New York Guardians

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New York Guardians
Team logo
Established2018; 4 years ago (2018)
Based inNew Jersey
Home stadiumMetLife Stadium
East Rutherford, New Jersey
Head coachKevin Gilbride
General managerKevin Gilbride
Team president"Vacant"
Owner(s)Alpha Acquico, LLC[1]
LeagueXFL
DivisionEast[2]
ColorsBlack, grey, red[3]
     
Websitexfl.com/teams/new-york
Current uniform
Ny guardians uniforms.png
Current sports event2020 New York Guardians season

The New York Guardians are a professional American football team based in the New York metropolitan area. The team was founded by Vince McMahon’s Alpha Entertainment and is an owned-and-operated member of the new XFL owned by Dwayne Johnson’s Alpha Acquico. The Guardians play their home games at MetLife Stadium

History[]

New York, joined Seattle, Houston, Los Angeles, St. Louis, D.C., Tampa Bay, and Dallas as the XFL's inaugural cities. All teams have 40-man active rosters and play a 10-week season. Vince McMahon said "the game will feature simplified rules for a faster pace of the game that should complete in under three hours", and draws from former college and NFL players.[4]

On April 15, 2019, the team hired Kevin Gilbride, who most recently was the Offensive Coordinator for the New York Giants as their first head coach.[5]

Market Overview[]

New York is one of two metropolitan areas, the other being Los Angeles, to have hosted teams in both the original XFL in 2001 and the 2020 XFL; the New York/New Jersey Hitmen were the Guardians' predecessors in the previous league.

The New York metropolitan area has 16 professional teams in some form or another, including three NHL teams, two NBA teams and two MLS teams whose seasons substantially overlap with the XFL's.[6] The Guardians (despite carrying a New York brand) are locally marketing themselves as a New Jersey franchise to differentiate themselves from the other teams in the region.[7] MetLife Stadium is the largest venue in the XFL; the league has been public in its desire to find a smaller venue, mentioning Red Bull Arena as a potential venue for 2023.[6]

2020[]

New York in action against Dallas in 2020

The Guardians won the first game in franchise history, topping the Tampa Bay Vipers 23–3 at MetLife Stadium. Quarterback Matt McGloin scored the first touchdown in team history on their first possession, a one-yard score that put them up 6–0. McGloin would later find Colby Pearson for a passing touchdown. Defensively, the Guardians forced three turnovers, including a fumble return for a touchdown by Jamar Summers. Tampa Bay reached the red zone five times, but emerged only with a field goal thanks to a standout defensive effort.

The Guardians' first road game saw them become the victims of the first shutout in the new XFL's history, as they fell to the DC Defenders by a 27–0 final at Audi Field. The game became notable for a McGloin sideline interview with ABC/ESPN's Dianna Russini, in which he was very critical of the team's offensive gameplan. McGloin was eventually pulled from the game for backup Marquise Williams in the second half.

New York's next game was a visit to The Dome at America's Center to take on the St. Louis BattleHawks. Another one-sided loss awaited the Guardians, as they fell by a 29–9 final in St. Louis' home opener. McGloin was injured on the Guardians' first possession. He returned to the game, but missed the entire second half. New York did manage to end a streak of 26 consecutive possessions without a touchdown when third-string quarterback Luis Perez found Austin Duke for an eight-yard score in the fourth quarter.

With McGloin out with an injury, Perez was the Guardians' starting quarterback for their Week 4 return to MetLife Stadium. Assisted by a strong rushing attack, Perez was able to guide the Guardians to a 17–14 victory over the Los Angeles Wildcats. The Guardians tallied 122 yards on the ground, led by a tally of 82 from Darius Victor. New York took the lead for good on a 47-yard field goal from Matthew McCrane, which was set up by a Summers interception. led the way defensively for the Guardians with two sacks and a blocked field goal.

Perez earned another start when the Guardians hit the road again, taking on the Dallas Renegades at Globe Life Park in Arlington. The Guardians would go on to put up their most dominant effort of the season, crushing the Renegades by a 30–12 final. New York's key to victory was a series of 21 unanswered points in the third quarter. Williams came in to score a rushing touchdown from one yard out before Perez hooked up with Pearson for an 80-yard touchdown pass, the longest play in Guardians history. Linebacker Ryan Mueller capped the barrage off by returning an interception for a touchdown, the Guardians' second defensive score of the season. New York once again had a stellar rushing day, earning 144 yards on the ground. Victor once again led the way, this time with 58 of those yards.

The Guardians were set to take on the undefeated Houston Roughnecks at MetLife Stadium prior to the XFL's decision to suspend its season due to the COVID-19 pandemic. New York finished their inaugural season with a 3–2 record and engaged in a three-way tie for first place in the XFL's East Division.

Roster[]

Quarterbacks

Running backs

  • 20 Tim Cook III
  • 23 Justin Stockton
  • 27 Darius Victor
  • 24 Miles Morales-Davis

Wide receivers

Tight ends

  • 88 E. J. Bibbs
  • 85 Keenen Brown
  • 87 Jake Powell
  • 83 Jake Sutherland
Offensive linemen

Defensive linemen

Linebackers

Defensive backs

Special teams

Reserve lists
  • 68 Garrett Brumfield G (IR) Injury icon 2.svg
  • 49 Nick DeLuca OLB (Left Squad)
  • -- J-Shun Harris WR (IR) Injury icon 2.svg
  • 81 Garrett Hudson TE (IR) Injury icon 2.svg
  • 11 DeAngelo Yancey WR (IR) Injury icon 2.svg
  • -- Rykeem Yates DE (IR) Injury icon 2.svg


Roster updated May 4, 2021
Depth chart
37 active, 6 inactive

XFL rosters

Staff[]

Front office
  • Director of player personnel – Alan "Trip" MacCracken
  • Player personnel/Scouting manager – Evan Ostrow
  • Director of football operations – John Peterson
  • Manager of football operations – Chris Thompson
Head coach
Offensive coaches
  • Quarterbacks – G.A. Mangus
  • Running backs – Jerald Ingram
  • Receivers – Mike Miller
  • Offensive line – Ronnie Vinklarek
  • Quality control/special teams – Ray Rychleski
 
Defensive coaches
  • Defensive coordinator – Jim Herrmann
  • Defensive line – C.J. Ah You
  • Linebackers – Kevin Kelly
  • Defensive backs – Cris Dishman
  • Defensive quality control/special teams – Jeff McInerney
East Division
DC
NY
STL
TB
West Division
DAL
HOU
LA
SEA

References[]

  1. ^ Perry, Mark (August 3, 2020). "More Details On The Rock Purchase Of The XFL, How Many Bidders". XFL News Hub. Retrieved August 3, 2020.
  2. ^ "FOX Sports announces 2020 XFL schedule". KMPH. January 7, 2020. Retrieved February 4, 2020.
  3. ^ "New York Guardians' uniforms, helmet". XFL.com (Press release). December 3, 2019. Retrieved December 12, 2019.
  4. ^ KOMO Staff (5 December 2018). "Seattle chosen as one of 8 inaugural teams for new XFL football league". KOMO.
  5. ^ "XFL lands Super Bowl Giants coach Kevin Gilbride for New York team". New York Post. 2019-04-15. Retrieved 2022-01-05.
  6. ^ a b Williams, Bob (March 1, 2020). "Oliver Luck: So far, so good in XFL – but LA and New York crowds need to improve". SportBusiness.com. Retrieved March 1, 2020.
  7. ^ Gabrielle Saulsbery (November 18, 2019). Guardian state. NJ BIZ. Retrieved November 18, 2019.

External links[]

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