Despite showing some tremendous fight through the first few weeks, the New York Giants have plenty of discipline issues on their plate The Giants entered Week 2 thinking they would play some classic bully ball — rough up the opponent, play a little dirty, and find a way to grit out a win. That strategy is ironic since, typically, this team is the one consistently being bullied by its opponent. What’s even more ironic is that the bully ball style led to 21 penalties, 14 of them accepted for 160 yards, ultimately ending with their demise despite an incredible bounce-back performance from Russell Wilson and an impressive showing overall from an offense that couldn’t find the end zone just a week prior. Then in Week 3, another flurry of penalties put them in a bad spot against the Chiefs. Giving a Mahomes-led offense free yards is never something teams want to do, especially since the Chiefs were struggling and frustrated heading into the game. It all comes down to accountability and discipline, both areas that Head Coach Brian Daboll is working to improve. These meltdowns show that his group still has some holes that need patching in that regard. Moving forward, the Giants can lose only by being outplayed, not by beating themselves.
This team played with an intensity and a desire to win that seemed like a distant memory for Giants fans, and was ultimately a positive sign about the internal feelings this team possesses. They want to win, they believe they can beat anybody, and are willing to put everything on the line to get it done.
It might be fair to say they put a little too much on the line. They actually crossed it completely.
James Hudson walked out of the tunnel and thought he was prime Sugar Ray. And no, not the band. There was nothing “Fly” about the way he played the game.
Giants T James Hudson trying out a new blocking methodpic.twitter.com/yoqnoXdFr3
— Underdog NFL (@UnderdogNFL) September 14, 2025
In the opening drive of the game, Hudson committed four penalties. No player in this century has committed that many penalties in a single drive.
A pair of pre-snap false start penalties is at least understandable. The Giants are on the road facing one of their biggest rivals, who they just can’t seem to beat, and they are desperate to win. Nerves were understandably at an all-time high, and he could have settled down into the game.
What is unacceptable is replacing blocking techniques with hefty right hooks and picking up two personal fouls in one drive. That’s the kind of discipline issue players get benched for.
#Giants OT James Hudson was not happy that he was benched.
(
@BobbySkinner_)pic.twitter.com/iDzzIpu8Pd https://t.co/BherFNYBIA
— Ari Meirov (@MySportsUpdate) September 14, 2025
Giants corner Dru Phillips also caused an abundance of flags to be thrown. Against Dallas, one penalty was for roughness when he slammed CeeDee Lamb to the ground on a tackle. Even though those two share some bad blood, that just can’t happen. The other was for pass interference, which Phillips said was “bogus.”
He committed another defensive pass interference against the Chiefs, giving them 52 yards and a free field goal. This was certainly bogus in the sense that it should never have been committed. This was the one time the Giants would have been okay giving up a bomb, because the kicking team probably wouldn’t have had time to get set and kick the field goal to give them the lead at half.
Patrick Mahomes had 12 seconds in the pocket, Dru Phillips gets called for a pass interference
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Should have let him caught it. pic.twitter.com/bbci0Ckdi6
— SM Highlights (@SMHighlights1) September 22, 2025
Phillips is not the veteran that Hudson is. Most of these penalties can be seen as a sophomore season growing pains. Whatever the case may be, he must learn from these mistakes quickly.
The Giants’ 14 accepted penalties are the seventh-most for a single game in franchise history. They committed seven more against Kansas City. In the Daboll era, the Giants have committed a whopping 340 accepted penalties. That averages out to about 85 per season. This year, they have given up 11 first downs on penalties alone and have allowed 277 total yards on penalties, the most allowed in the league.
here's the breakdown for the 14 accepted:
7 on offense
6 defense
1 special tms9 in the 1st half including 6 on the opening drive
5 2nd half3 false starts
3 unnecessary roughness
2 roughing the passer
2 pass interference4 James Hudson
2 Dru Phillips#NYGvsDAL— Lance Medow (@LanceMedow) September 15, 2025
Daboll’s Giants are on track to end the year with 170 total penalties. If they do eclipse that, they will set a new NFL record. They must do everything in their power to ensure they don’t come near that number.
The abundance of flags thrown in a single game indicates a coaching accountability issue, especially since that coach already has so many on his resume at the moment. The standards have to be much greater.
Benching Hudson was a step in the right direction. That is the type of accountability he needs to hold this team to moving forward. However, what Daboll can’t do is excuse Hudson’s actions and write them as him being a fierce competitor.
Daboll on the next steps with James Hudson and how to prevent costly penalties like on the #Giants opening drive last week. pic.twitter.com/4dVasJCj5J
— The Giants Report (@GiantsReport1) September 17, 2025
He is certainly taking a big swing in retaining his confidence in Hudson. Pun absolutely intended.
Addressing the team discipline issues is the next must.
Daboll has been trying his best to uphold his guys to these standards. During the pre-season, he implemented a policy that pulled players from practice if they committed a pre-snap penalty. He is evidently increasing the accountability of his team, benching both Hudson and Phillips.
Defensive edge Kayvon Thibodeaux puts it best.
“A lot of lack of discipline out there on the defensive side,” he said. “We have to grow up all the way around.”
This team just needs to grow up. They have their selection of veterans, but for the most part, the team has been investing in young talent. The young bucks need to learn from these mistakes, grow up, and start winning games and playing clean football.
It certainly doesn’t help the maturing process when Daboll and his star second-year player are airing things out on the sidelines.
Brian Daboll and Malik Nabers were YELLING at each other.
Then, in a hilarious let’s make up moment, Brian Daboll tries to give him a low five, only for Nabers to hilariously not see it.
Daboll tried to play it off with a tap to Nabers chest
#NFL #Week1
@TWDTV1 pic.twitter.com/xVBuGMiwL2
— Andrew Jerell Jones, Luke 1:37 (BlueSky too now) (@sluggahjells) September 7, 2025
At least when Odell Beckham Jr. got upset, he took it out on kicking nets instead of chatting to the coach.
Odell Beckham vs. kicking net https://t.co/0enwP3aCwZ pic.twitter.com/eD2pxlpgra
— Nick Cothrel (@NickCothrel) August 29, 2019
Regardless of what is causing these issues, a change needs to happen quickly. Something here is obviously broken.
The Giants face a red hot Chargers team in Week 4. Jim Harbaugh has them well coached, and Justin Herbert is playing the best ball of his career. Mistakes can’t happen if the G-Men want to pick up their first win of the season and get things back on the rails.
Nobody was expecting the Giants to have a fighting chance these past few weeks. Against Dallas, without the abundance of penalties, they very well could’ve won. And if Russell “Nabers is down there somewhere” Wilson got his team into the end zone just once more, and the Mahomes backwards pass ended up getting scooped up for a score, that outcome could have also been different.
They have been in scenarios where they very well could have a winning record, but they continue to find ways to lose games.
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