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Forget The Stats — Eli Manning’s Hall Of Fame Case Reminds The NFL What A True Giants Legend Really Means

Forget The Stats — Eli Manning’s Hall Of Fame Case Reminds The NFL What A True Giants Legend Really Means
Giants QB Eli Manning and Raiders LB Khalil Mack Named Walter Camp  All-America Alumni NFL Players of the Week – Walter Camp Football Foundation

Eli Manning moved one step closer to football immortality this week, advancing to the semifinal round of voting for the Pro Football Hall of Fame Class of 2026. The former New York Giants quarterback is one of 26 modern-era players still standing — the second straight year his name has reached this stage, and the closest he has come yet to Canton.

“I didn’t stay up refreshing my phone or anything,” Manning said with a familiar grin. “But seeing your name there again… that never gets old.” For a franchise still searching for stability, his presence on the ballot is a reminder of what Giants football once stood for.

On paper, Manning’s résumé has always sparked debate. A career .500 regular-season record. No league MVP. Critics rarely get past those numbers — but postseason football forces a different discussion.

“If you want flawless regular-season stats, there are plenty of quarterbacks who can give you that,” Manning said. “But if you want a Giants legend who can walk into Foxborough, face an undefeated team on football’s biggest stage, and still find a way to win — that’s a very different conversation.”

Giants fans know exactly what conversation that is. Manning is one of only six players in NFL history to win multiple Super Bowl MVPs, leading New York to shocking titles in Super Bowls XLII and XLVI. His playoff résumé — 8–4 with 2,815 passing yards and 18 touchdowns — remains the gold standard at the position in franchise history.

Former head coach Tom Coughlin has never been shy about defending his quarterback. “Eli never needed theatrics,” Coughlin once said. “He looked at the team and said, ‘We’re winning.’ And they believed him.”

Durability defined him as much as clutch play. Manning started 210 consecutive games from 2004 to 2017 — second most in NFL history — never missing a start due to injury. “Two hundred ten straight,” he said. “That mattered to me.”

The competition for the Class of 2026 is fierce, with first-time eligibles like Drew Brees and Philip Rivers crowding the ballot. Still, for the second straight year, Eli Manning is a Hall of Fame semifinalist — and for a Giants franchise searching for its identity, his legacy keeps getting stronger.

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Just 1 Hour After Learning He's No Longer in the Plans, Cowboys' $91.8 Million Star Right Tackle Is Ready to Restructure His Contract — Just for One More Chance to Play in Dallas Blue
Dallas, Texas – December 23, 2025 The message arrived quickly and without ambiguity. Just one hour after receiving clear signals that he was no longer part of the team’s long-term plans, Terence Steele chose a response rarely seen in today’s NFL: he voluntarily expressed willingness to restructure his $91.8 million contract, with one goal in mind — to continue wearing the Dallas Cowboys uniform. The move comes as the Dallas Cowboys undergo a significant shift along the offensive line. Coaches have confirmed that Tyler Smith will remain at left tackle over the final two games, while Tyler Guyton is expected to serve only as a swing tackle — a clear signal that Dallas is preparing for a future without Steele at right tackle. Combined with an “easy out” in Steele’s contract in 2026, his name has quickly surfaced among potential cap casualties. Rather than wait in silence for a decision, Steele chose to speak — not in protest, but in commitment. “If the team no longer sees me as the first option, I’m willing to step back,” Steele said. “I can restructure my deal, accept any role, even start from the bench — as long as I can stay here and be ready when the Cowboys need me. Dallas isn’t just where I play; it’s where my heart truly belongs.” What makes Steele’s stance resonate even more is what he has already given Dallas. An undrafted free agent in 2020, Steele defied the odds to become a full-time starter, logging over 5,000 career offensive snaps, protecting the edge in some of the league’s most pass-heavy offenses. At his peak, Steele started every game in back-to-back seasons, helped anchor a line that ranked top five in pass protection efficiency, and played a key role in Dallas finishing among the NFL’s top offenses in total yards and scoring. Teammates routinely cite his toughness — playing through injuries, rarely missing time, and lining up against elite edge rushers week after week. For the Cowboys, the dilemma is complex. The franchise must protect the blindside of Dak Prescott while also creating cap flexibility for a looming retooling process. Steele’s willingness to sacrifice financially could open another path — or at the very least, force decision-makers to pause before closing the door entirely on a proven veteran. No one knows yet whether Steele’s message will alter the final outcome. But in a league often driven by numbers, his response offered something different: loyalty expressed through action. In Dallas — where legacies are built on more than just contracts and depth charts — Terence Steele has reminded the Cowboys of a simple truth. Sometimes, a player’s greatest value isn’t found on a balance sheet, but in his willingness to stay, sacrifice, and fight for the star when the path forward suddenly narrows.