- The Washington Times - Tuesday, September 4, 2012

EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — A good start is what is on the line this time when the New York Giants host the Dallas Cowboys in the NFL season opener.

The stakes were much greater the last time the NFC East foes faced off to close the last regular season. New York won to claim the division title en route to the Super Bowl title. Dallas was left out of the postseason.

On Wednesday night at MetLife Stadium, the winner will take the early upper hand in the divisional race.

For Eli Manning and the Super Bowl champion Giants, this will be a chance to silence the critics and detractors who have sounded off repeatedly after they beat the New England Patriots in February to claim their second title in five seasons.

The Giants heard it all. They were lucky to get into the playoffs with a 9-7 record. They really didn’t beat the Packers or 49ers, they were just handed the games. There is a lot more, but that is the gist.

That is now over.

The goal for Tom Coughlin’s players is to show they have constructed that bridge the 65-year-old coach urged them to build to link their late-season 6-0 run to the title to the 2012 campaign.

“The leadership we have on this football team, that’s going to be the spine of the bridge, if you will,” defensive captain Justin Tuck said. “I think we’re in a good place as far as where we want to be coming into the game.”

The Giants are confident, and they don’t care what outsiders are saying about them.

“We’ve already showed people who we are,” safety Antrel Rolle said. “We can care less about that. We leave that up to spectators. We’re just going out there and playing ball. And that is what it is all about. We can care less about what kind of recognition we are getting or who is crowning us and who is not crowning us. None of that matters coming into the 2012 season.”

Jerry Jones’ Cowboys face a much different task after an 8-8 campaign that ended with a 31-14 loss to the Giants on New Year’s Day.

The outspoken owner, who boasted to fans that his team would kick the Giants’ posteriors in Dallas when the clubs meet a second time this season Oct. 28, knows the window for the aging Cowboys to return to the franchise’s glory years is fading fast.

“It’s a great opportunity for us is how I look at it,” Jones said of the season opener. “So very meaningful. Everybody has all the appreciation in the world for what we’re up against here, the quality of the team, so to have success up there would be very meaningful.

“As in any game in the NFL, it’s certainly not how you ultimately will wind up one way or the other, but it is a big game in front of really the entire world of sports, high visible game against the world champions.”

Romo will again be under the spotlight. He has yet to lead the Cowboys to a title, and many wonder whether he will after a late-season meltdown in which Dallas lost four of its final five games, including two to the Giants.

“I think they always stick with you,” Romo said of the last game. “That’s what fuels you in the offseason and makes you want to remember those moments so you can improve from them.”

Both running games should improve this season. The Cowboys’ DeMarco Murray is healthy after hurting his ankle in the first Giants’ game.

New York, which finished last in the league in rushing, should be better with speedy first-round draft pick David Wilson of Virginia Tech backing up Ahmad Bradshaw.

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