Paul Schwartz

Paul Schwartz

NFL

Brian Daboll’s return to his play-calling roots the right Giants move

How about this: The Giants will be getting a more seasoned and accomplished offensive play-caller — and also, as an added and welcome by-product, perhaps a calmer head coach — now that it appears Brian Daboll will be reaching back into his past to reclaim what got him to this exalted position in the first place. 

It is not even a secret anymore that Daboll will be the new play-caller on offense this season, a responsibility handled in 2022 and most of 2023 by offensive coordinator Mike Kafka. The Giants were 16th in the league in scoring in 2022 and plummeted to 30th in 2023, and to say this regression is all on Kafka is akin to saying your basement flooded because someone dropped an ice cube on the floor. 

This spring, it has been Daboll’s voice in the radio transmitters in the helmets of the quarterbacks. This is not breaking in a newbie who has never done it before. 

Brian Daboll walks with quarterback Daniel Jones during camp. Corey Sipkin for the NY POST

“I feel like that’s his comfortable spot,’’ second-year running back Eric Gray told The Post on Wednesday after the Giants wrapped up their second and final practice of their mandatory minicamp. “That’s what he’s used to doing, he’s been an OC. He knows his stuff. I feel like he goes home and just looks at plays all day. It’s really good.’’ 

When he was hired by the Giants, Daboll became a head coach for the first time, at any level, and he decided calling the plays — which he did, to great acclaim, the previous four seasons with the Bills — was going to be too much to handle and not the best way for him to oversee the entire operation. 

That was the right call then. This is the right call now. 

It is year No. 3 for Daboll, and the Giants need all hands on deck to fix an offense that added dynamic rookie wide receiver Malik Nabers, initiated changes on the offensive line to finally solve a decade-long problem and will bring back a healthy Daniel Jones at quarterback. A play-caller often gets too much credit when things go right and too much blame when things go awry. Still, Daboll worked his way up the coaching ladder in large part based on his acumen with this particular skill set and his expertise is needed now, more than ever. 

There could be a supplementary benefit to all this. Keeping his emotions in check on the sideline is an area Daboll wants to improve and the constant drumbeat of calling play after play should make it difficult for him to find the time to blow his stack when things go south. 

Giants head coach Brian Daboll stands with wide receiver Wan’Dale Robinson during camp. Corey Sipkin for the NY POST

“There’s an element of that,’’ Daboll said. 

Kafka, then 34, gained all sorts of acclaim in 2022 as Jones had a career-best season and the Giants won a playoff game. Kafka actually gained serious traction for head-coaching openings, interviewing with the Panthers, Texans, Colts and Cardinals. After the 2023 season, despite the alarming lack of production on offense, Kafka spoke to the Titans and Seahawks about their head-coach vacancies. 

Kafka’s fast track gets interrupted if he doesn’t call plays this season. Surely, that will sting, but it is not the end of the world for him. It wasn’t for Daboll, who in his 23 years in the NFL knows what it feels like to get demoted. He was the Dolphins offensive coordinator in 2012 and got bumped down to tight ends coach in New England in 2013. 

“You’re going to have some tough times,’’ Daboll said. “There is always a lot to learn, a lot to self-evaluate. 

“But certainly those lows, you’re going to have them, particularly in this league. They’re never fun, but they are very good learning tools if you use them the right way.’’ 

Giants quarterback Daniel Jones speaks with head coach Brian Daboll during camp. Corey Sipkin for the NY POST

The time is nearing for Kafka to take that advice to heart. When the Giants reassemble after a six-week break, Daboll figures to be making the calls once training camp opens up. 

“I think Dabes hasn’t really made a final call on that yet,’’ Kafka said. “Whatever decision he goes with, I fully support.’’ 

Kafka this spring had been reticent on all this, until now, perhaps realizing it is silly to deny something that appears inevitable. He was given the added title of assistant head coach but subtracting the game-day role of play-caller is a hit. 

Giants offensive coordinator Mike Kafka calls a drill during camp. Corey Sipkin for the NY POST

“Every year brings new opportunities,’’ Kafka said, “and so I’m taking this as an opportunity just to continue to grow as a coach and be an asset to those coaches and players.”

Kafka said “I’m not worried about that kind of stuff right now’’ when asked how this will affect his chances of becoming a head coach in the future. He said he will “kind of lean back on my experience in Kansas City,’’ when he was an offensive assistant and head coach Andy Reid called the plays, with offensive coordinators Eric Bieniemy and later Matt Nagy filling support roles. 

“So I have that experience of being in a system like that,’’ Kafka said. 

He’s in a system like that again. It looks to be Daboll’s show now.