What Brian Daboll's evaluation process reveals about NY Giants quarterback quest
Don't take that as a lack of interest from the New York Giants in Shedeur Sanders possibly being their next franchise quarterback. It's just part of a calculated evaluation at the position for Daboll that has evolved over the past 14 years from when he was the offensive coordinator and general manager Joe Schoen was a national scout for the Miami Dolphins.
Advertisement
"We like the process we have in place for quarterbacks in the NFL Draft," Schoen told NorthJersey.com and The Record after the season. "Daboll put it together a while ago, we believe in it and how we go about it."
Team brass has promised to take swings for a quarterback this offseason, and that certainly applied with the trade interest in Matthew Stafford before he went back to the Rams and their pursuit of Aaron Rodgers before landing both Russell Wilson and Jameis Winston.
Whether Daboll and Schoen will do the same in three weeks beginning with the No. 3 selection of the 2025 NFL Draft remains to be seen. But they have done everything they would have if there was a mandate to take a quarterback for the future - just as they did last year. The reality is the same every year, unless you have the No. 1 pick - circumstances
"You do the work, you build the board," Schoen said. "Then you see what happens, and you trust all you did to get to that point."
New York Giants coach Brian Daboll talks to reporters during the NFC Coaches Breakfast at the NFL Annual Meeting on Tuesday morning in Palm Beach, Fla.
The late Tony Sparano, as head coach of those 2011 Dolphins, tasked Daboll with coming up with a plan to evaluate QBs. They had Pat Devlin, J.P. Losman and Matt Moore on the roster, so the need was there. Opportunity did not present itself in that class, however, with Cam Newton going No. 1 overall to the Carolina Panthers, Andy Dalton and Colin Kaepernick going in the second round, Tyrod Taylor in the sixth round and the rest turning out to be a who's who of journeymen and busts featuring the likes of Jake Locker, Blaine Gabbert, Christian Ponder, Ryan Mallett, Ricky Stanzi and T.J. Yates.
Advertisement
"A lot of guys evaluate – it's not the right or wrong way," Daboll said. "We do a variety of different things with these players. Put them in a lot of different situations, no different than I'm sure a lot of teams do. You just got to try to check of the boxes with the things you ask them to do and touch points and people that you talk to."
The Giants believe Daboll gives them an edge. Even though they have yet to draft a quarterback in three previous years, the behind-the-scenes intel of what they thought and how their board was set has boosted the confidence.
Now it's a matter of actually turning the card in. Here's how the Giants get to that point with strong emphasis on private workouts for quarterbacks.
As far as Pro Days, Daboll has only been to a handful through the years. Last season, he was at LSU Pro Day - which featured Jayden Daniels and Malik Nabers, of course - and at Washington Pro Day featuring Michael Penix and Rome Odunze.
Advertisement
For Daniels, the current Commanders quarterback chose not to do a private workout for teams outside the top three picks. That was a big reason Daboll was there in Baton Rouge. And for Penix, he had dinner with the Giants the night after his Pro Day.
The homework starts prior to the team's contingent arriving on campus.
Daboll develops tests for each quarterback featuring formations, motions, defensive fronts, run concepts and pass concepts. Those exams are sent to the quarterbacks and returned before the workouts so Daboll and the Giants can get a baseline for the prospects' football knowledge.
"I would say, you're doing work all the way up until the draft and you're trying to cross every T and dot every I," Daboll said. "There is so much information you've got to weed through. Some of the stuff that you listen to or hear and you've got to trust your meetings with the players, and you got to trust the time that you were on the board with them and how they were at the Combine, the East-West game, or the time you got to meet them, what the athletic trainers had to say or what did the graduate assistant have to say."
Advertisement
He paused before adding: "You know, the face of a franchise is the quarterback. It's not an easy position to evaluate and it's not an easy position to coach or to play, so you do the best job you can to try to find the right one for your team."
Schoen and members of his scouting and personnel staff schedule the workouts, which are typically held on the player's college campus. The Giants connect the quarterbacks with Daboll, but intentionally leave certain details of the visits open-ended, suggesting the prospects make the dinner reservations or plan the car service for pick up at the airport. That's to test both their maturity and willingness to follow through on things that might normally be taken care of outside their purview.
If the Giants select Heisman Trophy winner Travis Hunter or pass rusher Abdul Carter at No. 3, expect the focus to shift to any number of potential QB targets who can, at the very least, join the roster as developmental prospects with upside. The Giants were at Pro Days for Tyler Shough at Louisville and Quinn Ewers of Texas, and they have scouted Alabama's Jalen Milroe, Jaxson Dart of Ole Miss, Kyle McCord of Syracuse and Will Howard of Ohio State.
The Giants are expected to hold workouts with a good number of those prospects, including Sanders, and Daboll said they already have had several since the Combine in early March. The hope is that, as Schoen and Daboll helped the Bills secure reigning NFL MVP Josh Allen, the Giants will eventually reap the reward of that process, too.
Advertisement
In Year 4, the clock is ticking, and no one can be sure these Giants will get their chance at the plate if more wins don't start to come.
"We're going to go through the evaluation of all the guys that have been on my list to look at and talk to," Daboll said. "Again, everything has to fall in the line too, relative to draft picks, where you're picking, if somebody gets picked ahead of time. ... You don't know when they're going to get taken. If there is an affinity you have for a player, if you feel like that player is the right player and they're sitting there at whatever pick you have, is it a reach, not a reach, I'm not going to get into that - it's how you feel about the player and does that player match where you want to take them."
That's a swing Daboll and the Giants have yet to take. We'll find out if this is the year where the evaluation process Schoen continues to laud helps Big Blue finally land a franchise quarterback of their own.
This article originally appeared on NorthJersey.com: What Brian Daboll NY Giants QB evaluation process reveals about quest
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
10 minutes ago
- Yahoo
It sounds like Ben Johnson has plans for Bears rookie Kyle Monangai
The Chicago Bears have high hopes for their offense this season with the arrival of head coach Ben Johnson and improvements along the offensive line. While quarterback Caleb Williams' development is key, he won't be able to thrive without a strong running game. D'Andre Swift was brought in as a free agent ahead of last season, but he hasn't been as productive as they hoped coming in. Roschon Johnson, who the Bears selected in the 2023 NFL draft, is a solid back, but he hasn't proven himself to be a number one either. In the 2025 NFL draft, Chicago selected Kyle Monangai in the seventh round to join the running back room. He was seen as the third guy on the depth chart ahead of camp, but that may not be the case as the season progresses. Head coach Ben Johnson seems to have a plan for the rookie. 'I'm very pleased with where he's at,' Johnson said after Family Fest. 'I think he's a guy we're gonna be able to trust this fall.' Does this mean that Johnson doesn't trust Swift or Johnson? Of course not, but it does mean that he plans on using Monangai, perhaps more than anyone thought. Having three running backs contributing isn't necessarily conventional in the NFL, but the Bears could make it work. Nobody has made the case to be the undisputed top running back since coming to Chicago, and Johnson is ready to try to get the most out of every player. When Johnson was the offensive coordinator of the Detroit Lions, he found success with Jared Goff throwing the football. None of it would have worked well, however, with that strong running attack, and they had no problem using more than one running back with the duo of Jahmyr Gibbs and David Montgomery. We'll see if he can duplicate it in Chicago, where Monangai could be a contributor. This article originally appeared on Bears Wire: It sounds like Ben Johnson has plans for Bears rookie Kyle Monangai
Yahoo
10 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Jaguars HC Liam Coen believes Travis Hunter can win both OROY and DROY
What kind of impact could Travis Hunter have on both sides of the ball during his rookie season with the Jacksonville Jaguars? If you ask his coach, a historic one. [Join or create a Yahoo Fantasy Football league for the 2025 NFL season] Appearing on "The Rich Eisen Show" on Monday, Jaguars head coach Liam Coen said he believed that Hunter, who was selected No. 2 overall in April's NFL Draft, can win both NFL Offensive and Defensive Rookie of the Year as a cornerback and wide receiver. "I do think it's possible," Coen said. "He is committed to driving, not just himself, but his teammates as well. I think his teammates, these guys are challenging him every single day. He doesn't get a free pass because he was the second overall pick and he's Travis Hunter. "They are in his grill trying to jam him up, trying to hem him up, trying to make it as hard as they can possibly make it for him in a great way, like in the most healthy way as possible where they're going at it and chirping at each other. But it's truly iron sharping iron. That's what it feels like and I wouldn't expect anything less from those guys. They think he can do it as well, but they're going to make him earn it as well in this building." Two-way players in the NFL have made impacts on the game — see: Deion Sanders — but none of them have ever done what Coen says is possible for Hunter this season. There is a little over a month until the Jaguars host the Carolina Panthers in Week 1, and Coen and his staff are still working out the percentage of snaps Hunter will take on offense and defense to start the season. "We want to play him as much as we can," Coen said. Last season, Hunter played 753 offensive snaps and 776 defensive snaps, along with 23 more on special teams with Colorado, according to Pro Football Focus. Despite the extra usage, Hunter was productive with 92 receptions, 1,152 receiving yards and 14 touchdowns on offense and 29 total tackles and four interceptions on defense. His play earned him the Heisman Trophy in December. Hunter said at the start of camp that playing both sides is more taxing mentally than physically. He'll now need to be ready to deal with NFL cornerbacks and wide receivers, like Panthers wideout Jaycee Horn come Sept. 7, who won't make life easy for the rookie. "[Horn's] not going to be like, 'Hey, man, this is cool what you're doing.' They're going to say, 'No, dude, you can't do this' and that's the beauty of it," Coen said. "I think [Hunter's] definitely driven to do it for the right reasons."
Yahoo
10 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Highlights from Day 9 of Broncos training camp
The Denver Broncos wrapped up Day 9 of training camp on Monday. Here are some of the highlights from the light session. Sean Payton chats with Jason Garrett Bo Nix goes deep to Troy Franklin Audric Estime as a receiver out of the backfield Troy Franklin and Evan Engram running out routes More Evan Engram Courtland Sutton helping mentor Pat Bryant RJ Harvey running through drills The Broncos will practice again on Tuesday before a travel day on Wednesday. The team is set to face the San Francisco 49ers in a joint practice on Thursday ahead of their preseason showdown on Saturday. Social: Follow Broncos Wire on Facebook and Twitter/X! Did you know: These 25 celebrities are Broncos fans. This article originally appeared on Broncos Wire: Denver Broncos: Highlights from Day 9 of training camp