The New York Giants were hoping a change at quarterback would provide a spark coming out of the bye week.
After benching and then releasing Daniel Jones, and promoting third-string quarterback Tommy DeVito to the starting role, things remained the same for the lowly NFC East basement dwellers.
As DeVito and the Giants offense struggled in nearly every phase of the game during a 30-7 blowout loss against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, no one inside New York's locker room had an answer.
Star rookie wideout Malik Nabers couldn't provide a solution, but he also didn't hold back his thoughts after the embarrassing defeat.
"Same outcome as we had when DJ (Daniel Jones) was the quarterback," Nabers told reporters. "It ain't the quarterback."
When asked what the problem is with the Giants, Nabers said, "I don't know what it is. Everybody knows better than me."
The visibly frustrated Nabers wound up putting together a solid game with six receptions for 64 yards on a team-high, but he didn't see his first target of the game until the second half.
The Giants offense gained just 245 total yards and averaged 4.4 yards per play. The defensive side of the ball didn't fare much better, allowing a rushing touchdown to four different players on the Bucs offense.
This isn't the first time Nabers has called out his own team this season, but it's clear the tensions are beginning to boil over amid another disastrous campaign.
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