EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — Two-time Pro Bowl defensive end Jason Pierre-Paul is back with the New York Giants more than three months after losing a finger in a fireworks accident on July 4.
Wearing white gloves on his hands, the 26-year-old Pierre-Paul did calisthenics with the team on Wednesday and then worked with members of the medical staff while the rest of the Giants went through drills with their units.
The main question is how long it will take Pierre-Paul to be ready to play. His right index finger was amputated, his thumb was injured and his hand sustained burns in the accident.
After the warmup, Pierre-Paul ran some sprints, stretched, talked to equipment manager Joe Skiba and pushed a sled roughly 10 yards at a time, all at the far corner of the team’s indoor facility on a rainy day.
“How long that lasts is really according to how well he is able to proceed,” coach Tom Coughlin said. “He has told me he has worked against bags and he’s delivered blows on a board and done all of those things.”
A Giants spokesman said Pierre-Paul would not be permitted to speak to reporters until later in the week.
Coughlin said Pierre-Paul looked good. His weight of 268 pounds was on the money. He said the 2010 first-round draft pick was eager to get back to work after missing all of training camp and the first seven games of the season, an absence that cost Pierre-Paul more than $6 million.
The Giants designated Pierre-Paul as their franchise player after last season and tendered him an offer that would have paid him $14.8 million. He didn’t sign it, hoping for a long-term deal. The fireworks mishap changed everything.
Pierre-Paul signed a one-year deal late Tuesday that has a much lower weekly salary than the $871,000 he was scheduled to make as the franchise player.
There are incentives in the new deal, but first Pierre-Paul has to get back on the field, and that means showing the medical staff he is ready to go.
“We’ll just see how fast this comes along,” Coughlin said, adding his return was a boost for the NFC East-leading Giants (4-3).
Coughlin said the Giants have no intention at this point of having Pierre-Paul play against the New Orleans Saints on the road on Sunday. However, he is considering having the six-year veteran make the trip to get him around a competitive environment.
Pierre-Paul was examined by team doctors Monday and given the OK to play. He made significant progress with his healing since being last examined by the team around Labor Day, Coughlin said.
“We are all rooting for him,” Coughlin said. “He has done an outstanding job of preparing himself. He is mentally very upbeat. His attitude is outstanding. He is anxious to play right now, to be honest with you, but we are going to go relatively slow on that now.”
Coughlin hopes Pierre-Paul can return to being a dominant lineman. He led the team with 12 1/2 sacks last season and was almost as good against the run.
How Pierre-Paul does playing with a missing finger and injured hand remains to be seen.
“If you have studied him and watched how he maneuvers rushing the passer, then he will use that hand basically as he always has,” Coughlin said. “Not necessarily as a grabber, but a club.”
Coughlin said Pierre-Paul has studied the defense installed by new coordinator Steve Spagnuolo, and needs to catch up on some terminology.
“He senses that it’s close and that whatever we ask him to do, he can do it,” Coughlin said.
Coughlin also knows how to judge Pierre-Paul’s performances: by watching how many times he knocks down the opposing quarterback.
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