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NFL

How Victor Cruz became a Giants legend in such a short period of time

It all happened so quickly. Victor Cruz burst onto the scene and, before you knew it, was among the league’s top playmakers. From blowing away Rex Ryan in a preseason game to catching a touchdown pass in the Super Bowl, it was a meteoric rise and subsequent fall.

As quickly as many realized Cruz’s brilliance as a jitterbug slot receiver was real, it was gone. With one leap in the corner of the end zone in Philadelphia during the 2014 season, his New York Giants career was torn to shreds.

Cruz, 30, was cut on Monday because, truth be told, the Giants aren’t convinced he can still play at a high level. The days when he was one of the best players on the field are gone.

Cruz had one Pro Bowl season. He had two 1,000-yard seasons. His best year was his breakthrough campaign in 2011, which began with his first career catch and ended with 1,500-plus yards in the regular season, a Super Bowl ring and a trademark salsa in the big game.

To Giants fans and teammate Odell Beckham Jr., Victor Cruz’s end zone salsa dances were picture perfect. Andrew Dieb/Icon Sportswire

Cruz’s star was never brighter than following that magical season, which made him a pitchman, author, fashion aficionado and celebrity. After a solid 2012 and less impressive 2013 … poof, it was over. He was ruined by a knee injury followed by a calf injury. The best of Victor Cruz, hometown kid done well, was over.

The totality of it is seven seasons with the Giants. Only two of those years were at a Pro Bowl level. Cruz’s career numbers (303 catches, 4,549 yards and 25 touchdowns) are comparable to what Odell Beckham Jr. has done in his first three professional seasons. They’re almost identical to those of his former partner in crime Hakeem Nicks (318 catches, 4,676 yards and 27 touchdowns) and pale in comparison to what Amani Toomer produced.

Somehow, it doesn’t seem to matter. With the perfect mix of timing, personality and performance, Cruz managed to become and remain a Giants legend despite such a limited (three years at the most) window of success.

“Victor is one of the great stories of the National Football League,” general manager Jerry Reese said in a statement after Cruz’s release. “He came in here and earned everything that he’s gotten. It has been amazing to see him grow from an undrafted free agent to a Pro Bowl player and one of our go-to guys during the Super Bowl XLVI run. He will always be one of the great Giants.”

Underdog story

A lot of it has to do with the story of Victor Cruz, which has at this point been told 10,000 times over. He’s a local kid (from Paterson, New Jersey) who almost flunked out of UMass. He came to the Giants as an unknown undrafted free agent and was a long shot to make the roster.

He immediately caught the attention of the Giants and their fans. And then Rex Ryan.

“I don’t know who No. 3 is, but holy sh–,” Ryan said after Cruz torched the New York Jets for six catches for 146 yards and three touchdowns in his first preseason game.

That was 2010, his rookie year. During the season, Cruz rarely saw the field. It was 2011 when he exploded for 82 receptions for 1,536 yards and nine touchdowns.

But it was more than his production that made him an ideal candidate for superstardom.

It was … everything.

The memorable plays

It wasn’t just what Cruz did. It was how and when he did it. Perhaps the biggest play of the 2011 season (and Cruz’s career) was a 99-yard touchdown, with the Giants trailing the Jets on Christmas Eve. It put the Giants in the lead and propelled them into a Super Bowl run.

Just over a month later, Cruz was dancing in the end zone at the Super Bowl, capping a season filled with big plays. Cruz had a mind-boggling 25 receptions of 20-plus yards that year. He never topped 12 in any other season.

But his flair for the jaw-dropper (see his jump cut vs. the Texans in 2014) or the dramatic (see his game-winning touchdown in Week 1 this past season after missing most of the previous two years) defines Cruz. There always seemed to be something special with that smile, the way he handled himself and the way he made everyone seem as if they were his closest friend. It left indelible memories with the fan base, teammates and the entire organization.

Nobody did it with a smile on his face quite like Cruz.

The personality and being a Jersey kid

Some players just resonate with the fans and the city.

“Cruuuuuuz,” Giants fans chanted after almost every catch.

He had his own chant. He had his own dance. He had his own first-down celebration and unique style.

Cruz came along in the right place at the right time. He has a made-for-TV smile that rarely escapes his face and seemingly welcomes the camera. He has the ability to play to all ages, races, colors and genders. He’s chic, stylish and cool. He has the salsa and he’s from Paterson.

“Paterson with one T,” they like to say. If you’re from there or from New Jersey, you know that.

That matters to many Giants fans. Cruz was an underdog. Their underdog.

Cruz’s fans knew that. They knew where he came from, how he reached the top and did it all while remaining one of them. This may be his most distinctive talent.

All these factors made Cruz a fan favorite, and will help keep him a fan favorite. As he leaves following a seven-year run during which he averaged fewer than four touchdowns per season, Cruz remains a legend beyond what Nicks, Toomer or Plaxico Burress could ever achieve. That alone proves he really was something special.

NFL

Sources: NFL warns Seahawks for injury report

3:22 PM ET

  • Sheil KapadiaESPN Writer

    Close

    • Covered the Philadelphia Eagles for Philadelphia Magazine and Philly.com from 2008 to 2015.
    • Covered the Baltimore Ravens and the NFL for BaltimoreSun.com from 2006 to 2008.

The Seattle Seahawks have received a warning for not listing Richard Sherman’s knee injury on the injury report in the second half of last season, league sources told ESPN.

The league had considered docking the Seahawks a second-round pick for failing to disclose the injury, sources told ESPN’s Chris Mortensen last month.

The violation was determined to be the result of a misinterpretation of the policy’s reporting requirements, a source told ESPN’s Adam Caplan.

Sherman never missed a game last season. The Pro Bowl cornerback was listed on the injury report in 11 of the team’s final 12 games (including the playoffs), but the knee injury was never listed. In 10 of those weeks, he missed practice time, but the Seahawks listed the reason as “non-injury related.” In Week 12, Sherman was listed with an ankle injury.

The NFL’s rule says, “If any player has a significant or noteworthy injury, it must be listed on the practice report, even if he fully participates in practice and the team expects that he will play in the team’s next game.”

In the event of any future violation, this current violation will be taken into account in determining discipline, the source told Caplan.

NFL Network first reported the news of the NFL’s warning.

After the season, Seahawks coach Pete Carroll said in a 710 ESPN Seattle interview that Sherman “dealt with a significant knee [injury] the whole second half of the season.”

NFL

If history holds, Dak Prescott will show he has more to offer

FRISCO, Texas — Quarterback rankings in the Tony Romo era have always been a fun task, with those believing the Dallas Cowboys quarterback should not be ranked highly because of a lack of playoff success being just as correct as those who believe he is (was?) an elite quarterback, if not at the very top of the list.

While it looks like Romo’s days with the Cowboys will be coming to an end, unless Jerry Jones can truly sell ice to Eskimos and convince Romo to remain in a backup role, the rankings will not go away.

Dak Prescott was Offensive Rookie of the Year and played in the Pro Bowl, but to instill full confidence, he’s going to have to sustain his high level. AP Photo/Chris O’Meara

ESPN’s Dan Graziano offered up his Quarterback Confidence Index last week, and the Cowboys checked in at No. 19.

Nineteen?!

That surprised me.

Here’s Graziano’s methodology, laid out in the column: This is not simply a ranking of starters, though starters (especially those who never miss games) obviously make up the bulk of the formula. Nor is it a pure comparison of quarterbacks’ accomplishments to date. It’s a rating based on the confidence each team currently should have in those at the position.

So this doesn’t mean Dak Prescott is the 19th-ranked quarterback in the NFL. It means the Cowboys’ quarterback situation is 19th-best in the NFL. Feel better? Yeah, I think that’s a little low, too. But my guy Graz breaks the index into categories: All set; Set but for how long?; Caught on a speed bump; Trending up; Just fine; Keep it up, kid; Watch your back, and No idea.

The Cowboys check in at “Keep it up, kid,” with Tennessee, Tampa Bay and Philadelphia.

An argument can be made that the quarterback situations are better for those four than for, say, Cincinnati and Minnesota, which are in the “Just fine” category. Would you rather have Prescott, Sam Bradford or Andy Dalton? Washington is in the “Trending up” category, with Kirk Cousins set to be franchise-tagged again if he doesn’t reach a long-term deal.

It’s interesting to compare this to the Confidence Index points from the 2016 season. The Cowboys checked in at No. 30 in September. Handing the keys over to a rookie fourth-round pick, even one who had played as well as Prescott had in the preseason, did not inspire much confidence, so it made sense for Dallas to be in the bottom third.

In October, the Cowboys moved up to No. 18. In November, they moved to No. 5. And they ended up at No. 6 in December.

Maybe the return of Romo had something to do with the confidence going up. If something happened to Prescott, the Cowboys would have been better off than any other team having to play its “backup” quarterback late in the season.

If I were constructing a ranking, albeit with different criteria than this list, I’d probably have Prescott somewhere in the 10-14 range.

Graziano wants to see more from Prescott, which is a completely fair expectation. Everybody should want to see more from Prescott, even as well as he played in a season that ended with him being named Offensive Rookie of the Year.

He is not a finished product by any stretch. Neither was Romo after the 2006 season. Romo ignited a Cowboys run to the playoffs that season and had 19 touchdown passes in 10 games. He was intercepted 13 times as well, but the Cowboys offense caught a spark.

In 2007, Romo threw 36 touchdown passes, which remains a team record, and piled up 4,211 passing yards, the most in franchise history at the time. The Cowboys went 13-3 and had home-field advantage in the playoffs.

That season didn’t end the way anybody in Dallas wanted it to, but the Cowboys knew they had their quarterback.

So there’s nothing wrong with observers wanting to see Prescott do it again in 2017 before moving him up the rankings.

NFL

Patriots' Dont'a Hightower shares his thoughts on pending free agency

FOXBOROUGH, Mass. — In an informative interview with ESPN NFL Insider Adam Schefter on the “Know Them From Adam” podcast, New England Patriots linebacker Dont’a Hightower shed light on his mindset as he enters unrestricted free agency this offseason.

Specifically, Schefter asked Hightower what he is looking for in a team.

“I love what I have in New England,” Hightower said. “I don’t have too much drawn up. I just want to be respected and loved.”

We highlighted Hightower’s value to the Patriots on Tuesday morning. He’s made two clutch plays in each of the team’s last two Super Bowl victories, and is in position to command a top-of-the-line contract.

“I love what I have in New England,” Dont’a Hightower said. “I don’t have too much drawn up. I just want to be respected and loved.” Ezra Shaw/Getty Images

He was asked by Schefter what he expects in free agency.

“I’m not sure. Obviously I have a few friends, a few teammates going into it with me. Chandler Jones [in Arizona], Logan Ryan, Duron Harmon, a lot of guys I’m close to,” he said on the podcast. “Jamie [Collins] obviously signed his deal [in Cleveland], I’ve reached out and talked to him a little bit.

“I’m sure it will be a journey, a rough and rocky one. But I’m looking forward to it. I’ve had five good years and I’m looking forward to what’s coming my way.”

Would he consider taking the proverbial hometown discount?

“We’ll see, man, we have a long time coming. We’ve got a long process going throughout,” he answered. “I’m sure [agent] Pat [Dye], Nick [Caserio] and Bill [Belichick] will be in touch whenever that time comes. I’m going to soak up this Super Bowl LI. I haven’t had enough of that yet.”

Hightower, who on ESPN’s NFL Live program on Wednesday didn’t seem averse to receiving the franchise tag, laughed when Schefter set up the following scenario for him to see if it was accurate:

“In the NFL, you don’t get many chances to become a free agent. You’re 26 years old. They exercised the fifth-year option [in 2016] because that was their right. Now you get to exercise free agency and see what’s out there. So in a perfect world, yes, you would love to be back in New England and if it works out, that would be great. But it is your duty and obligation to go out there, explore the market, see what’s out there, and if some team shows you much more love, respect and appreciation than New England does, as disappointing as it would be, then it would be time to move on.”

Hightower’s thoughts on that?

“I’m not going to agree with you 100 percent,” Hightower responded, “but I think you’re about there. I think you did a lot better job than I did.”

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“If you think about it, I've never held a job in my life. I went from being an NFL player to a coach to a broadcaster. I haven't worked a day in my life.”
-John Madden


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