giants' next tie came against Washington, now rebranded the Commanders, in a 20-20 outcome on December 4, 2022.
Week 14: vs. Tampa Bay Buccaneers Against the Buccaneers, who had never won in seven games played at the Meadowlands, the Giants came out flat with just 202 yards from scrimmage and converting 1-of-13 third downs in a 20–8 loss. The first drive looked promising, featuring a 27-yard pass from
Danny Kanell to
Chris Calloway on the initial play; but after drawing a penalty when failing to get Tampa Bay to jump offsides on 4th-and-2,
Brad Daluiso missed a 47-yard field goal wide left. Later in the first quarter, quarterback
Trent Dilfer hit tight end
Dave Moore for a 26-yard gain into the New York red zone; but his third-down pass was intercepted by
Phillippi Sparks, who returned it 68 yards to the Bucs' 27-yard line. However, Kanell was picked off by linebacker
Derrick Brooks six plays later. The turnover trend continued in the second quarter, as Dilfer was picked off again by Sparks and Kanell by cornerback
Donnie Abraham in Tampa Bay territory. On 3rd-and-9, Dilfer hit rookie
Warrick Dunn—inexplicably matched up with
Michael Strahan—out of the backfield for a 53-yard catch-and-run; three plays later, Dilfer threw to
Mike Alstott from the 1 for a touchdown. After the Giants went three-and-out, the Buccaneers took over late in the first half, and used the running of Dunn and Alstott to drive into the red zone. But after a holding call on left guard
Jim Pyne pushed them back out, Dilfer'a pass was deflected and intercepted by
Tito Wooten, who got up and ran 53 yards to Tampa's 28; replays showed the ball hit the ground before Wooten got it, but it went unseen by the officials, and led to a Daluiso field goal just before halftime. In the third quarter, Dilfer's deep pass for rookie wide receiver
Reidel Anthony was intercepted by
Jason Sehorn, but he was flagged for pass interference, putting the ball at the 9-yard line; Alstott rumbled for a touchdown on the next play, putting the Bucs up 14–3. Plays by
Jessie Armstead and defensive end
Chidi Ahanotu kept both offenses quiet until a 38-yard run by
Tyrone Wheatley—coupled with back-to-back personal fouls on safety
John Lynch—set up New York at the 10. But the drive stalled, so a short Daluiso field goal made the score 14–6 at the end of the period. At the start of the fourth, Dilfer was blitzed by
Conrad Hamilton in the end zone and was called for intentional grounding when he threw the ball out of bounds, giving the Giants two points via safety. But on 4th-and-1 from the Bucs' 47, Wheatley was stopped short; then on 3rd-and-18, Sparks was called for interference on a deep pass to wide receiver
Robb Thomas. Dunn then carried three times for 27 yards down to the 1, where
Errict Rhett hammered in for a touchdown; the Giants would not threaten again. Dunn gained 169 yards from scrimmage—the most of his young career—as New York fell to 7–5–1; they maintained their one-game division lead thanks to a Redskins loss, but an Eagles win also bumped them up to 6–6–1, making next week's game in Philadelphia all the more critical.
Week 15: at Philadelphia Eagles The Giants made the trip down I-95 to take on the Eagles, winners of two straight behind the play of new young quarterback
Bobby Hoying, coming off a four-touchdown performance in a shootout win over the Bengals. But New York's defense forced five turnovers and collected four sacks, while
Danny Kanell's career-high three touchdown passes paced a 31–21 win.
Jessie Armstead set the tone by intercepting Hoying's second pass and returning it 58 yards for a touchdown. However, Kanell matched him when the ball slipped out of his hand as he went back to pass, and cornerback
Charles Dimry returned it to the 3-yard line;
Ricky Watters scored two plays later. Later in the first quarter,
Tyrone Wheatley left the game with a sprained ankle, and Hoying completed passes to wide receiver
Michael Timpson to reach the Giants' 29. On fourth down, he hit
Irving Fryar for 13 yards; but left tackle
Jermane Mayberry was flagged for illegal hands to the face, and the Eagles would punt. On their next possession, Hoying fumbled on a sack by
Scott Galyon, and
Keith Hamilton recovered. New York fed the ball to
Tiki Barber on all five plays of their next possession, and he gained 33 yards, eventually scoring on an 11-yard pass from Kanell. On the third play of Philadelphia's next drive, Hoying was sacked by defensive end
Bernard Holsey—starting due to injuries to
Chad Bratzke and
Cedric Jones—and fumbled, with
Michael Strahan recovering. One play later, Kanell threw a deep bomb to
David Patten, who caught it in stride for a 40-yard touchdown. Both teams would miss field goals in the final minute of the first half, keeping the Giants up 21–7. The Eagles drove to New York's 37 at the start of the third quarter, but running back
Charlie Garner let Hoying's deep sideline pass go through his hands, and both
Tito Wooten and
Conrad Hamilton knocked away passes to kill the drive; however, Kanell's third-down pass for
Chris Calloway was intercepted by
Brian Dawkins, who took it 64 yards the other way for a touchdown. New York traveled inside Philadelphia's 40 on their next two drives—with Armstead securing another interception—but they both ended in punts, as Kanell missed high for
Amani Toomer and low for Barber. It was still 21-14 early in the fourth quarter before Barber broke down the left sideline for a 42-yard run down to the 5-yard line; two plays later, Kanell rolled out and hit Calloway in the corner of the end zone for a touchdown. The Eagles' offense continued to sputter, as Hoying was picked off by
Percy Ellsworth—the second time throwing off his back foot—and later a 19-yard punt set up the Giants with a short field. Runs by Barber and
Charles Way led to a
Brad Daluiso field goal to make the score 31–14. Hoying hooked up with Fryar for a late touchdown, but Way recovered the onside kick to seal the win. Armstead, who also collected 10 tackles and half a sack, was named NFC Defensive Player of the Week, while Barber rushed for a season-high 114 yards and Way added 76 for the Giants, who moved one step closer to clinching the division title, with a rematch against Washington coming up.
Week 16: vs. Washington Redskins The Giants clinched their first NFC East title since
1990 with a 30-10 romp over the Redskins in front of a record crowd at
Giants Stadium, with the defense forcing six turnovers on the afternoon. The first came on a fumbled handoff between
Jeff Hostetler and
Stephen Davis, which
Jessie Armstead recovered. After a
Brad Daluiso field goal, Washington went three-and-out, but
Matt Turk dropped the snap, setting up the Giants at the 16-yard line; two plays later,
Charles Way barreled in for a touchdown. On New York's next drive,
Danny Kanell led a 13-play, 76-yard drive by converting on third-down passes to
Chris Calloway and
Howard Cross. From the 7, he then hit Calloway on a slant for a score, putting New York up 17-0 still in the first quarter. Hostetler passed the Redskins inside the Giants' 10 on their next drive, but a sack by
Robert Harris forced a
Scott Blanton field goal. The score was still 17–3 with less than two minutes remaining in the first half before Hostetler's pass for
Brian Mitchell was intercepted by
Conrad Hamilton off a deflection; that led to another Daluiso field goal, and
Jason Sehorn intercepted Hostetler's Hail Mary pass in the end zone on the last play of the half. The third quarter was a turnover-littered affair, as on Washington's first drive, Hostetler finally hit rookie wide receiver
Albert Connell for a 41-yard touchdown; they then forced a punt due to a sack by
Ken Harvey, but Connell was flagged for roughing the punter on
Brad Maynard. However, Kanell was intercepted by safety
Stanley Richard on the next play; but then
Corey Widmer took a pass from Hostetler one play later. Maynard's next punt was muffed by Mitchell and recovered by
David Patten, but Kanell was picked off again by Richard on the next play. However, a pass deflection by Sehorn and a sack by
Michael Strahan—his 14th on the year, tied for 3rd in the NFL and the most by a Giant since
Lawrence Taylor had 15 in
1989—forced a three-and-out, and the Giants ran eight times on their next drive and got a tipped third-down catch by
Amani Toomer, which ended with Daluiso's third field goal. The last four carries went to
Rodney Hampton, a longtime veteran who had not played all season due to undergoing knee surgery. On the second play of the Redskins' next drive,
Michael Westbrook slipped and fell as Hostetler threw to him, and Sehorn intercepted it, taking it all the way for a touchdown to increase New York's lead to 30–10. In desperation, Hostetler completed a host of passes for chunk plays on Washington's next two drives; but fullback
Larry Bowie was stuffed on 4th-and-1, and then Hostetler threw four straight incompletions at the Giants' 27. New York, meanwhile, used the running of Hampton and Way to burn off the remainder of the clock, securing a division title in front of the raucous home crowd. Sehorn—who not only had two interceptions but also held Westbrook without a catch after having nine in their first meeting—was named NFC Defensive Player of the Week for the second time, as
Jim Fassel became the Giants' first rookie head coach to win a division title since
Allie Sherman in
1961.
Week 17: at Dallas Cowboys With their playoff position already locked in, the Giants played their starters for one half and dominated the moribund Cowboys before letting most of their back-ups coast to a 20–7 win, becoming the first team in the NFC East to ever go undefeated in division play. Dallas's first drive was a three-and-out that saw
Troy Aikman get immediately sacked by
Robert Harris—his 10th of the year—and three penalties. The Giants, meanwhile, had
Danny Kanell hit
David Patten on 3rd-and-11 for 33 yards, which eventually led to a 28-yard
Brad Daluiso field goal. Later in the first quarter, he hit an open
Chris Calloway for 41 yards, and then found him again for a 21-yard touchdown to give New York a 10–0 lead. It was Calloway's eighth of the season, the most by a Giants receiver since
Mark Bavaro in
1987. Another Daluiso field goal added to the Giants' lead, as throughout the first half, Aikman was frequently harassed by
Keith Hamilton, and
Michael Irvin by
Jason Sehorn, who came up with his sixth interception—New York's league-best 27th—after a 26-yard pass to
Anthony Miller gave the Cowboys their first substantial gain of the day, and an apparent huge throw down to the 1-yard line was wiped out by a penalty. The Giants then traveled 65 yards in 10 plays, giving the ball to
Rodney Hampton seven times and benefitting from a 35-yard pass interference call on
Kevin Smith. With just over a minute left in the half, Hampton waltzed in from the one to make the score 20–0; his first touchdown of the season was the 49th of his career, breaking
Joe Morris's franchise record. The Cowboys had just two first downs in the first half, but in the third quarter,
Dave Brown's first snap in over two months was fumbled and recovered by linebacker
Fred Strickland; that led to an
Emmitt Smith touchdown run three plays later. Brown continued to look uncomfortable, completing just 2-of-9 passes for 14 yards and taking three sacks; however, Dallas failed to capitalize, as
Kevin Mathis had a big punt return negated by a penalty, and Aikman and his backup
Wade Wilson both fumbled snaps on consecutive drives, giving the Giants a franchise-record 44 takeaways on the season. In the fourth quarter, the running of
Sherman Williams and a 45-yard punt return by Mathis put Dallas in the red zone on separate drives. But
Richie Cunningham missed a field goal, while defensive tackle
Ray Agnew sacked
Jason Garrett on fourth down to kill their last scoring threat. With the win, the Giants finished the regular season with a 10–5–1 record, while the Cowboys ended their tumultuous season with five straight losses, entering an offseason of change that included head coach
Barry Switzer resigning. Elsewhere, wins by the Buccaneers, Lions and Vikings solidified the rest of the NFC playoff picture; Minnesota earned the No. 6 seed, and would be New York's opponents in the NFC Wild Card Game.
Standings ==Postseason==