Apr/13/08 11:05 AM Filed in:
Jeremy
Shockey
Eli Manning wants Jeremy
Shockey back next season, but does Shockey want to
be back?
That’s an interesting question and one that
wasn’t exactly cleared up this afternoon when the
Giants opened their locker room doors to the media for
the first time this offseason. Manning was asked about
this offseason’s rumor that won’t die -
that Shockey might be traded before the NFL draft. His
response was that he’s looking forward to working
with Shockey next season.
Then he was asked if he thought Shockey felt the same
way.
“I hope so,” Manning said. “I hope he
understands we would like him back.”
It’s unclear exactly what Shockey feels about all
this, since he’s down in Miami not saying much,
and his agent - Drew Rosenhaus - is declining to
comment on any Shockey-related subjects. He obviously
knows that the New Orleans Saints - and his old buddy,
Sean Payton - inquired about him recently. And he
probably knows that the Giants aren’t shopping
him (or so they say) but are willing to listen to
offers, just in case there’s one they can’t
refuse.
But what does Shockey want? There are rumors - lots and
lots of them - that he’s unhappy in New York and
would welcome a trade. One friend of his recently said
he’s expressed a frustration with his role in the
offense and with the way it’s been portrayed in
New York that the Giants’ Super Bowl run started
when he got hurt. He’s also apparently a little
worried that if the offense tanks next season, people
will blame him.
The problem with that, according to the friend, is that
Shockey is a volatile, emotional person who complains.
A lot. And there can be a big gulf between him
expressing his frustrations in a private conversation
and rooting for a trade.
Regardless, it’s not Shockey’s call, of
course. And as far as I’ve been told, the
Giants’ position is unchanged. They are not
actively shopping Shockey, nor are they really
interested in dealing him. But no one is untouchable
(almost no one, anyway) and they’re willing to
listen to offers. If the offer is good enough, who
knows? Maybe they’d strike a deal. But Shockey is
27, coming off a broken leg, and has yet to make it
through a full, 16-game season in his six-year career.
Those facts are likely to keep the offers low enough
that the Giants won’t be tempted.
Then again, you never know.
(nydailynews.com)