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 Jim Fassel says his team will be in the playoffs this season.
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Giant turnaround came after losing streak
By Tom Oates


Under Jim Fassel, the Giants have been the NFL's most fractious team, proof positive that in football two halves don't necessarily add up to a whole.

Throughout 1998 and 1999, as the Giants consistently failed to match the promise they showed during their 1997 playoff season under Fassel, tensions mounted. Seldom did anyone venture across the demilitarized zone that ran through the heart of the team's locker room.

Jim Fassel
Back-to-back losses to the Rams and Lions forced Jim Fassel to make the "guarantee."
Offense on one side, defense on the other, both frustrated by the same thing: the offense's inability to score.

Hostilities in this intramural border war escalated whenever locker room power brokers such as linebacker Jessie Armstead and defensive end Michael Strahan went public with criticism of their offensive teammates, which they did frequently.

Clearly, that was not a stable environment for a team that some thought had Super Bowl talent. But now, as the Giants prepare to play the Ravens in Super Bowl XXXV at Tampa, the frustration of the past has been replaced by the exhiliration of seven straight victories, the franchise's first NFC championship in 10 years and even some national respect after a 41-0 dismantling of the favored Vikings in the conference title game.

In a locker room once hopelessly divided by self-interests and notable mainly for finger-pointing, there is now more hand-holding than a revival meeting. Rumor is, the Giants have actually been heard whistling while they work this week. Right now, they are more harmonious than the Cleavers.

But while everyone knows the Giants' Berlin Wall has come down, they just can't agree on when the darn thing actually crumbled.

The popular theory is that it fell on Nov. 22, when Fassel made a guarantee that in time might take its place alongside another famous guarantee by another famous New Yorker (Joe Namath) just before Super Bowl III.

Fassel's Giants had lost back-to-back home games to the Rams and Lions, the latter a 31-21 debacle that ended with the team being booed off the field and trashed in the media. After a 7-2 start, they appeared once again to be the same old Giants.

But, Fassel, dubbed Mr. Rogers by the New York media, made a stunning decision at that point. He shed his mild-mannered demeanor and transformed himself into a ramblin', gamblin' man overnight. The Giants haven't lost since.

"This team is going to the playoffs, OK?" Fassel said. "This team is going to the playoffs. I'm raising the expectations. I'm raising the stakes. I'm upping the ante. This is a poker game and I'm shoving the chips to the center of the table."

To make his point, Fassel cut Bashir Livingston, a special-teams standout who made three costly mistakes against the Lions. That got the players' attention.

But Fassel didn't stop there. Since the guarantee, he has been more aggressive and vocal than ever before. He's become more open with the media and ordered his players to be less open. He's been quicker to get in players' faces.

At first, it looked like Fassel's guarantee was the last act of a desperate coach. After all, if the Giants didn't make the playoffs it was widely anticipated that he would be fired. So there really wasn't much risk for Fassel in guaranteeing a playoff berth.

"Everyone looked at him like he was a madman who was about to lose his job," linebacker Micheal Barrow said. "But we took a bite into what he was saying."

That has been evident, especially as the Giants kept winning. The players have appeared both relaxed and energized since that day.

"I didn't make the guarantee for any specific reason," Fassel said. "It was just in my gut. I was angry about some things. I wasn't going to let anybody tell me what we were going to do or how we were going to do it. I didn't want my team walking about like they were second-class citizens. My attitude was, take a tough stance and don't be afraid to let the world know what you're thinking. I was proud of my guys and felt we were going to (make the playoffs) and said so. It lit a match and that fire has been burning ever since. I haven't had to light another one."

However, some think the Giants' moment of truth might have come three days before the guarantee, when they hit rock bottom in that home loss to a mediocre Lions team that was in the process of falling out of playoff contention.

The Giants had plowed through a ridiculously easy schedule to reach 7-2 even though their offense was still sputtering. When the defense collapsed -- giving up 38 points to the Rams and 31 to the Lions, the two highest point totals all season -- the Giants hit rock bottom.

The fan and media criticism was expanded to include the defense in general and the secondary in particular. With that, the entire team was under siege. No one could point fingers at anyone but himself.

Coach showed how much faith he had in us when he made the guarantee following that game. Sometimes you've got to drop to the bottom before you can work your way back to the top. That game was the low point.
Kerry Collins, Giants quarterback

"Coach showed how much faith he had in us when he made the guarantee following that game," quarterback Kerry Collins said. "Sometimes you've got to drop to the bottom before you can work your way back to the top. That game was the low point."

But there are those on the Giants who think it wasn't the turning point, either. Some think it came two weeks later, in a 9-7 victory over the arch-rival Redskins.

The Giants had rebounded from the Lions loss by hammering the hapless Cardinals, but then they had to go to Washington on Dec. 3. They didn't secure the victory until the end, when a 49-yard field-goal attempt by the Redskins' 44-year-old Eddie Murray fell just short.

"Had we lost that game, especially on that last-second field goal, it may have set us back a couple of years," Strahan said. "It would have been devastating for us.

"When we won that game, and the way we won it, the team said, "Hey, if we play together, if we stay together, we have a chance to win.' From then on, guys have done that and we've been successful all the way through. It seems like the bigger the game, the more everybody comes together, the more everyone leans on each other and the more we play for each other."

If togetherness is indeed the reason for the Giants' sudden success, it might have had its genesis not in the last seven weeks but in the last offseason.

The Giants lost six of their last eight games in the turbulent 1999 season to finish 7-9. By the end of the season, the offensive and defensive players were barely on speaking terms.

That's when Fassel began a campaign to take back a locker room controlled by loose cannons. He made locker-room unity his No. 1 offseason priority.

Fassel made the decision to let offensive coordinator Sean Payton call the plays, so he could concentrate on the big picture and become more of a team-wide leader. He improved his relationship with the defensive players, especially Strahan and Armstead, the loosest of the cannons.

But that wasn't all Fassel did. He took the players on a boat trip around Manhattan in the spring. He took them on a wild and crazy golf outing in May. During training camp, he took them to see the movie "Gladiator." During the season, there was a day of bowling. Camaraderie became the order of the day.

Even the Giants' personnel moves had the effect of breaking down barriers. Free-agent offensive linemen Lomas Brown, Glenn Parker and Dusty Zeigler were veterans who had won awards and played in championship games. Thus, they commanded instant respect from the defensive players. Plus, they were locker room leaders who weren't about to take any grief from the defense.

"I don't know if it's maturity or what you would call it," guard Ron Stone said. "Everybody came to understand that things work more when there is no animosity. We've been working hard and caring about each other instead of fighting each other. There's been no problems."

The rift between the offense and defense disappeared during training camp, then reappeared early in the season when Strahan went off on the offense while Fassel was out of town. When Fassel returned, Strahan visited the boss' office and emerged properly chastened. Nary a discouraging word has been heard from the locker room since, not even after the loss to the Lions.

Now, the Giants are picking up steam. Collins is giving Fassel the quality quarterback play he never had, not even in 1997, and the defense is playing better than ever, with a revived secondary, led by Jason Sehorn, playing behind an increasingly ferocious front seven.

"You've got to have a belief in yourself, you've got to have a belief in your team, you've got to have a determination, you've got to work at it and you've got to push through the tough times," Fassel said. "All our guys are on the same page."

Even if they're not exactly sure how they got there.

Green under fire in Minnesota ... again
At midseason, Vikings coach Dennis Green was riding a wave of popularity. His gutsy gambit with second-year quarterback Daunte Culpepper had thrust him into contention for both coach of the year and executive of the year.

Dennis Green
Dennis Green's playoff record is 4-8.
After the Vikings' 41-0 trouncing Sunday in New York, however, Green is once again under heavy fire in the Twin Cities. That's because the blame for the massive failure can be evenly divided between Green's coaching decisions and his personnel decisions.

Coaching?

Although Green has led the Vikings to the playoffs eight times in nine years, he has a 4-8 playoff record. If there's a pattern to those failures it's that the Vikings lose games they shouldn't lose.

Sunday, Green's Vikings simply weren't ready to play. Wide receiver Randy Moss noticed it before the kickoff. The rest of the football world figured it out less than three minutes into the game, at which time the Vikings trailed, 14-0.

Personnel?

Since he wrested control of the Vikings away from the departed Jeff Diamond, Green's predilection has been to spend his salary-cap dollars on offense. Along the way, he retained his offensive stars and drafted megatalents such as Culpepper and Moss when others wouldn't touch them.

That preference cost Green dearly this season, however. The Vikings lost their last three regular season games -- to the Rams, Packers and Colts -- which cost them the home-field advantage. It also gave the Giants a blueprint on how to beat them, which was to come out throwing against a secondary so bereft of talent that the Giants, a running team at heart, were able to pass the football at will.

Tom Oates of the Wisconsin State Journal writes his weekly NFC column every Thursday for ESPN.com.


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