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Giants beat Redskins in opener 16-7, but are not satisfied
Giants spoil Zorn’s debut as Redskins coach



Seth Weng | Associated Press New York Giants’ Aaron Ross (front) breaks up a pass to Washington Redskin’ Santana Moss during the second half of an NFL football game at Giants Stadium in East Rutherford, N.J., Thursday. The Giants beat the Redskins 16-7.
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. (AP) — The New York Giants kicked off defense of their Super Bowl title by showing they could play great defense without Michael Strahan and Osi Umenyiora and that their offense could move the ball with Eli Manning.

What the Giants didn’t show in a 16-7 win over the Washington Redskins that spoiled the coaching debut of Jim Zorn on Thursday night was that they are a dominating team.

Sure, they dominated the first half in scoring on their first four possessions to take a 16-0 lead, but they never put the Redskins and Zorn’s West Coast offense away.

Washington scored late in the half to get within nine points, and they were a play away from making the kickoff to the NFL season a game throughout the second half.

‘‘You can say we made a statement,’’ said Giants halfback Brandon Jacobs, who ran for 116 yards on 21 carries. ‘‘But if we made a statement, I don’t think we made enough of a statement. There are probably guys sitting around saying the Giants are pretty good and we can’t lay down on them, but it should have been worse tonight. We left a lot of points out there.’’

The Giants got inside the Redskins 10 yard line on their first three possessions and twice had to settle for short field goals by John Carney, who kicked three in the game. Eli Manning capped a game-opening 84-yard drive that featured three big catches by Plaxico Burress (30, 19 and 11 yards) with a 1-yard touchdown run.

However, the offense failed to score touchdowns on its next three possessions, a fact that had Washington still in the game despite being outgained 246-16 late in the opening half.

The Redskins had only one first down at that point and it came on a roughing the punter penalty.

‘‘Everybody thinks that we’re the bottom fifth team in this division,’’ Giants defensive end Justin Tuck said. ‘‘And I don’t think we changed that tonight. I really don’t.’’

Still, there were positives for the Giants, who stunned the NFL last season by playing their best football in the playoffs and capping it with a stunning win over the previously unbeaten New England Patriots in the Super Bowl.

New York’s defense led that win over Tom Brady and company in February, and Steve Spagnuolo’s group showed it can be a force even with Strahan in retirement and fellow Pro Bowler Umenyiora sidelined for the year with a knee injury.

New York limited the new-look Redskins to 11 first downs and 209 total yards and gave indications that these Giants are back for another run despite the preseason predictions that there chances of repeating are slim.

‘‘We played well and it’s no surprise to us,’’ defensive tackle Barry Cofield said. ‘‘We feel like we got capable guys and we held them for very few yards other than the two-minute situations, where the got most of their yardage.’’

The win capped a fun-filled opening night for Giants fans, who saw the retired Strahan hold up the Lombardi Trophy just minutes before the opening kickoff.

Manning, Burress (10 catches for 133 yards) and Jacobs kept the crowd on its feet in ending a four-game losing streak at home. New York was 11-1 away from Giants Stadium last season, winning the final 11.

‘‘It was a great opening to the season,’’ said Manning, who completed 19 of 35 passes for 216 yards with an interception. ‘‘There was a lot of emotion, a lot of excitement. You could feel it in the crowd. It was great to see Michael holding the trophy.’’

third-down conversions.

Jason Campbell threw a 12-yard touchdown pass to Santana Moss with 13 seconds to play in the first half to account for the Redskins’ points. The score was set up by a Giants special teams lapse, a 50-yard kickoff return by Rock Cartwright.




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