At this point in the 2025 NFL season, there really isn’t much left to learn about this New York Giants team. They’re bad. As a former scientist, I do appreciate that ownership has tried to apply the scientific method to understand why.
Minnesota
‘This feels like home’: Donte DiVincenzo is embracing Minnesota, and Timberwolves fans are loving the guard right back
A New York megastar by the end of the 2024 NBA postseason finally received the love and admiration of Minnesota basketball fans Sunday evening. As Donte DiVincenzo stood on the floor for a postgame, television interview, roars of “Donte! Donte! Donte!” reverberated throughout Target Center.
“It’s amazing,” DiVincenzo said as he soaked in the support. “This feels like home.”
Timberwolves fans know good basketball. And they witnessed the degree to which DiVincenzo produced it in Minnesota’s victory over San Antonio.
It wasn’t just the season-high 26 points on the strength of five three-point shots. It also was the seven rebounds, the four assists, the hustle displayed when the guard raced down the floor to deny Victor Wembanyama a home-run pass that was sure to end in a Spurs bucket in the game’s closing minutes.
Pace, hustle, creativity. DiVincenzo has hit 11 threes in total over the Timberwolves’ past two games, and has multiple made triples in each of the past six games. But his impact extends far beyond his jump shot at the moment. There were numerous times against the Spurs when the guard appeared to have the ball on a string, including a play in which he appeared to pull the ball out in transition, only to reverse course and blow by Spurs guard Keldon Johnson for a layup.
“It’s the stuff I work on,” DiVincenzo said. “I know what I can do. Everybody on the team knows what I can do.”
When DiVincenzo is rolling, the basketball is beautiful. It’s why he quickly became a fan favorite among Knicks fans during his one-year stop in New York. But Minnesota fans hadn’t gotten the chance to see that player much through the first two months of the current season, outside of a stellar preseason.
This, however, is the player Knicks fans saw in the latter half of last season, and the guy Wolves fans were hoping to get as a blue-chip piece in the Karl-Anthony Towns trade return.
“He’s stringing (performances) together right now,” Wolves coach Chris Finch said. “He’s giving us everything. He’s given us everything we knew he was with the rebounding and the shot-making and the smart play.”
What took him so long?
The Timberwolves’ brass lauded DiVincenzo as a “plug-and-play” guy who could seamlessly fit into any roster or system. That sentiment doesn’t necessarily account for a transitional period. DiVincenzo has always needed those in new landing spots. He immediately struggled out of the gates playing with Sacramento, Golden State and New York upon his arrival before hitting his stride.
The experience in Minnesota has been no different, though the transition has seemingly taken twice as long. That can rather easily be explained away by the timing of the trade, which took place just two days before the start of training camp.
“I was at home chilling,” DiVincenzo said. “Next thing I know, I’m on a flight going to Minnesota.”
That’s not easy. DiVincenzo was adamant he makes “no excuses” for himself, but added he had to give himself a personal grace period as he adapted to life in a new city with a new organization and offense. Not only did he have to learn new teammates and a new system, but he also had to learn a new metropolis and determine how his family would fit into it.
Beyond that, Wolves center Rudy Gobert sensed some lingering frustration from the trade, which is natural. There’s a resentment when you’re dealt from a place where you experienced such success.
“But when you want to succeed, you gotta let that go,” Gobert said. “I think now, from what I’m feeling, he’s finally present. He’s happy. He’s himself, and he’s in the moment. He’s able to have fun being who he is and be fully, mentally there.”
Now present, DiVincenzo looks like himself on the court. That, Gobert noted, means being a two-way player who’s always making the right play and knocking down key shots.
“That’s who he is,” Gobert said.
And everyone is finally getting to see it. DiVincenzo credited conversations with folks throughout the organization — from teammates to coaches and front office members — that gave him an “at-home feel.”
“That reassurance of, ‘Just go play. Don’t worry about anything else,’ ” he said. “Telling myself that. It’s one thing to have somebody else tell you, and then you’re in your own head, but get comfortable. Be yourself, get comfortable and whatever happens, happens. … Everybody in this locker room knows that we’re living with me shooting threes. I think that’s the most confidence you can have is knowing when I shoot the ball, everybody on the bench, on the court thinks it’s going in.”
And, more often than not at the moment, they’re correct. The adjustment period appears to be nearing it’s completion. Now, the good times are starting to roll.
“Everybody holds themselves to a high standard, so when it’s not going to that ability of what you know you’re capable of, it seems like the negative is worse than what it actually is,” DiVincenzo said. “For me, it’s just understanding that some games aren’t going to happen. You’re not going to have your night. But what can you hang your hat on? Making energy plays, doing the little things and giving yourself up to your teammates.
“Just understanding to take the good with the bad, because I know the tides will turn. And everybody here has the utmost confidence in me. So just going out and doing it. There’s no excuses to be had, just doing it.”
Originally Published:
Minnesota
4 things we learned from the Giants’ 16-13 loss to the Vikings
Two hypotheses were offered by fans and the Giants beat writers in mid-season. The Giants are bad because (a) the coaches are bad, or (b) the players (and hence the general manager) are bad. They couldn’t realistically fire the entire coaching staff in mid-season, but they did fire the two most frequent targets of fans’ and writers’ wrath, head coach Brian Daboll and defensive coordinator Shane Bowen. They’ve now run the experiment for five weeks, taken the Petri dish out, and the results are in: The Giants still stink. So we now know it wasn’t (just) the coaches, although it’s possible that Mike Kafka and Charlie Bullen are as bad as Daboll and Bowen.
No scientific experiment is perfect, but today we got another data point. What did we learn from the Giants’ 16-13 loss to the Minnesota Vikings?
Is Mike Kafka the second coming of Joe Judge?
When Brian Daboll was still head coach, the Giants had some of their most successful offensive games this season after Jaxson Dart took over as starter. That more or less continued until Dart’s concussion in Chicago, during another blown fourth quarter lead, precipitated Daboll’s dismissal. Kafka, who supposedly had been given back the play calling this year, now had complete charge of the offense, and it looked good, even great at times, in his first two games as head coach with Jameis Winston at the helm.
Since Dart returned, though, things haven’t been the same…except for the losing. Dart has played some of his worst ball since returning to the lineup against New England. Today was clearly the worst game of his Giants career, with only 33 yards passing on the day. Maybe the absence of designed runs has taken something important from his arsenal.
Or maybe Kafka is coaching scared. Last week I was upset at how often he called running plays on 2nd and 10 after incomplete passes. Today Kafka just bypassed first down passes completely for a while. Kafka called runs on the Giants’ first four offensive plays. The first two worked for big gains, but the next two didn’t. Kafka finally called passes on two consecutive plays, neither of which worked, but both of which were canceled by Minnesota penalties. Given new life at the Vikings’ 16 yard line, Kafka called three consecutive runs that only got them to 4th and goal at the 5 yard line. THEN, rather than kick the field goal to get back to a 3-3 tie, he decided to have Dart pass…which resulted in a sack and change of possession.
This is terrible play calling. You’re telling your QB that you have no faith in him. It brought back memories of the final two games of the Joe Judge Experience, when he refused to let Mike Glennon pass at all after the first quarter in Chicago, and then had Jake Fromm not even attempt to get first downs deep in his own territory. I get it – Brian Flores runs a difficult defense to diagnose, and you’re risking disastrous turnovers if he’s confusing your rookie QB. But Flores was blitzing Dart about 70% of the time, and play callers are supposed to have hot reads for the QB to throw to in order to blunt the effect of the pressure. If you don’t let your QB experience that, you’re stifling his development. If you’re using 12 personnel and then almost always running out of it rather than passing, you’re tying your QB’s hands.
You’re not in good hands with the Giants’ receiving corps
The counter to my point above is that minus Malik Nabers, the Giants’ receivers are a really unreliable group. On the rare occasions that Dart did try to pass, he was undercut by his receivers’ inability to corral the ball. Darius Slayton bobbled and lost another pass that would have been a first down. Wan’DaleRobinson, among the more sure-handed of the Giants’ receivers, let a pass hit him in the face mask and be bobbled before he got hit and it fell incomplete. Admittedly it was a pass that Dart floated rather than putting velocity on so Robinson could gather it in well before contact, but it was still a drop. Finally, Theo Johnson once again could not bring in a pass that he should have been able to go get, letting it bounce off his hands for an interception.
The pass rush is looking up
Granted, the Vikings’ OL is not the best, but the Giants got good pressure on J.J. McCarthy and Max Brosmer today. The beneath-the-surface story of today’s game was that the QB the Giants chose not to draft last year faced the QB they chose to trade up for this year. McCarthy, after a rough start to his career, had played great the previous two games, making the Viking offense suddenly look like a juggernaut. Today, The Giants sacked McCarthy three times and Brosmer once and held the two of them together to 160 yards passing. Brian Burns had two more sacks, continuing his excellent season, and Abdul Carter was active again, with another sack on a beautiful inside spin, his signature move, plus several other pressures. In addition, Chauncey Golston, who has been injured for much of his first Giants season and invisible when he’s been out there, got his first sack and was generally active when he was in the game.
Maybe it was the pass rush, maybe it was the inexperienced QBs, but today was the first day that I thought the Giants’ secondary played well this season. Paulson Adebo had his first interception as a Giant. Jevon Holland had what should have been a pick-6, but it was called back because Abdul Carter lined up in the neutral zone. Oof. Tyler Nubin finally made a positive play this season, recovering McCarthy’s fumble and returning it 27 yards for a TD.
I also thought the Giants’ linebackers had one of their best games of the season, especially Bobby Okereke, who has been MIA since Wink Martindale stormed out the door. Okereke even broke up a pass to Justin Jefferson.
After a 3-year odyssey, the Giants today looked like they actually have a kicker who can make field goals in Ben Sauls. Granted, they were only 27 and 39 yards, but we’ll take what we can get as Giants fans. Besides,he was kicking in what looked like a decent wind today and it looked like he placed them perfectly to compensate for the wind. He also made his only extra point, which would not be a big deal on any other team, but as Giants fans we count our blessings, however small.
Speaking of blessings, the dream of the No. 1 pick remains alive, with unexpected help from the Titans, who handily defeated the cratering Chiefs.
Minnesota
2 men convicted of murder in 2023 north Minneapolis shooting
Two men have been convicted of murdering a man in north Minneapolis in 2023, and both are expected to spend life in prison.
A jury found Lavester Breham and Dandre Franklin guilty of first-degree premeditated murder and second-degree intentional murder, according to the Hennepin County Attorney’s Office. The first-degree conviction carries a mandatory sentence of life without parole.
According to a criminal complaint, Breham and Franklin fatally shot Mikiyel Deshone Patton inside a car on the 900 block of Newton Avenue North on Dec. 19, 2023.
Investigators connected Breham and Franklin to the shooting via surveillance footage, cellphone records and DNA testing.
Breham and Franklin are scheduled to be sentenced on Jan. 15.
Minnesota
Minnesota Vikings’ plane turns around after mechanical issues en route to game against Giants
Sunday, December 21, 2025 12:31AM
The Minnesota Vikings had some travel trouble Saturday getting to northern New Jersey for their game Sunday at the New York Giants.
Their team plane experienced mechanical issues that required turning around shortly after departing Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport, according to a team spokesperson. The Vikings were expected to arrive in Newark later Saturday night after boarding a second plane, the spokesperson said.
Minnesota is 6-8 and, like the 2-12 Giants, has been eliminated from playoff contention. The Vikings are coming off beating Dallas, with this game more about young quarterback J.J. McCarthy getting additional NFL experience.
Copyright © 2025 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.
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