Giants’ Deonte Banks facing key make-or-break third season
What Deonte Banks has proven after two seasons is that he is not a complete waste of a first-round draft pick like DeAndre Baker and Kadarius Toney.
Whether he gets lumped in with too many other Giantsâ playable underachievers from the first round over the last decade â Ereck Flowers, Eli Apple and Evan Neal, specifically â or he is able to salvage his career as an effective starting cornerback should be determined next season.
âIâm always confident, but I feel like I have to be more consistent and then Iâll be straight,â Banks told The Post. âYou have to be more consistent in how you approach things and be consistent in your play â consistent with your eyes, consistent with your keys, stuff like that.â
Banks took a step backward in his second NFL season, when he allowed 49 catches for 689 yards and six touchdowns, according to Pro Football Focus.
It would be a stretch for the Giants to do an honest offseason self-assessment and not prioritize adding a No. 1 cornerback to bump Banks back into the No. 2 role that he played for most of his promising rookie season.
âI really do know what itâs about now,â Banks said. âI didnât know some stuff, but I think I know what I need to do and whatâs being asked of me. I want to follow the No. 1 [receiver]. But I donât get into that whole label. Iâm cool with whatever. I just want to go out and play and do what I do.â
Banks became one of the poster boys for a horrid season because of a couple magnified plays against the Cowboys and Eagles after which the coaching staff openly questioned his tackling effort. It often seemed like the blame â plenty of other candidates could have shared responsibility â weighed down his demeanor.
âObviously he would like to have a little bit more production than what heâs had,â said defensive coordinator Shane Bowen, who was put on the hot seat this week by owner John Mara. âHopefully we can get there and he can continue to progress to that. But heâs got the right mindset. Itâs just a matter of continuing to grow up.â
Since Banks âcame back and battled,â in Bowenâs words, with hard work over the final two months after scrutiny on him reached its peak, a better poster for Banksâ face wouldâve been one that shared general manager Joe Schoenâs warning not to draft for need or scheme.
The Giants entered the 2023 draft with a hole at starting corner opposite Adoreeâ Jackson, and Banks profiled as an ideal fit in then-coordinator Wink Martindaleâs man-to-man coverage defense. They traded up one slot to get him after a late-first-round run on equally desirable receivers.
Bowenâs scheme was the opposite of Martindaleâs and utilized zone coverage about two-thirds of the time, according to PFF. Did some underestimate before the season the impact that the change would have on Banks?
âI never did,â said Banks, who is â100 percentâ hoping to keep the same scheme headed into Year 3. âIâd know what this play is and what I have to do here. Bring it into offseason training and know that, know my techniques.â
One teaching point that needs development is Banks making a play on the ball when he has his back turned in tight coverage. He finished the season with 12 passes defended, one forced fumble and no interceptions.
âWhen in doubt,â defensive backs coach Jermone Henderson said, âfind the ball.â
Receivers made a habit of essentially picking catches off the top of Banksâ helmet.
âJust got to make sure he gets his head around and finds the ball quicker,â Bowen said. âYouâre running 4.4, 4.3 [second] speed down the field, and all of a sudden youâve got to be able to locate the ball and have confidence and make yourself comfortable in those uncomfortable positions.â
That is a good start for making the Giants more comfortable with counting on Banks as a building block.
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