New York Giants Have Multi Year Jaxson Dart Development Plan

Bonisiwe Shabane
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new york giants have multi year jaxson dart development plan

Offensive coordinator Mike Kafka talks about “touchpoints” at different stages It should come as no surprise that the New York Giants have an extensive, long-range plan for what the development of rookie quarterback Jaxson Dart should look like. The Giants constantly referred to a very intentional evaluation process they used during a two-draft cycle that finally led them to the decision trade up and select Dart No. 25 in the 2025 NFL Draft. That was a process GM Joe Schoen called both “extensive” and “exhausting.” Moments after the Giants drafted Dart, head coach Brian Daboll told media that “the process of developing a quarterback is just that.”

It is a process Daboll and quarterbacks coach Shea Tierney went through successfully with Josh Allen during their time with the Buffalo Bills. Giants.com is counting down to the start of 2025 Giants Training Camp with 25 questions in 25 days. Matt Citak: As coach Brian Daboll has said since the draft, Russell Wilson is the Giants' starting quarterback. We saw as much throughout the spring, as Wilson took a majority of the snaps with the first-team offense. There is a reason why Wilson was brought in this offseason, and the veteran is going to be able to show he still has plenty of gas left in the tank. Not only that, but given the additions of both Wilson and Jameis Winston, it seems clear that the Giants want to give Dart ample time to grow and develop before throwing him out there.

Between those two veterans and Tommy DeVito, there is a ton of experience in the QB room, where the rookie won't get put into action until the coaches believe he's ready. "Russ will be our starter, and that's how it'll be once we get started here in the spring," Daboll told the media immediately following the selection of Dart. "Look, the process of developing a quarterback is just that. So we're going to do everything we can to develop him and bring him along. We have some good quarterbacks in the room relative to play time, experience, some medals on the wall, if you will." Daboll acknowledged that Dart already has shown good improvement from the time he was drafted to now, as the rookie has been picking things up from the veterans in the room.

When the team returns for training camp and the pads come on, Dart will be given an opportunity to showcase his growth even more, and in a more competitive setting. 25) How would you sum up the Giants’ offseason? Not only is New York Giants head coach Brian Daboll sticking with Russell Wilson as his starting quarterback, but he’s also going to stick with rookie Jaxson Dart as QB2. “He had a good camp. He had a good preseason,” Daboll said in confirming the decision. “Again, for young quarterbacks, you're going to see a variety of things when you first start playing that you need to learn from.

Every kind of checkpoint we've had for him in his process, albeit only a couple of months with us, he's done a good job with.” The Giants reportedly had a package of plays ready for Dart, the second of their two first-round picks in this year’s draft, and the one they traded up for to acquire with the 25th... While Daboll didn’t go into details, Dart’s package of plays could have simply been tailored specifically to handling the offense in the event the score became too lopsided either way, which would have allowed... Although Dart didn’t get a chance to play last week, Daboll praised the former Ole Miss signal caller for his preparation throughout the week. The New York Giants have a plan for Jaxson Dart, but it doesn’t involve tossing him into the fire just yet. After Russell Wilson’s Week 2 masterpiece against the Dallas Cowboys, the franchise has every reason to continue letting the veteran lead while their rookie quarterback soaks in the NFL experience from the sideline.

Wilson turned back the clock in Arlington, completing 30 of 41 passes for 450 yards and three touchdowns. His 73.2% completion rate was a reminder that he still has plenty left in the tank, especially when given protection and rhythm in the passing game. For a Giants team looking to remain competitive while developing its future, Wilson’s resurgence is a stabilizing factor. Performances like that buy New York time. They can afford to let Dart learn at his own pace rather than rushing a first-year quarterback into action for the sake of optics or job security. Dart impressed in preseason action, completing 68.1% of his passes for 372 yards and three touchdowns.

His poise against second-string defenses was evident, and his ability to process quickly stood out. But as every coach will emphasize, preseason defenses are vanilla compared to what he would face in a live NFL game. Exotic blitz packages, disguised coverages, and the speed of elite defenders could easily overwhelm a rookie not fully prepared. That’s why the Giants want Dart to be more than talented—they want him to be ready. The New York Giants made headlines during the 2025 NFL Draft when they selected Jaxson Dart, a promising rookie quarterback out of Ole Miss. While many fans speculated he might compete for the starting job immediately, the organization has made it clear.

Dart will not be rushed. ESPN's Jeremy Fowler recently revealed that Dart will sit for “an extended period.” “The stage is set for Jaxson Dart to sit an extended period.”@JFowlerESPN on the Giants' plan for Jaxson Dart ahead of rookie minicamp. pic.twitter.com/JDU9lULNB7 The plan mirrors the blueprints Giants general manager Joe Schoen and head coach Brian Daboll helped implement in Buffalo with Josh Allen. According to Schoen, Dart will be evaluated in various practice scenarios, some unplanned, to test his instincts and composure.

Dart is expected to receive reps with the third team, gradually working his way up as the season progresses. Veteran quarterbacks Russell Wilson and Jameis Winston were brought in not just to compete, but to guide. Wilson's attention to detail and Super Bowl pedigree make him a valuable mentor. Meanwhile, Winston, a former first-round pick, brings insight from both highs and lows of an NFL career. “They feel like they can win games with just capable, turnover-free quarterback play,” Fowler added in his report. Every good plan has a backup.

But the New York Giants? They’re preparing for every scenario imaginable — and doing it quietly. With the hardest schedule any NFL team has faced in five years, nothing can be left to chance this coming season. Russell Wilson might be the starter, but the Giants are making sure every quarterback is ready to take the reins. Head coach Brian Daboll made it clear that all quarterbacks will take meaningful snaps during training camp practices. “They’ll all get reps at various spots,” he said, via the NY Post.

“We’ve got a plan for that, and we’ve been working that.” For much of this offseason, the New York Giants defined who they wouldn’t be over the long-term plan implemented by general manager Joe Schoen. They wouldn’t be trading for Matthew Stafford. Or Trevor Lawrence. Or any answer at quarterback they’d be tethered to beyond next season. But the work to determine who they would place their faith in continued behind the scenes — years in the making.

And it bubbled to the surface on Thursday night, with the announcement, a few hours after the team selected Abdul Carter with the third overall pick, that New York had traded its second and... This isn’t just the acquisition of a quarterback, and cannot be viewed through the prism of value for pick alone, though it is very much a win for the Giants on that front. It is the chance, finally, for Schoen and Brian Daboll to select and develop a player of their own at the position, after inheriting Daniel Jones from the previous regime. “Yeah, it’s been exhausting, to be honest with you," Schoen told reporters late Thursday night, after making the trade. "We’ve been, whether it’s here all week and then you go on the road in the fall or all the way up to Easter weekend, we're still on the road. Credit to the coaches, my staff, the film they watch, the area scouts putting us in the correct direction on the quarterbacks to go see…

“…Credit to them. I'm glad we were able to get a guy that we're convicted on and we like. So yeah, it's gratifying. I'll probably on the ride home be able to decompress, but it was pretty stressful up there the last 15, 20 minutes trying to get this done. I'll probably reflect on it later in the day, but I'm fired up about the two players that we were able to get tonight.”

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