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Fassel

It has been an off-season of coach bashing for the Giants now that Dan Reeves is down in Atlanta. He battled with the brass on draft day, they say; couldn't coach an offense, they complain; gave his quarterback such a complicated and time-consuming play-calling system that he couldn't get his audibles in. And so on.

Sorry, but that doesn't fly.

If Reeves was such a disaster, how come none of this was written last season? All you read in those days was what a good job Reeves was doing to keep the operation together. And if his system was so inflexible (after all, in modern football, if you can't call an audible, if you can't switch out of a doomed play, you're a dead duck), how did New York ever beat Minnesota and Miami and Dallas and take the Super Bowl-bound Patriots down to the last 1:23 before losing by a point? And how did Reeves get the Broncos into the Super Bowl three times? No, the problem with the Giants goes much deeper than Dan Reeves.

For one, they have never figured out the whole free-agency game. They've picked up a starter here and there, but never anything more. "Build through the draft" has been the Giants' credo, and while they have selected some young defensive talent—like cornerbacks Phillippi Sparks and Jason Sehorn, linebackers Jessie Armstead and Corey Widmer, and end Michael Strahan—they have not done the same on offense. The last drafted Giant to make the Pro Bowl, tailback Rodney Hampton, was chosen in 1990. He's coming off his least productive season in six years and is showing signs of wear.

That was the kind of hand Reeves had to play. No Giants wideout had made the Pro Bowl since 1968 (the team's leading receivers, Chris Calloway and Thomas Lewis, tied for 50th in the league in receptions last season). Reeves inherited a quarterback he didn't believe in, and when he tried to bring in his own guy, Tommy Maddox, people laughed. Reeves struggled through a season when everyone knew he'd be gone, and he still kept things from getting completely out of hand.

O.K., enough history. The Giants finished next to last in offense in '95 and last in '96—with a passing game that produced almost 400 fewer yards than the 29th-ranked Buccaneers. So the Giants decided to open the door and let in some fresh air. Along came a smiling, studious-looking 47-year-old coach named Jim Fassel, whose entire reputation is built on his familiarity with the quarterback position. Look at what Fassel did in Arizona last year: He turned Boomer Esiason from a stiff into a guy who terrorized the league (at least for a few weeks) and breathed life into Kent Graham, a perpetual reject. And remember what he did in Denver in 1993: John Elway's rating jumped 27 points that season, Fassel's first as the Broncos' offensive coordinator.

Can Fassel work the same magic with Dave Brown, who has heard more boos than any nice young New Jersey gentleman should have to? Well, if he can't, nobody can. How many NFL head coaches really understand the quarterback position? Half a dozen? Maybe. One of them is certainly Fassel, who used to take snaps himself: In 1975, as a member of the Hawaii Hawaiians, he threw the last pass in the history of the World Football League.

Brown raves about how the whole tempo of the offense will pick up, how his play-calling has been simplified, how his fundamentals have been addressed. "Best of all, Jim's in my corner," he says.

"The biggest thing I saw about Dave was that he didn't have a fluidity about him," Fassel says. "Things looked hurried, forced. He was trying to power the ball. If the receivers weren't where they were supposed to be, he'd throw the ball with an anger to it. All that can be corrected."

Another problem may be tougher to address: Brown's tendency to start off fine in some games, then gradually fall apart. "Part of that might be a loss of fundamentals as things become unfamiliar in a game," says Fassel. "Part of it might come back to competitive instincts, and I won't know about that until we get on the field."

General manager George Young seems to be leaning over backward to give Fassel what he wants. There were receivers in the draft who were faster than Florida's Ike Hilliard, but Fassel liked him, so he became the Giant's No. 1 pick. Ditto halfback Tiki Barber, who was the team's second-round selection.

The offensive line is about average for the NFL. The defense is good enough to keep the Giants in just about any game. Now it's up to Fassel to work some miracles.

—by Paul Zimmerman