The errors truly bury the giants in the fourth quarter when Dart threw a desperate shipment in fourth place and watched Kool-Aid McKinstry scared it for his first interruption of the career. Dart added one additional interception in the fourth quarter of a play where the Beaux Collins receiver stopped running his way a short distance from Dart’s proposed goal, which led to another wiper McKinstry and turned off Giants’ flickering hopes of recurrence.
One cannot forget the most important turnover of all: Deep in the territory of Saints at the beginning of the fourth quarter in a 19-14 game, a rookie that runs Cam Taxboybebo’s ball out of his hand with Bryan Bresee’s defense and hit the ball for Jordan Howden’s safety to reach 86 yards.
“He got it perfectly out and I handed them over,” said Katthebo. “He punched the ball from the back and I didn’t think tight enough.”
Total rattled giants five possessions that ended as follows: fumble, fumble, fumble, interception, interception. The final drive of the game reached 17 in New Orleans before ending up in the rolls.
The last one does not count in the leaflet, fortunately. Five is already enough.
“Five turnover in zero, you are not going to work in this league,” said Brian Daboll coach. “They kill you. Most people were on the plus-50 or down in the stage area.”
Daboll knows too well how fine victory is in the NFL. He has to spend the week correcting the mistakes that produced the knight with the disclosures with the hope that it affects positive changes, puts darts back on a promising path and makes this performance distant memory.
“It’s about working. I don’t have an excuse for age or to be a rookie,” said Dart. “It is a responsibility when you are a team manager to win games.”