Giants say they lacked intensity

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EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. - Standing in front of his locker, Giants tailback Brandon Jacobs fully credited the Eagles after the NFC's top seed failed to score a touchdown yesterday in the NFC divisional playoff. He fully blamed the Giants offense, the NFL's top rushing unit.

"We couldn't come out and match their intensity," Jacobs said.

Giants coach Tom Coughlin protested a penalty call in the third quarter and got it reversed. But a challenge didn't go his way.
DAVID MAIALETTI / Staff Photographer
Giants coach Tom Coughlin protested a penalty call in the third quarter and got it reversed. But a challenge didn't go his way.
Jacobs offered no explanation for his team's failure at key times. Jacobs did say that the Eagles reminded him of his own football team, last year's version.

"I think they just beat the team that had the best chance to beat them," Jacobs said. "I'm on that bandwagon. . . . My prediction is they will win the whole thing."

Praising the Eagles was about the only move left for the Giants after they converted just one of seven third-down conversions in the first half and failed on two crucial fourth-and-short plays later on.

After the Eagles' 23-11 victory, Giants center Shaun O'Hara summed up the sensation of going from Super Bowl champions to exiting the postseason without beating the Eagles or anybody else, losing at home after winning all their playoff games on the road last season. He called it "probably the worst feeling in the world."

"You almost wonder if it's better to not make the playoffs than exit the way we did," O'Hara said.

Speaking of the "remorse" felt in the Giants locker room, coach Tom Coughlin talked about his team's failure to score in the Green Zone. That zone was the entire field since that's how far New York's failure spread.

Even Coughlin's proven ability to divine whether to throw a challenge flag left him. On one fourth-and-short play, Coughlin and his staff watching monitors upstairs were convinced that tailback Derrick Ward had been given a bad spot by officials.

"Couldn't imagine the spot was right," Coughlin said later. "Obviously, I challenged."

Replays showed a completely fair placing of the ball. Ward had rolled past the first-down marker but not before he hit the ground. With fourth and inches at the Giants' 45-yard line, his team trailing, 20-11, Coughlin called for a quarterback sneak.

"We had the play we wanted - the sneak," Coughlin said. "They just did a good job of loading up."

The Eagles stuffed Eli Manning and stopped Jacobs on fourth and 2 on the next drive, with 61/2 minutes left in the game. Coughlin blamed himself for the play call, saying he thought it was fourth and 1, that he would have called timeout and "possibly" changed the play.

"I pulled around and there was nowhere to go," said Giants guard Rich Seubert of the play.

Giants players talked about all the missed opportunities, starting from the opening drive, after Ahmad Bradshaw ran the opening kickoff to the Eagles' 35-yard line. The Giants got a couple of first downs, even converted on fourth and 2 with a Jacobs run. But after getting to the Eagles' 11, they ran for 2 yards and no yards and couldn't get to the end zone with a third-down pass, settling for a field goal.

"If we could have started any better, who's to say - it could have been different," O'Hara said. "If we had punched it in, we could have made a statement."

O'Hara was talking about this game and the entire playoffs when he said the difference between winning and losing was "not very big. It's very small.

"It's an ankle tackle here, a better block here, a finished block there. It's something we're used to doing. For whatever reason, we didn't do it today. We kept putting our defense in a tough spot. They played their butts off. Offensively, we really have nobody to blame but ourselves."


Contact staff writer Mike Jensen at 215-854-4489 or mjensen@phillynews.com

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