Giants Release Cruz, Jennings; Patriots Display Game-Winning Football
Published on February 14 2017 6:14 am
Last Updated on February 14 2017 6:15 am
By ESPN
The New York Giants released wide receiver Victor Cruz and running back Rashad Jennings on Monday, creating significant salary-cap space by parting ways with two veteran members of their offense.
Cruz, an undrafted free agent from nearby Paterson, New Jersey, described his seven-year stint with the Giants as an "amazing journey."
"I pretty much grew up in front of the eyes of this entire organization," Cruz said as part of a statement released by the team. "The Giants fan base, the community, my hometown, my family. I grew up there. It's very much a family atmosphere and it's very much like leaving your family. That's what it feels like. I did some great things there."
Cruz, 30, is 2½ years removed from major knee surgery and would have counted for $9.4 million against the Giants' salary cap in 2017. New York frees up $7.5 million in cap space with his release.
Jennings would have counted $3,062,500 against the cap in 2017. Releasing him frees up $2.5 million in cap space.
Giants general manager Jerry Reese described Cruz as "one of the great stories in the National Football League."
After spending most of his rookie season on injured reserve, Cruz burst onto the scene with back-to-back 1,000-yard seasons in 2011 and 2012, and he caught a touchdown pass in the Giants' Super Bowl XLVI victory. But he has struggled to regain that form since suffering a torn patellar tendon in October 2014. He missed the entire 2015 season and had just 39 catches for 586 yards and a touchdown this past season.
Cruz's role diminished as he fell behind Odell Beckham Jr. and Sterling Shepard on the Giants' depth chart in 2016.
"He came in here and earned everything that he's gotten," Reese said in the Giants' statement. "It has been amazing to see him grow from an undrafted free agent to a Pro Bowl player and one of our go-to guys during the Super Bowl XLVI run. He will always be one of the great Giants."
Cruz took a significant pay cut to return to the Giants last season. He still made $5.4 million and wanted to return to the team that signed him as a free agent out of UMass in 2010.
"There are so many experiences, times and moments that I shared in that building with that team in that jersey," Cruz said. "Those can't be replaced or forgotten. I'm happy I have those moments to look back on."
Jennings, 31, averaged just 3.3 yards per carry last season, his third with the Giants. He rushed for a career-high 863 yards in 2015.
"It's an honor to play here, playing for a team that has so much history, a team that falls under great leadership and high character," Jennings said in the statement. "In the mecca of everything, the relationships I've built are priceless. The people, the fans, teammates, ownership, I've been blessed to play with the Giants and see that side of the NFL. I have nothing but good things to say."
Patriots Display Game-Winning Football
New England Patriots running back James White said he forgot to keep the football that he scored the game-winning touchdown with in Super Bowl LI, but luckily for him, an equipment assistant scooped it up, according to a team spokesman.
The Patriots are now displaying the football at their Hall of Fame.
On ESPN Radio's Mike & Mike show the day after Super Bowl LI, White said he forgot to keep the football. In a separate interview on "The Dan Patrick Show" the following day, White said he was hopeful that an equipment manager picked it up.
White's remarks came in the wake of uncertainty over the whereabouts of quarterback Tom Brady's game jersey, which led some to assume that perhaps the football was also missing.
"I wasn't thinking in that moment," White said. "I was too busy sprinting down the field."
But a team spokesman explained that an equipment assistant retrieved the football at the time of the touchdown, as would be normal protocol.
The football could ultimately be given to White as a keepsake, but for now it is being shared with the team's fans.
Brady's jersey still has yet to be found.
"It's very sad to me that someone would do something like this," Patriots owner Robert Kraft told the Fox Business Network on Monday of Brady's jersey. "It's like taking a great Chagall or Picasso or something. You can never display it. And somehow, I feel there'll be some news that'll clear this up in the not-too-distant future."