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The Lifestyle of Jaxson Dart 2025

Started by MightyGiants, June 05, 2025, 08:26:14 AM

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MightyGiants

 Jun 3, 2025  HOA KỲ
Jaxson Dart, Jaxson Dart, and once again, Jaxson Dart — the rising NFL quarterback for the New York Giants, is making headlines both on and off the field. In this video, we delve into Jaxson Dart's lifestyle in 2025, highlighting his transition from college football star to professional athlete. Explore his new life in New York, including his residence and how he's adjusting to the city's pace. We also touch on his personal life, including past relationship dynamics that have caught public attention. With a net worth estimated at $1 million, Dart's journey from Utah to the NFL is both inspiring and intriguing. Join us as we uncover the facets of Jaxson Dart's life beyond the gridiron.

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Philosophers

Did he buy a Rolls Royce?  Oh wait, that's the other guy.

DragonSoul

#2
Am I the only one not interested in his personal life. Wish him well, hope he is a good kid with a good head on his shoulders but his personal life is just that.

Caveat - Unless his personal life affects the Giants on the field.

Jclayton92

Quote from: DragonSoul on June 05, 2025, 12:27:38 PMAm I the only one not interested in his personal life. Wish him well, hope he is a good kid with a good head on his shoulders but his personal life is just that.

Caveat - Unless his personal life affects the Giants on the field.
It's a different time now, these younger guys all want to show their lifestyles and the younger fans eat it up.

Jclayton92


Crypto Fareez

Quote from: Jclayton92 on June 05, 2025, 03:51:13 PMIt's a different time now, these younger guys all want to show their lifestyles and the younger fans eat it up.

Yeah, but it's social media. It's very manicured and curated. It's made to look a certain way. I know tons of people who seem to have a fantasy life on socials. But are a mess in real life. I was watching some concerts from the late 90's last weekend. What a great time to be alive, everyone was so in the moment, completely engaged with each other and having fun without a care in the world. Not a cellphone in sight. We aren't going back to those times. But it's fun to think about how different the world was.

AZGiantFan

As far as I could tell, he had nothing to do with this production, even though it painted him in a very favorable light.
I'd rather be a disappointed optimist than a vindicated pessimist. 

Not slowing my roll

MightyGiants

Brandon Brown on Dart

Q. In the quarterback process, what is your contribution to that process? What was your part in that?

BRANDON BROWN: Yeah, it was a comprehensive and arduous process where you kind of look at the coaching staff and the scouts were on it on two different timelines.

When you look at the quarterbacks, from a scouting perspective, we have two years of a book of business of seeing these guys live, where the coaches get to the off-season, they're playing catch-up for us.

We have the touch points of the All-Star Games as well as the private workouts, the 30 visits, combine. Then when you have the process, the culmination as you kind of build this funnel, as you get later and later in the spring, you get to watch tape together, figure out what best fits, what are the non-negotiables and understand what is going to play at a premium in this system, what can be emphasized based on Dabs' vision.

The collaborative process, like I said, it's long. This is our second year in a row doing a deep dive into it. We're happy that Jaxson (Dart) is our guy, the way that we came away with it.

Q. At what point in the process with Jaxson did you say, that guy can work for us?

BRANDON BROWN: When you look at these players, they are their walking résumé. Every benchmark matters and contributes to how they would fit for us.

Obviously you have your two years of tape with Jaxson. Then you get to the Senior Bowl, we were lucky enough to have coaches that were involved in coaching there. But the cool part is when we got to Senior Bowl, we get to sit down with other players. You talk to them about, Hey, if you have one guy to bring to the NFL with you... Jaxson was a common theme that came about. It was players from different sides of the ball, different sides of the ball, demographics. He's kind of got that every-man feel, which was really unique.

When you get through the spring process, we do our aptitude testing as well as our private workout, private dinners, he was a guy who checked all the boxes with us and we're happy we were able to get him.

Q. You asked Ole Miss players, or guys who showed up in Mobile or...

BRANDON BROWN: Guys at Mobile, guys that played against him during the regular season, guys that were on the same team with him at Mobile, but not at Ole Miss.

When you get to your private workout, you have all your skill guys show up for you at a private workout, it shows how they think about you as a teammate. When you go to the Pro Day, he's cheering on Walter Nolan on the bench pressing. He's there early when he's not even doing the lifting portion of the workout.

The guys see what kind of equity he builds up with them. He has that moxie where guys like to be around him, they gravitate towards him. They see that he puts the work in.

So it was a glove fit for us.
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MightyGiants

Q. Every year at the draft you hear somebody say, I thought this team told me they were going to draft me and they didn't draft me. How difficult is the fine line to walk between showing a player love, telling him you're interested in him, and not leading him on to believe that he's your guy that you're going to pick?

BRANDON BROWN: For sure. When you get to the combine or early in the process, you're still in the fact-finding part. You have a good feel or you should have a good feel for what the player is on the field, how he can fit into your system from just a skill set standpoint.

But then as you have these call it off-season benchmarks, you figure out the intangibles. You're negligent if you make that decision on a player before you go through the full kitchen sink process with them.

It's how can he process? What is the work ethic that he puts in? What are his, outside of football, interests? What drives him? What's his support system like? All those things contribute to really what's his floor, what's his ceiling.

At the end of the day we're looking at the draft, there's a lot of risk analysis that goes on. Then you factor in the medical component. You find some of that medical component stuff later on which either creates an opportunity for a player or makes it more risky than not to take the player.

Q. You were talk about risk analysis. What was the calculation with Jaxson. You're sitting at 3. You know you can get him at three, obviously take Abdul, just not knowing if Jaxson is going to make it to wherever you end up getting him.

BRANDON BROWN: Well, I think when you take Abdul, he was for us, the talent was a no-brainer. You look at opportunity costs, right? What are you giving up potentially for the player you're taking? With the help from NASA, which is our analytics crew, that we affectionately call them NASA. Take our area scouts, they hear the word on the street. Scouts talk. You hear from other buildings where guys may be on the board.

There's so much dead time in the spring before the draft, you're starting to hear where guys potentially may fall. As we get all this information, from agents, all third-party sources, we figure out, hey, what is our best opportunity to strike?

We knew once we got into the 20s, there was going to be an opportunity for Jaxson. At what striking point? And what would be the compensation we'd have to give up?

Q. You and Joe Schoen have worked closely together now, to this point. In that point, you're in the draft room, we got to see it after the fact when the team released a video of Joe, just you can see I don't know how I would describe it, but the emotions of when do we pull the trigger, and the relief when it finally hit. From someone that was in there and had to watch it transpire, what did that feel like to know that here's a quarterback you guys like, but you just don't know until you know when you pull that trigger?

BRANDON BROWN: The first thing, I have to give my hats off to Joe for how systematic and streamlined our processes were, where nothing happened that we were surprised about.

Leading up to the draft, we have these strategy sessions where we go through hypothetical scenarios. If we take a player early, if we trade back into one, what does that look like. It's no different than practicing. You take those reps so when game day comes, on draft day, you're ready for whatever. There's no curve ball surprise where you're caught flat-footed.

When we got into the 20s, we knew there were going to be striking opportunities and potential deals that could have been done with multiple clubs. We were happy that we were able to keep pick 65 and get Darius Alexander later. These are some of those scenarios we worked through.

For it to come to fruition, seeing that sigh of relief from Joe, everything that we planned for. It doesn't always go according to plan, but this one planned out the way we did, Hey, we may be in this position. What does it look like? For the way it came together, we were really happy.
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MightyGiants

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