National Football League
Coughlin meets with Burress
National Football League

Coughlin meets with Burress

Published Jul. 29, 2011 1:00 a.m. ET

Plaxico Burress received his chance to convince Tom Coughlin that he again can be a productive member of the New York Giants in a roughly 90-minute meeting on Friday night.

Burress pled his case to his former coach in a face-to-face meeting at the Giants headquarters on the first day of training camp.

Burress was not made available to the media, and he left via a side door to avoid contact.

He arrived at 6:30 p.m., and left shortly after 8, spending nearly an hour with Coughlin. He then spent 15 minutes each with president John Mara and general manager Jerry Reese.

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When he arrived, and again on his way out of the complex, he had conversations with many of his former teammates and coaches, notably running back Brandon Jacobs, who restructured his deal this week to remain a Giant.

Only time will tell if Burress gets a chance to join him.

''What I have to hear is sincerity,'' Coughlin said Friday afternoon, roughly two hours before the meeting, the first between the two since the soon-to-be 34-year-old receiver and Super Bowl hero was imprisoned for almost two years on a weapons possessions charge.

''I am looking forward to it. I will be opened minded about it,'' Coughlin said. ''It's an opportunity in a confidential setting to sit down, and what I feel is it will be Plaxico's opportunity to speak. I am going to listen and decipher. I'll ask questions, but basically I would like to hear what he has to say.''

Burress, who was released from prison on June 6, is hoping to revive his career. There has been talk about him joining either the Giants or his original team, the Steelers.

The Giants asked Coughlin to talk with Burress.

''Ownership would like to think that we can sit down and talk about it and secondly, you know, this is business,'' Coughlin said. ''It's not personal for me. It's business. I can separate the two. I have no ego in terms of what I have to accomplish with regard to him or anybody else. I'm willing to listen.''

Coughlin indeed planned to listen, go over what was said and then report back to management to say whether the two can work together again. The Giants insist they are serious about possibly signing Burress, who provided their one true deep threat during his time with the club between 2005-09.

''We don't bring guys in just for the fun of it,'' general manager Jerry Reese said. ''We won't bring a guy in unless we are serious about the possibility of signing him.''

Coughlin and Burress had a rocky relationship during their first tenure and the receiver was fined repeatedly. However, he also caught the game-winning touchdown vs. New England in the 2008 Super Bowl.

Less than a year later, Burress shot himself in the leg in a New York City nightclub in late November. He was kicked off the Giants weeks later, and the team fell apart in the playoffs. Burress was jailed the following September after pleading guilty to a weapons possession charge.

Burress criticized Coughlin after his release, but the coach downplayed it, saying all he wants is commitment from his players.

''When you sign on to go to work for someone you have to go to work, you have to be there on time,'' Coughlin said. ''What is there to change? When you come down to it, that's the basic ingredient or rule. Jump into the team as hard as you can, as fast as you can, but understand your responsibility, people depend on you.''

Burress let the Giants down in 2008. The team was 11-1 and had a chance to make another title run, but the offense disappeared when Burress was let go.

Veteran David Diehl said he would be willing to give Burress another chance, simply because of how he can dynamically change an offense.

''If anyone has felt the consequences of his actions, it's him,'' Diehl said. ''For us to sit here and be in the situation where we might get him back, I think we would welcome him with open arms.''

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