| New York Giants Team History
  The 
                  history and tradition of the New York Giants is linked to pro 
                  football itself for one might have perished without the other 
                  in the early days of the National Football League. The late 
                  Tim Mara, now a member of the Pro Football Hall of Fame, purchased 
                  a franchise for $500 in 1925 and before the Giants' first season 
                  had ended, he had invested another $25,000 to keep the franchise 
                  alive. A team in New York was thus assured. To a young NFL that 
                  was seeking national media and fan attendance, a team in the 
                  nation's largest city was an absolute must. 
 The value of New York exposure was clearly demonstrated in December 
                  of the first season when more than 70,000 turned out at the 
                  Polo Grounds to see the Giants play the Chicago Bears, who had 
                  just signed Red Grange, the most famous pro football player 
                  of the 1920s.
 
 The very next season (1926), Grange and his agent formed a rival 
                  American Football League and placed their flagship team, the 
                  Yankees, in New York to battle the Giants head-to-head. It proved 
                  to be a costly battle but the Giants and the NFL won. The AFL 
                  lasted only one year.
 
 In their third season in 1927, the Giants won their first NFL 
                  championship behind a defense led by tackle Steve Owen that 
                  permitted an all-time low of 20 points in 13 games. Owen became 
                  the Giants' coach in 1930. He held the job for 23 seasons and 
                  wound up with a 153-108-17 record. He still ranks ninth in all-time 
                  coaching victories. The Giants enjoyed some of their finest 
                  seasons during the Owen years. Beginning with the start of divisional 
                  play in 1933, the Giants won eight Eastern division titles in 
                  14 seasons and NFL championships in 1934 and 1938. Ken Strong, 
                  a triple-threat halfback and a premier placekicker, and Mel 
                  Hein, a center-linebacker who didn't miss a game in 15 seasons, 
                  were Giants standouts through most of the 1930s and 1940s.
 
 With the coaching of first Jim Lee Howell in the late 1950s 
                  and Allie Sherman in the early 1960s, the Giants won the NFL 
                  title in 1956 and six NFL Eastern championships in eight years 
                  from 1956 to 1963. Such stars as Y. A. Tittle, Frank Gifford, 
                  Roosevelt Brown, Emlen Tunnell and Andy Robustelli led New York's 
                  annual chase to the title game. From 1964 to 1985, the Giants 
                  remained out of championship contention. With Bill Parcells 
                  at the helm, they won NFC Eastern division crowns in 1986, 1989 
                  and 1990. They concluded the 1986 and 1990 campaigns with victories 
                  over Denver in Super Bowl XXI and Buffalo in Super Bowl XXV.
 
 From the start, the Giants have been a family enterprise. Founder 
                  Tim Mara's sons, Jack and Wellington, succeeded him and Tim 
                  Mara II served for many years as the club's vice president. 
                  Wellington Mara and Preston Robert Tisch, who purchased 50 percent 
                  of the club in 1991, are now co-chief executive officers.
 |