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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Offseason  



1.1  Signings  





1.2  Draft  





1.3  Undrafted free agents  







2 Staff  





3 Final roster  





4 Preseason  





5 Regular season  



5.1  Schedule  





5.2  Game summaries  



5.2.1  Week 1: vs. Pittsburgh Steelers  





5.2.2  Week 2: at Chicago Bears  





5.2.3  Week 3: vs. San Francisco 49ers  





5.2.4  Week 4: at Los Angeles Rams  





5.2.5  Week 5: at Dallas Cowboys  





5.2.6  Week 6: vs. Washington Football Team  





5.2.7  Week 7: at Philadelphia Eagles  





5.2.8  Week 8: vs. Tampa Bay Buccaneers  





5.2.9  Week 9: at Washington Football Team  





5.2.10  Week 10: vs. Philadelphia Eagles  





5.2.11  Week 12: at Cincinnati Bengals  





5.2.12  Week 13: at Seattle Seahawks  





5.2.13  Week 14: vs. Arizona Cardinals  





5.2.14  Week 15: vs. Cleveland Browns  





5.2.15  Week 16: at Baltimore Ravens  





5.2.16  Week 17: vs. Dallas Cowboys  







5.3  Standings  



5.3.1  Division  





5.3.2  Conference  









6 References  





7 External links  














2020 New York Giants season






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2020 New York Giants season
OwnerJohn Mara
Steve Tisch
General managerDave Gettleman
Head coachJoe Judge
Home fieldMetLife Stadium
Results
Record6–10
Division place2nd NFC East
Playoff finishDid not qualify
Pro BowlersCBJames Bradberry
TEEvan Engram
Uniform
  • Giants seasons
  • 2021 →
  • The 2020 season was the New York Giants' 96th in the National Football League (NFL) and their first under head coach Joe Judge.

    For the first time since 2004, long-time quarterback Eli Manning was not on the roster, as he announced his retirement on January 22.[1][2][3] Manning led the Giants to six playoff appearances, three NFC East titles, and two Super Bowl wins in the 2007 and 2011 seasons, winning the game MVP title in both Super Bowls.

    Despite starting the season 0–5 for the third time in eight years, the Giants improved on their 4–12 record from the previous season with their week 13 upset win over the Seattle Seahawks and rallied to finish 6–10, but despite beating their divisional rival, the Dallas Cowboys, the Giants failed to win the NFC East or make the playoffs for the fourth consecutive year, following the Washington Football Team winning their final game against the Philadelphia Eagles in Week 17. The Giants would have needed the Eagles to win in order to win the NFC East due to their head-to-head record against Washington, and it would have made them the first team in the Super Bowl era to make the playoffs with a double-digit losing record, as well as the first team to make the playoffs after starting 0-5.[4]

    On July 20, 2020 the Giants confirmed that their home games would take place without fans in attendance due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic in the United States.[5]

    Offseason[edit]

    Signings[edit]

    Position Player Age 2019 team Contract
    CB James Bradberry 26 Carolina Panthers 3 years, $43.5 million
    ILB Blake Martinez 26 Green Bay Packers 3 years, $30.75 million
    TE Levine Toilolo 28 San Francisco 49ers 2 years, $6.2 million
    OLB Kyler Fackrell 28 Green Bay Packers 1 year, $4.6 million
    OT Cameron Fleming 27 Dallas Cowboys 1 year, $3.438 million
    SS Nate Ebner 30 New England Patriots 1 year, $2 million
    QB Colt McCoy 33 Washington Redskins 1 year, $2.25 million
    RB Dion Lewis 29 Tennessee Titans 1 year, $1.55 million
    DB Dravon Askew-Henry 24 New York Guardians 2 years, $1.39 million
    DT Austin Johnson 25 Tennessee Titans 1 year, $1.5 million
    TE Eric Tomlinson 27 Oakland Raiders 1 year, $1.02 million
    LS Casey Kreiter 29 Denver Broncos 1 year, $1.048 million
    CB Logan Ryan 29 Tennessee Titans 1 year, $7.5 million

    Draft[edit]

    2020 New York Giants Draft
    Round Selection Player Position College Notes
    1 4 Andrew Thomas OT Georgia
    2 36 Xavier McKinney S Alabama
    3 99 Matt Peart OT UConn Compensatory pick
    4 110 Darnay Holmes CB UCLA
    5 150 Shane Lemieux G Oregon
    6 183 Cam Brown LB Penn State
    7 218 Carter Coughlin LB Minnesota
    238 T. J. Brunson LB South Carolina from New Orleans
    247 Chris Williamson CB Minnesota Compensatory pick
    255 Tae Crowder LB Georgia Compensatory pick

    Pre-draft trades

    Undrafted free agents[edit]

    Player Position College
    Christian Angulo CB Hampton
    Oluwole Betiku DE Illinois
    Case Cookus QB Northern Arizona
    Derrick Dillon WR LSU
    Malcolm Elmore CB Central Methodist
    Tyler Haycraft OT Louisville
    Rysen John WR/TE Simon Fraser
    Niko Lalos DE Dartmouth
    JaQuarius Landrews S Mississippi State
    Javon Leake RB Maryland
    Dana Levine OLB Temple
    Austin Mack WR Ohio State
    Kyle Markway TE South Carolina
    Kyle Murphy OT Rhode Island
    Dominique Ross OLB North Carolina
    Binjimen Victor WR Ohio State

    Staff[edit]

    2020 New York Giants staff

    Front office

    • President/CEO – John Mara
    • Chairman/executive vice president – Steve Tisch
    • Senior vice president & general manager – Dave Gettleman
    • Vice president of football operations/assistant general manager – Kevin Abrams
    • Senior vice president of player personnel – Chris Mara
    • Director of player personnel – Mark Koncz
    • Director of pro personnel – Ken Sternfeld
    • Director of college scouting – Chris Pettit

    Head coaches

    Offensive coaches

    Defensive coaches

    Special teams coaches

    Coaching Assistants

    • Special projects and situations – Amos Jones
    • Chief of staff – Ryan Hollern

    Strength and conditioning

    • Director of strength and performance – Craig Fitzgerald
    • Assistant strength and performance – Thomas Stallworth
    • Performance manager/assistant strength and performance – Sam Coad

    Final roster[edit]

    2020 New York Giants final roster
    Quarterbacks

    Running backs

    Wide receivers

    Tight ends

    Offensive linemen

    Defensive linemen

    Linebackers

    Defensive backs

    Special teams

    Reserve lists


    Practice squad


    Rookies in italics
    53 active, 12 inactive, 15 practice squad (+1 exempt)

    Preseason[edit]

    The Giants' preseason schedule was announced on May 1.[8]

    Week Date Opponent Venue Result
    1 August 13 atNew York Jets MetLife Stadium Cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic
    2 August 22 atTennessee Titans Nissan Stadium
    3 August 29 Green Bay Packers MetLife Stadium
    4 September 3 New England Patriots MetLife Stadium

    Regular season[edit]

    Schedule[edit]

    The Giants' 2020 schedule was announced on May 7.[8]

    Week Date Opponent Result Record Venue Recap
    1 September 14 Pittsburgh Steelers L 16–26 0–1 MetLife Stadium Recap
    2 September 20 atChicago Bears L 13–17 0–2 Soldier Field Recap
    3 September 27 San Francisco 49ers L 9–36 0–3 MetLife Stadium Recap
    4 October 4 atLos Angeles Rams L 9–17 0–4 SoFi Stadium Recap
    5 October 11 atDallas Cowboys L 34–37 0–5 AT&T Stadium Recap
    6 October 18 Washington Football Team W 20–19 1–5 MetLife Stadium Recap
    7 October 22 atPhiladelphia Eagles L 21–22 1–6 Lincoln Financial Field Recap
    8 November 2 Tampa Bay Buccaneers L 23–25 1–7 MetLife Stadium Recap
    9 November 8 atWashington Football Team W 23–20 2–7 FedExField Recap
    10 November 15 Philadelphia Eagles W 27–17 3–7 MetLife Stadium Recap
    11 Bye
    12 November 29 atCincinnati Bengals W 19–17 4–7 Paul Brown Stadium Recap
    13 December 6 atSeattle Seahawks W 17–12 5–7 Lumen Field Recap
    14 December 13 Arizona Cardinals L 7–26 5–8 MetLife Stadium Recap
    15 December 20 Cleveland Browns L 6–20 5–9 MetLife Stadium Recap
    16 December 27 atBaltimore Ravens L 13–27 5–10 M&T Bank Stadium Recap
    17 January 3 Dallas Cowboys W 23–19 6–10 MetLife Stadium Recap

    Note: Intra-division opponents are in bold text.

    Game summaries[edit]

    Week 1: vs. Pittsburgh Steelers[edit]

    Week One: Pittsburgh Steelers at New York Giants – Game summary

    Period 1 2 34Total
    Steelers 3 13 01026
    Giants 3 7 0616

    atMetLife Stadium, East Rutherford, New Jersey

    Game information

    The Giants lost their first game in the post-Eli Manning era. They suffered their 4th consecutive loss in a season opener, and became 3–8 in home openers since moving to MetLife Stadium.

    The Giants opened up strong, taking a 10-3 lead on the first play of the 2nd quarter when Daniel Jones connected with Darius Slayton for a 41-yard score. T. J. Watt forced an interception of Jones which sparked two Steelers touchdown drives before halftime. In the 3rd quarter, on the 19th play of an 87-yard drive, Jones was hit by Bud Dupree and forced a goal-line interception, which the Steelers kicked a field goal to make it a 2 possession game. JuJu Smith-Schuster scored his second touchdown in the 4th quarter for the Steelers to take a commanding 26-10 lead. Slayton scored his second touchdown with 1:52 remaining, but the Steelers sealed the victory when they stopped the Giants 2-point conversion attempt and recovered the onside kick.

    Week 2: at Chicago Bears[edit]

    Week Two: New York Giants at Chicago Bears – Game summary

    Period 1 2 34Total
    Giants 0 0 31013
    Bears 10 7 0017

    atSoldier Field, Chicago, Illinois

    Game information

    The Giants came out flat, surrendering a 12 play, 82-yard opening touchdown drive that lasted half the first quarter. Saquon Barkley suffered a season ending ACL injury on the first play of the second quarter,[9][10] and Daniel Jones later threw a costly red zone interception to end the drive. They would also lose Sterling Shepard to a toe injury.

    Down 17-0, the Giants tightened up their defensive play in the second half, forcing two interceptions from Bears quarterback Mitchell Trubisky and getting back in the game. In the final 2:02 down 17-13, Daniel Jones tried to complete a comeback and led the offense to the Bears' 10-yard line, but could not score, so the Giants started 0–2 for the 4th consecutive year.

    Week 3: vs. San Francisco 49ers[edit]

    Week Three: San Francisco 49ers at New York Giants – Game summary

    Period 1 2 34Total
    49ers 6 10 71336
    Giants 0 6 309

    at MetLife Stadium, East Rutherford, New Jersey

    Game information

    With the loss, the Giants fell to 0–3 for the first time since 2017. The 49ers did not punt once the entire game while the Giants only mustered 231 total yards. Daniel Jones had multiple turnovers for the third game in a row.

    Week 4: at Los Angeles Rams[edit]

    Week Four: New York Giants at Los Angeles Rams – Game summary

    Period 1 2 34Total
    Giants 0 6 039
    Rams 7 3 0717

    atSoFi Stadium, Inglewood, California

    Game information

    Daniel Jones tried to mount a game-tying drive but threw an interception in Rams territory to seal the loss. It was his 7th turnover in 4 games. The Giants fell to 0–4 for the first time since 2017 and failed to score a touchdown for the second consecutive game.

    Week 5: at Dallas Cowboys[edit]

    Week Five: New York Giants at Dallas Cowboys – Game summary

    Period 1 2 34Total
    Giants 14 6 31134
    Cowboys 3 21 7637

    atAT&T Stadium, Arlington, Texas

    Game information

    The Giants blew a 14-point lead in the second quarter. Daniel Jones' fumbling woes continued after he was sacked by Cowboys' Anthony Brown who returned that same fumble for a touchdown. The Giants briefly regained the lead with 8:46 left in the 4th quarter after Cowboys quarterback Dak Prescott suffered a season-ending ankle injury, but their defense could not hang on against backup quarterback Andy Dalton. The Cowboys kicked a game-winning field goal to drop the still-winless Giants to 0–5 and two games behind the 2–3 Cowboys.

    Week 6: vs. Washington Football Team[edit]

    Week Six: Washington Football Team at New York Giants – Game summary

    Period 1 2 34Total
    Washington 0 10 0919
    Giants 10 3 0720

    at MetLife Stadium, East Rutherford, New Jersey

    Game information

    Tae Crowder, the last pick in the 2020 NFL Draft, recovered a fumble and ran 43 yards for the go-ahead score with 3:29 remaining. After responding with a touchdown to make it 20–19, Washington coach Ron Rivera chose to go for the 2-point conversion, and the win. The Giants stopped Washington's conversion attempt, guaranteeing Joe Judge his first win as an NFL head coach.

    Week 7: at Philadelphia Eagles[edit]

    Week Seven: New York Giants at Philadelphia Eagles – Game summary

    Period 1 2 34Total
    Giants 7 0 7721
    Eagles 7 3 01222

    atLincoln Financial Field, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

    Game information

    After a slow start in the first half, the Giants gained momentum to take a 21–10 fourth-quarter lead. However, several mishaps would ensue for New York, including late penalties and a critical drop by Evan Engram in the 4th quarter at the Eagles 25 yard line. Philadelphia capitalized on the momentum swing and scored two unanswered touchdowns for a 22–21 lead with 40 seconds left in regulation. With one last chance to drive for a potential game-winning field goal, Daniel Jones was strip-sacked by Brandon Graham on second down. The Eagles recovered the loose ball, sealing New York's fate. The heartbreaking loss dropped the Giants to 1–6 on the season and extended their losing streak against the Eagles to eight games dating back to Week 9 of the 2016 season.

    Week 8: vs. Tampa Bay Buccaneers[edit]

    Week Eight: Tampa Bay Buccaneers at New York Giants – Game summary

    Period 1 2 34Total
    Buccaneers 3 3 91025
    Giants 7 7 3623

    at MetLife Stadium, East Rutherford, New Jersey

    Game information

    Despite leading 17–15 heading into the fourth quarter, more miscues haunted the Giants as the defense allowed Tom Brady to score 10 points and quickly fell behind 25–17. Despite the miscues, the Giants drove down the field with Daniel Jones finding Golden Tate in the endzone with 28 seconds left. However, during the two-point conversion, controversy arose after the referees picked up a flag for an Antoine Winfield Jr. pass interference on Dion Lewis in the endzone as Winfield made a deflection on a Daniel Jones pass. This forced the Giants to attempt an onside kick and could not recover the kick ending the game. The Giants dropped 1–7 for the third time in four seasons.[11][12]

    Week 9: at Washington Football Team[edit]

    Week Nine: New York Giants at Washington Football Team – Game summary

    Period 1 2 34Total
    Giants 10 10 3023
    Washington 0 3 71020

    atFedExField, Landover, Maryland

    Game information

    The Giants took an early lead and never trailed. Washington fought back from a 20-3 deficit and cut the lead to 23-20. However, two late interceptions allowed the Giants victory and swept Washington for the second straight year to improve to 2–7. The Giants had 5 total takeaways and did not turn the ball over for the first time in the season and extended their winning streak against Washington to 5 games. The Giants were the only NFC East team to defeat Washington in the 2020 season.

    Week 10: vs. Philadelphia Eagles[edit]

    Week Ten: Philadelphia Eagles at New York Giants – Game summary

    Period 1 2 34Total
    Eagles 3 0 14017
    Giants 7 7 7627

    at MetLife Stadium, East Rutherford, New Jersey

    Game information

    With this win, the Giants avenged their Week 7 loss and improved to 3–7 on the season. The Giants did not turn the ball over for the second straight game and did not force any turnovers on defense. The victory also snapped an 8 game losing streak to the Eagles, dating back to Week 9 of the 2016 season.[13][14][15] After the game, the Giants extended kicker Graham Gano $14M through the 2023 NFL season.

    Week 12: at Cincinnati Bengals[edit]

    Week Twelve: New York Giants at Cincinnati Bengals – Game summary

    Period 1 2 34Total
    Giants 7 3 3619
    Bengals 7 3 0717

    atPaul Brown Stadium, Cincinnati, Ohio

    Game information

    The Giants opened up with a Wayne Gallman touchdown on 4th and Goal, set up by a 53-yard completion from Jones to Evan Engram. The Bengals returned the ensuing kickoff for a touchdown of their own and the halftime score was 10-10. The Giants defense forced three turnovers in the 2nd half, the first an interception by Niko Lalos, a rookie from Dartmouth making his NFL debut, and a forced fumble later by Logan Ryan which he also recovered. The Bengals cut into the Giants 19-10 lead in the final minutes and had a chance to win the game on the final drive, but backup quarterback Brandon Allen was sacked by Jabaal Sheard and lost the ball, which was recovered by the Giants. Daniel Jones injured his hamstring in the win.[16]

    With the win, the Giants became the third NFL team to win 700 regular season games (only behind the Bears and Packers) and won in Cincinnati for the first time in franchise history.

    Week 13: at Seattle Seahawks[edit]

    Week Thirteen: New York Giants at Seattle Seahawks – Game summary

    Period 1 2 34Total
    Giants 0 0 14317
    Seahawks 3 2 0712

    atLumen Field, Seattle, Washington

    Game information

    The Giants did not have Daniel Jones as their starting quarterback and were double-digit underdogs going into a cross-country battle with the Seahawks. In only his second appearance with the team and first start, Colt McCoy and the Giants shocked the NFL with one of the biggest upsets of the 2020 season. McCoy won his first game as a starting quarterback since October 27, 2014, when he was with the Washington Redskins. The Giants defense contained Russell Wilson all game long, sacking him 5 times and forcing 2 takeaways. Seattle was leading 5–0 at halftime, but in the third quarter, the Giants' rushing attack broke through with a 60-yard run by Wayne Gallman which set up two Alfred Morris touchdowns on back-to-back possessions. With a 17–12 lead and under two minutes to play, the defense was able to stop Wilson one last time. With the upset win, the Giants improved to 5–7, beat the Seahawks for the first time since 2010, and earned their longest winning streak since 2016. In addition, New York would take sole possession of first place in the NFC East, though the Washington Football Team would move back into a first-place tie with the Giants the following night with a bigger upset win over the undefeated Pittsburgh Steelers.

    Week 14: vs. Arizona Cardinals[edit]

    Week Fourteen: Arizona Cardinals at New York Giants – Game summary

    Period 1 2 34Total
    Cardinals 3 10 7626
    Giants 0 0 707

    at MetLife Stadium, East Rutherford, New Jersey

    Game information

    The Giants average starting field position was from their own 17-yard line while the Cardinals' started from their own 47-yard line all game. The Giants struggled from start to finish in an uphill battle as Daniel Jones and the offense struggled to move the ball with only 4 first downs in the first half. The defense kept the game competitive as long as they could with an early goal line stand, but were overmatched in a 26-7 blowout loss. Cardinals LB Haason Reddick had a dominating performance with 5 sacks and 3 forced fumbles. The Giants snapped their four-game winning streak, dropped to 5-8 on the season, and lost Jones to another leg injury. New York also dropped to second place in the NFC East when the Washington Football Team defeated the San Francisco 49ers later that afternoon to take sole possession of first place.

    Week 15: vs. Cleveland Browns[edit]

    Week Fifteen: Cleveland Browns at New York Giants – Game summary

    Period 1 2 34Total
    Browns 0 13 0720
    Giants 3 0 036

    at MetLife Stadium, East Rutherford, New Jersey

    Game information

    Before Week 14, the NFL flexed the Giants-Browns game into the Sunday Night Football slot, replacing the San Francisco 49ers visiting the Dallas Cowboys. It was the first time the Giants have played on Sunday Night since the 2018 season.[17]

    The Giants did not have Daniel Jones due to his injury and also lost offensive coordinator Jason Garrett and defensive back James Bradberry who both contracted COVID-19. Former Browns draft pick Colt McCoy and former head coach Freddie Kitchens were promoted to starting QB and offensive coordinator, respectively. The Giants opened the game with great field position and drove into the red zone only to turn the ball over on downs on a fake field goal attempt. The defense forced a turnover on downs of their own and the Giants took advantage of the ensuing field position and led 3–0 after the first quarter. Baker Mayfield then got hot, leading the Browns on three 10+ play touchdown drives, two of them for 95 yards. The Giants offense struggled to gain that kind of momentum and the Browns won 20–6, dropping New York to 5–9 and losing to the Browns for the first time since 2008.

    Week 16: at Baltimore Ravens[edit]

    Week Sixteen: New York Giants at Baltimore Ravens – Game summary

    Period 1 2 34Total
    Giants 0 3 3713
    Ravens 14 6 0727

    atM&T Bank Stadium, Baltimore, Maryland

    Game information

    The Ravens scored on all 4 drives in the first half and all of them were 10+ plays. Daniel Jones made his third start in 5 weeks and could only muster 89 yards on 8 completions in the first half. A tired Giants defense couldn't keep up, and the Ravens became the first team since 2008 to have 3 players run for 75+ yards in the same game (Jackson, Dobbins, and Edwards).

    In the loss, kicker Graham Gano tied a Giants franchise record with his 29th consecutive field goal.

    Despite the loss, the Giants remained in playoff contention with Washington's loss to the Panthers, and the Eagles loss to the Cowboys.

    Week 17: vs. Dallas Cowboys[edit]

    Week Seventeen: Dallas Cowboys at New York Giants – Game summary

    Period 1 2 34Total
    Cowboys 3 6 7319
    Giants 6 14 0323

    at MetLife Stadium, East Rutherford, New Jersey

    Game information

    Despite orchestrating 3 touchdown drives in his previous 3 starts, Daniel Jones and the Giants came out firing, scoring 3 touchdowns in the first half, including two from Sterling Shepard, one of which was a 23-yard end-around on the opening drive. However, the Cowboys scored a field goal on their last possession in the first half and a touchdown by Ezekiel Elliott on their first drive of the third quarter to make it a one-score game.

    Kickers Greg Zuerlein and Graham Gano traded field goals in the 4th quarter. Controversially, on the Giants field goal drive, Cowboys head coach Mike McCarthy failed to challenge an 11-yard catch by Dante Pettis on 3rd & 16 to put the Giants in field goal range, despite replays showing the ball had touched the ground. On the Cowboys last chance of the game, needing a touchdown to win, Leonard Williams sacked Andy Dalton on first and goal and got to him again. On third down, Williams hit Dalton as he was throwing the ball, and the pass was intercepted by rookie safety Xavier McKinney, his first NFL interception. Needing a first down to run out the clock, running back Wayne Gallman got it, then dropped the football without being touched. Fortunately, he recovered his own fumble in the mad dash and the Giants then ran out the clock.

    With the win, the Giants improved to 6–10 and eliminated the Cowboys. They also snapped a 7-game losing streak against them, which dated back to Week 14 of the 2016 season. Their 6 wins was the most in a season since 2016 as well. They also won all three home games against their divisional opponents in a season for the first time since 2005. However, the Giants were eliminated when the Washington Football Team defeated the Philadelphia Eagles 20-14 and clinched the NFC East later that night.[18]

    Standings[edit]

    Division[edit]

    NFC East
  • talk
  • edit
  • W L T PCT DIV CONF PF PA STK
    (4) Washington Football Team 7 9 0 .438 4–2 5–7 335 329 W1
    New York Giants 6 10 0 .375 4–2 5–7 280 357 W1
    Dallas Cowboys 6 10 0 .375 2–4 5–7 395 473 L1
    Philadelphia Eagles 4 11 1 .281 2–4 4–8 334 418 L3

    Conference[edit]

  • e
  • # Team Division W L T PCT DIV CONF SOS SOV STK
    Division leaders
    1 Green Bay Packers North 13 3 0 .813 5–1 10–2 .428 .387 W6
    2[a] New Orleans Saints South 12 4 0 .750 6–0 10–2 .459 .406 W2
    3[a] Seattle Seahawks West 12 4 0 .750 4–2 9–3 .447 .404 W4
    4 Washington Football Team East 7 9 0 .438 4–2 5–7 .459 .388 W1
    Wild cards
    5 Tampa Bay Buccaneers South 11 5 0 .688 4–2 8–4 .488 .392 W4
    6 Los Angeles Rams West 10 6 0 .625 3–3 9–3 .494 .484 W1
    7[b] Chicago Bears North 8 8 0 .500 2–4 6–6 .488 .336 L1
    Did not qualify for the postseason
    8[b] Arizona Cardinals West 8 8 0 .500 2–4 6–6 .475 .441 L2
    9 Minnesota Vikings North 7 9 0 .438 4–2 5–7 .504 .366 W1
    10[c] San Francisco 49ers West 6 10 0 .375 3–3 4–8 .549 .448 L1
    11[c][d] New York Giants East 6 10 0 .375 4–2 5–7 .502 .427 W1
    12[d] Dallas Cowboys East 6 10 0 .375 2–4 5–7 .471 .333 L1
    13[e] Carolina Panthers South 5 11 0 .313 1–5 4–8 .531 .388 L1
    14[e] Detroit Lions North 5 11 0 .313 1–5 4–8 .508 .350 L4
    15 Philadelphia Eagles East 4 11 1 .281 2–4 4–8 .537 .469 L3
    16 Atlanta Falcons South 4 12 0 .250 1–5 2–10 .551 .391 L5
    Tiebreakers[f]
    1. ^ a b New Orleans finished ahead of Seattle based on conference record.
  • ^ a b Chicago finished and clinched the 7th and final playoff spot ahead of Arizona based on better win percentage in common games (against Detroit, the NY Giants, Carolina, and the LA Rams, Chicago finished 3–2, while Arizona finished 1–4).
  • ^ a b San Francisco finished ahead of the NY Giants based on head-to-head victory. Division tie break was initially used to eliminate Dallas (see below).
  • ^ a b NY Giants won tiebreaker over Dallas based on division record.
  • ^ a b Carolina finished ahead of Detroit based on head-to-head victory.
  • ^ When breaking ties for three or more teams under the NFL's rules, they are first broken within divisions, then comparing only the highest-ranked remaining team from each division.
  • References[edit]

    1. ^ Eisen, Michael (January 22, 2020). "Eli Manning announces retirement". Giants.com. Retrieved January 22, 2020.
  • ^ Bergman, Jeremy (January 22, 2020). "End of an era: Eli Manning retiring after 16 seasons". NFL.com. Retrieved January 25, 2020.
  • ^ Freiman, Jordan (January 22, 2020). "Eli Manning, Giants quarterback and two-time Super Bowl-winner, retiring after 16 seasons". cbsnews.com. Retrieved January 25, 2020.
  • ^ Inside the Numbers: Giants' playoff history, Giants.com, December 29, 2020
  • ^ "Giants, Jets to play without fans at MetLife Stadium in 2020". NFL.com. Retrieved July 20, 2020.
  • ^ "Saints acquire CB Eli Apple in trade with Giants". ESPN.com. October 23, 2018. Retrieved April 27, 2020.
  • ^ Eisen, Michael (October 29, 2019). "New York Giants acquire DL Leonard Williams for two draft picks". Giants.com. Retrieved October 30, 2019.
  • ^ a b Shook, Nick (July 27, 2020). "Roger Goodell writes letter to NFL fans as training camps start across U.S." NFL. Retrieved July 27, 2020.
  • ^ "Giants vs. Bears score: Live updates, game stats, highlights, TV channel, streaming info for Week 2 matchup". CBSSports.com. Retrieved September 20, 2020.
  • ^ Florio, Mike (September 20, 2020). "Giants fear torn ACL for Saquon Barkley". ProFootballTalk. Retrieved September 20, 2020.
  • ^ Scott, Jelani. "Controversial DPI no-call propels Bucs past Giants in thrilling MNF matchup". NFL.com. Retrieved November 3, 2020.
  • ^ Hancock, Jacob. "Did officials bail out Tom Brady, Bucs by picking up flag on Giants' tying 2-point attempt?". www.sportingnews.com. Retrieved November 3, 2020.
  • ^ "Eagles at Giants score: Live updates, game stats, highlights, TV, streaming info for Week 10 NFC East game". CBSSports.com. Retrieved November 15, 2020.
  • ^ Dunleavy, Ryan (November 15, 2020). "Giants finally beat Eagles to boost shocking playoff hopes". New York Post. Retrieved November 15, 2020.
  • ^ Benton, Dan (November 15, 2020). "Daniel Jones shines as Giants finally break Eagles' curse". Giants Wire. Retrieved November 15, 2020.
  • ^ "Giants lose Daniel Jones but move to top of NFC East standings with road win over Bengals". New York Daily News.
  • ^ "Browns-Giants flexed to Sunday night in Week 15". December 9, 2020.
  • ^ Traina, Patricia. "New York Giants Eliminated from Playoffs as Washington Tops Philadelphia, 20-14". Sports Illustrated New York Giants News, Analysis and More. Retrieved January 4, 2021.
  • External links[edit]


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    Categories: 
    2020 National Football League season by team
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