Mike Vaccaro

Mike Vaccaro

NFL

Coughlin holds in anger after Giants loss to Broncos

We have seen Angry Tom before, in the aftermath of especšŸŒøially dyspeptic Giants losses. Angry Tom squints his eyes shut. Angry Tomā€™s disappointment cuts through the nonsense. There are 285 visibly different shades of red, from alizarin to vermilion; Angry Tom has a face that can reach all 285 during the course of one 10-minute news conference.

Angry Tom is so convšŸ incing, you want to finish your blocks, hold onto the football, and write your column at least 15 percent better afteršŸŒ³ward.

Angry Tom made a rare appearance after the Week 1 opener in Dallas, a 60-minute wreck of a game in which the Giants turned the ball over six times and let the Cowboys end their skein of home-field futility. But we didnā€™t seą½§e Angry Tom Sunday, even after the Broncos walked into MetLife Stadium and laid a 41-23 hurting on the Giants.

This was time for Coach Coughlin.

ā€œI thought it ź¦…was a very good football game,ā€ Coach Coughlin said. ā€œOur defense played well, hšŸ…·andled their tempo. It was a highly competitive game. And it turned into a sloppy finish.ā€

That was about as livid, cross, heated, disagreeable as he would get on this day. And it was the perfect way to be, of course. The Giants understood they were getting stiff tests back-to-back to open the year, their ancient rivals in Dallas backed up with Manning Bowl III, which meant the team that may be the ź§ŸNFLā€™s best was paying a visit in addition to the attendant fraternal football hoopla. Oh-and-two was an absolute possibility.

Nobody wants to start 0-2.

But if there has ever been a team that knows you can start 0-2 and still achieve everything you can out of a football season, itā€™s the Coughlin Giants. There are only a few holdovers from the 2007 team that started 0-2 (and came within a whisker of 0-3), but their legend remains: You can lose two in a row at the start of the season, but if you win four in a row at the eā™”nd ā€¦

ā€œI understand how the players feel,ā€ Cź¦•oach Coughlin said. ā€œWeā€™re 0-2 and weā€™ve been 0-2 before, we dug our heels in before. When we did that it was all about ā€˜team.ā€™ But our performance hšŸøas to be better.ā€

When they did that, in ā€™07, the only aspect of Tom Coughlinā€™s career š’anyone ever wanted to discuss was Angry Tom, because that was the part that had nearly cost him his job. But that team also showed the world what everyone in pro football already knew: This wasnā€™t merely a dictator who liked to motivate by agitation. This was a smart man who also well understood the human condition.

And is even better schooled in that now. So Coach Coughlin patiently reminded his players Sunday, minutes after the Broncos had turned them into a grease spot on their own home carpet, about ā€™07. He reminded them that two games shouldnā€™t change what they feel about tšŸ»hemselves, which is ā€¦

ā€œWe knā™‹ow weā€™re good,ā€ defensive end Mathias Kiwanuka said. ā€œCeź¦Ærtainly better than this.ā€

ā€œOšŸ”“ur confidence is good,ā€ receiver Hakeem Nicks said. ā€œAnd should be.ā€

ā€œI can say what we are,ā€ safety Antrel Rolle sź¦•aid, ā€œbut our record says otāœ¤herwise.

Thź§ƒe message is clear, and it is correct: 0-2 isnā€™t the end of anything ā€” hope, optimism, certainly not the season. It can well be a fresh beginning. But thatā€™s true only if they go to Carolina next week and handle a Panthers team that had its heart stomped on in Buffalo Sunday and went punch-for-punch with the NFCā€™s darlings from Seattle in Week 1.

In the end, amid the residue of Manning Bowl III, that is what the Giants must salvage from the MetLife Stadium turf. Kiwanuka said it bluntly: ā€œWeā€™ve shown we can play a good quarter or a good half. But we need to start playing whole games that way. And we need that to happen startišŸ…°ng next week.ā€

They do. And history insists they will. The Coughlin Giants are always at their fiercest when there are questions shadowing them, when there is doubt stalking them, when their toes are touchź¦›ing the edge of the abyss. Thatā€™s no accident. Coach Coughlin sees to it far more often than not.

ā€œI can standšŸ„€ up here and be fiery if thatā€™s what everyone wants,ā€ he said, drawing laughter, acknowledging his kinder, gentler, more common alter ego. ā€œThereā€™s a big hole in my stomach.ā€

It should be less so in the hearts and minds of the Giants and their fans. Angry Tom is locked in a film room somewhere, stewing. Coach Coughlin is on the case. The Giants are in gšŸŒŠood hands.