NFL
Giants already scrambling with remade offensive line after Jermaine Eluemunor injury
The sense of optimism around the remade Giants offensive line almost lasted one full practice without being threatened.
After spending $45.2 million in free agency on three new starters and hiring a new position coach to fix a unit that allowed a historic 85 sacks last season, the Giants were back to scrambling Wednesday to plug holes because right tackle Jermaine Eluemunor was injured on the first day of training camp.
Eluemunor left practice walking gingerly alongside head trainer Ronnie Barnes after taking an accidental shot near the ribs on his left side from Dexter Lawrence during a running play.
He was diagnosed with bruised ribs, The Post learned, and later declared “I’m good,” with a thumbs-up emoji, on X as fans exhaled.
“The big thing with the offensive line is we’ve shuffled guys in and out the last few years for competition,” head coach Brian Daboll said before Eluemunor’s injury scare. “If we can get five [starters] going as quickly as we can, that’s what we’d like to do.”
The Giants made a bold (and revealing) move Wednesday by shifting Eluemunor from starting left guard to right tackle in place of the injured Evan Neal.
It made a statement that Neal — a 2022 first-round pick who has been a bust through two seasons — will have to earn back his job instead of being handed an exemption based on draft status whenever he returns from the Physically Unable to Perform list.
“He has to get healthy and then … how he plays and his contribution to the team will take care of itself from there,” general manager Joe Schoen said. “He’s not far off [from returning to practice].”
About an hour after Schoen spoke, Eluemunor was down on a knee as practice stopped.
Eluemunor, who signed a two-year, $14 million contract, was the No. 1-ranked free-agent offensive lineman by the Giants’ pro scouting department, Schoen revealed on HBO’s “Hard Knocks.”
Because he played under Giants new offensive line coach Carmen Bricillo with the Raiders, Eluemunor has been key to the offseason offensive-line makeover, which adds to the injury’s significance.
“That was tough. Hopefully he’s OK,” left tackle Andrew Thomas said. “He knows what makes Carm tick. [The Raiders] offense was a little similar … [so] the language kind of translates. And he’s just a veteran presence. Physically, he’s dominated — a really strong guy, and I think that will help us in the run game.”
The Giants finished practice with Plan C: Josh Ezeudu at right tackle.
Ezeudu, who was overwhelmed at left tackle when Thomas was out last season, was the right tackle in place of Neal when Eluemunor was at left guard during spring practices.
But the Giants opted to move Eluemunor and elevate Aaron Stinnie to first-team left guard rather than stick with Ezeudu.
“The health of that group can help everybody,” quarterback Daniel Jones said. “I think that’s important.”
All of it comes back to Neal getting healthy and rapidly improving from allowing 10 sacks and 81 quarterback pressures in 20 career games before suffering an ankle injury.
Originally diagnosed last season with a sprain, Neal tried to practice before it was discovered he needed surgery to repair a small fracture — and then he chose to rehab away from the team facility in the offseason, unlike most other injured players.
Daboll sounded at the start of camp like he is open to a merit-based competition between Eluemunor and Neal.
“It’s day-by-day,” Daboll said. “[Eluemunor] is going to go in there. If he plays well, if he keeps playing well, we’ll revisit it when Evan gets healthy. He’s played well at right tackle in Las Vegas.”
The Giants used 14 offensive linemen in total last offseason, including nine who played at least 266 offensive snaps.
The additions of Ezeudu, Stinnie and $30 million right guard Jon Runyan Jr. were supposed to help, but the Giants might not be done adding, whether that’s guard Greg Van Roten (who visited Monday) or another experienced tackle.
“The reality of this business is guys go down,” Thomas said. “We saw that last year — hopefully it’s not that bad. But the next guy has to be ready to step up.”