Welcome to the Giants Exhibition Hall

Giants Card of the Day

Dave Meggett
Dave, the can-do-everything running back for the Giants, registered a 92-yard kickofl return for a TD in a 47-34 loss to the Eagles in Week 12. It was the longest KOR for a TD by a Giant in 20 years. Dave ranked fourth in the NFC in KORs with a 22.8-yard average.
430

Daily Position Focus: Running Back

Jarrod Bunch
Rodney Hampton
Rodney Hampton
Ron Johnson
View more Running Back position cards in the Giants Running Back Gallery.

Recent Additions

Kayvon Thibodeaux
Kayvon Thibodeaux
Malik Nabers

Giants Gallery

View all the Giants cards together in the Giants Team Gallery

* Factoid: Charles Way played Fullback for the mighty Giants.
Browse Cards by Decade

Other Cards

Giants Inserts
Giants Update cards
Giants Coffee Talk
Name that player!

John played backfield and center in the Big 9 and centinued that division of duties during his first campaign with the New York club. Starting as a blocking back, Cannady shifted to center when trouble developed at that position where the Giants' Mel Hein became football's all-time No. 1 center in an unbroken 15-year span. Rough, durable, a savage line backer, John quickly made good in the very important pivot spot.



After a spectacular rise from the cellar in '64, to a 2nd place tie in the Eastern Division, in '65, the Giants fell to the cellar, again in '66 with a 1, 12 and 1 record. They did, lead the NFL with a 101 yard interception TD.



When the Giants have their backs against the goal line, Rosie is the man to watch. His fantastic amount of power is marshalled up and he makes a habit of smashing enemy goal-line drives.



Rookie Cards

Marion Manningham
Bill Austin
Michael Strahan

Gallery Redux!

Rodney Hampton, Running Back - Giants.
Odell Beckham, Jr., Wide Receiver - Giants.

Back to the Front! Giants card back du jour...

"Ken" Strong
Though there have been many men who could punt and drop, or place kick, the writer advises young players to specialize in one type of kicking. The arc of the leg's swing for punting is different than the swing for the drop kick. In punting the foot meets the ball well out in front and several feet above the ground, being struck with the instep. In drop kicking the foot just skims the ground and the toe catches the ball a split second after it rebounds from the turf. It is better to accustom the leg to the "groove" of one style of kicking. Don't try to be a punter and a field goal kicker. Better be good at one than poor at both. Ken Strong, New York Giants, New York University, All League Half back 1934. Home is in N. Y. 6 ft. tall, 202 pounds, 28 years old.
7
Rookie

Giants
Total Card Count

2,199

You can browse all the available Giants cards in the Giants Team Gallery