Tuesday, September 13, 2022

1978 Profile: Kyle Chandler

Center 
No. 61
Princeton
"Signed by the Giants as a free agent after an impressive performance in a 1974 pre-season tryout camp at Fordham, Karl proved to be a valuable addition to the club in his rookie campaign. He stepped right in and did a solid job, starting four games and assisting the specialty teams as well.
Karl earned varsity letters in both football and wrestling at Princeton, playing offensive tackle with the tackles. He lost only two wrestling matches in three years. Karl is a fine squash player."

-1978 Topps No. 99

Thursday, August 11, 2022

1978 Profile: Bill Bryant

Cornerback
No. 21
Grambling
"Bill won himself a spot on the Giants' roster with his solid hitting and his rugged specialty teams play during the 1976 pre-season. He is a good open-field tackler.
A three-year starter as a defensive back at Grambling, Bill caught the eye of pro scouts at the Senior Bowl after 1973.

-1978 Topps No. 412

Tuesday, June 28, 2022

1978 Profile: Ron Mikolajczyk

Offensive Tackle
No. 62
Tampa
"Only to be taken seriously if you are a defensive lineman. Off the field, he deals in silliness. Of his name (pronounced Mik-o-LIE-chick) he says, 'In Poland it's just like 'Smith' in the phone book. I think it translates to 'Dead Cattle.' Or is it 'Fallen Angel?' ' Ron says he wants 'to be loved by little kids and puppies.' He says he wants 'to be a quarterback.'
Ron was born in Passaic, New Jersey, and played at Tampa University, the Canadian League and the World Football League before joining the Giants. He's a pro wrestler in the off-season, and his teammates swear he's the villain."

-John Jeansonne, The Complete Handbook of Pro Football (1978 Edition)

Saturday, May 21, 2022

1978 Profile: Jack Gregory

Defensive End
No. 81
Delta State
"Coaches have been dabbling with ways to replace him for a few years, simply for purposes of youth, but in 1976 No. 1 draft choice Troy Archer was moved to tackle so Gregory could remain, and last season No. 1 draft choice Gary Jeter never threatened. He had 21 sacks when he first came to the Giants in 1972 from  Cleveland and hasn't matched that again, but 1977 was his best year in a while.
Gregory was born in Okolona, Mississippi, where he still lives on a soybean farm. He's the defensive captain and a kind of self-appointed Big Brother to fellow defensive linemen."

-John Jeansonne, The Complete Handbook of Pro Football (1978 Edition)

"The Giants acquired Jack from the Browns in 1972 and he enjoyed a banner campaign that season. He led the NFL in quarterback sacks with 21 and was named to the 1st team All-NFL squad by both UPI and Pro Football Weekly.
Jack has produced numerous blocked passes, quarterback sacks and fumble recoveries during his six seasons in New York. A four-year starter in Cleveland, he won All-AFC honors and a Pro Bowl selection for 1970.
Jack raises cotton and soybeans on his ranch."

-1978 Topps No. 159

Wednesday, April 27, 2022

1978 Profile: Joe Pisarcik

Quarterback
No. 9
New Mexico State
"'I'm very big in Calgary,' he says. That's where he played for almost three seasons in the Canadian League. Pisarcik was a free agent who started as the Giants' No. 5 quarterback in summer camp a year, but by the fourth regular-season game had won the starting job.
Pisarcik would prefer showing off his arm more than his coaches allow. Born in Kingsport, Pa., he went to New Mexico State 'because they had a pro-style offense, and I wanted to be a pro.' He has none of the doubts about his talent that others may have.
He lives off-season in Fort Lauderdale. 'Do you know many bikinis and belly-buttons there are down there?' he asks."

-John Jeansonne, The Complete Handbook of Pro Football (1978 Edition)

"One of the NFL's most outstanding rookies of 1977, Joe was rewarded with selection as the quarterback on the all-rookie team last season. A three-year starter for the Calgary Stampeders of the Canadian Football League, he has a powerful arm. Joe worked with the Giants during the club's spring trip to Mexico City in 1977."

-1978 Topps No. 7

JOE PISARCIK: READY WHEN LUCK CAME CALLING
The Giants QB Went From Fifth-String To First Team In '77 And Looks To Stay No. 1 In '78
"The young autograph-seeker looked over his latest treasure and exclaimed, 'Joe Pisarcik! Wow!'
Just a year ago, however, the reaction would have been, 'Joe Pisarcik? Who?'
'I think back to it sometimes, how it was then,' says the Giants No. 1 quarterback. 'It reminds me I have to work just as hard if not harder this year to stay where I got last year.'
Pisarcik's meteoric rise from No. 5 to No. 1 has been chronicled many times. Certainly, the climb was partially by default as well as by Pisarcik's design. But the 26-year-old former Canadian Football League quarterback can't deny his life has changed immeasurably in the past 12 months.
'I got to play in a lot of celebrity golf tournaments in the off-season,' he says. 'People know who I am. Last year nobody knew me, and I didn't have an American Express card.'
Only three quarterbacks populated the training camp as compared to the five who clogged things a year ago. Pisarcik was the fifth man during last year's preseason, as the team prepared for its first exhibition game.
'We never really talked about cutting him, but let's just say he didn't figure in our plans,' says Bob Gibson, the offensive coordinator.
'I'd go three or four days sometimes without really getting to practice,' Pisarcik recalls. 'I'd just kind of stand around and watch the other guys. It was very frustrating because I knew what I could do if I just got the chance.'
That's where the default helped out. First Dennis Shaw failed miserably in the first exhibition game. Steve Ramsey, acquired from Denver in the Craig Morton deal, couldn't shed his excess weight. Randy Dean was green. Finally, Jerry Goldsteyn just couldn't stand up behind a porous offensive line.
'Funny thing is I never considered myself competing with any of those guys,' Pisarcik says. 'I almost considered it to be competing with myself. If you compete against another guy, you may be satisfied with performing one level higher than he is. You may never reach your potential if you're always satisfied just doing a little better than the other guy.'
Pisarcik's first big break came in that initial exhibition game when Goldsteyn was battered. Paterson Plank Joe was tossed into fourth-period action without any warmups. He completed his first pass, out of his own end zone, on a play run from the wrong formation.
The next big step came in the Buffalo exhibition game, which Pisarcik pulled out with his passing. Finally, when Goldsteyn withered under Atlanta's pressure, Pisarcik was given the starting job.
At first it appeared to be nothing more than a move to save Goldsteyn's life. Pisarcik was the buffer, the man who would take the punishment until the line was strong enough to protect the pocket-passing Goldsteyn. But as the season progressed, Paterson Plank Joe changed some coaching opinions.
'He may not have the greatest natural ability in the world, but he's tough mentally and physically,' says Gibson. 'He works hard and eventually will play as well as he can.
'He's far advanced from what he was a year ago in his knowledge and techniques. He hasn't been throwing the ball as well he did as last year, but that will come with work. Joe's not your picture quarterback, and he may never be a great one. But he'll give it everything he's got.'
Pisarcik was sometimes at odds with the coaches last year. He wanted to call his own plays. He wanted to open up the attack. This time he won't get his first wish, but he may get his second.
'We've got more formations and looks this year,' Pisarcik says of the implementation of the man-in-motion plays in Dallas. 'It will make the opposing defenses think a little more about us and not just sit back and work on the same keys every week.
'If we can score a touchdown, maybe 10 points a game in the first period, we'll make the playoffs. If we can get a lead and really let our defense go to work, we'll beat some people. Believe me, I know how good our defense can be. I work against it every day.'
This summer he worked against it every day. Last summer Pisarcik knew of the Giant defense only from what he read in the papers or saw in training-camp films.
'I can't forget about it, but I've got so much going on for me now it's almost hard for me to imagine how it was last year,' Pisarcik says. 'All I knew was the Giants needed a quarterback, and there I was. Now, here I am.' "

-Vinny Ditrani, The Bergen County Record (Football Digest, November 1978)