The Giants like to run Jaxson Dart, but they aren’t rushing him. 

Dart did not clear the NFL’s five-stage concussion protocol in time to play Sunday against the Lions, interim head coach Mike Kafka announced before Friday’s practice. 

Jameis Winston will make his second consecutive start. 

“We’re just living by the protocol,” Kafka said, “and what the doctors’ opinions are.” 

Dart remained in the same stage in the protocol for the third straight day — a limited non-contact practice — but still took most of the first-team reps throughout the week, according to Winston. It’s a rare situation for a player to stagnate at a late stage without progressing or regressing. 

So, Winston will make his 89th career start after mostly handing off in drills Wednesday and Thursday. He threw passes Friday. 

Jaxson Dart on the Giants sidelines during the loss to the Packers on Nov. 16, 2025.Jaxson Dart on the Giants sidelines during the loss to the Packers on Nov. 16, 2025. Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post

“Today, in red zone, I got a select few reps,” Winston said. “Red zone, you have to be the best — fast and efficient. We share reps, but today with limited reps, I got a little bit more.” 

There was optimism early in the week that Dart, who was back on the practice field last Friday for the first time since his concussion Nov. 9, would clear the protocol by week’s end.

That sense dissipated more and more as the clock ticked, even though it does not appear Dart experienced a significant setback. 

The decision to rule out Dart was “based on the testing and the results,” Kafka said. In order to play, Dart needs to be a full practice participant — quarterbacks are never contacted — and be medically cleared by an independent neurologist. 

“My only concern was just making sure Jaxson’s healthy and right,” said Kafka, a former NFL quarterback. “We have a lot of trust in the doctors. We have a lot of trust going through the concussion process. I know myself, I’ve had a couple concussions over the course of my career, and you just want to feel comfortable and good.” 

Dart led the NFL in designed quarterback runs and was second among quarterbacks in hits taken through Week 10 (despite not starting until Week 4). 

The rookie’s injury combined with a fourth-quarter collapse against the Bears was the final straw in head coach Brian Daboll’s firing. He has been checked for a concussion four times in his past nine games dating to the preseason, but he passed the first three tests. 

New York Giants quarterback Jaxson Dart (6), during practice at the New York Giants training facility in East Rutherford, New JerseyJaxson Dart returned to Giants practice after suffering a concussion. Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post

How does Dart look in practice? Is the Giants’ medical staff just being extra cautious with the future of the franchise? 

“Jaxson looked like his normal self,” Kafka said. “He looked great.” 

No two concussions are exactly the same. 

Daniel Jones returned from a concussion without missing a game for the Giants in 2021, while the Texans’ C.J. Stroud missed his third straight game Thursday night due to a concussion. 

“I don’t think you want to take away [Dart’s] edge,” left tackle Andrew Thomas said. “We’re playing football. Obviously, you want everybody to be safe, but the reality is there are injuries. I trust the trainers to make the right decision to determine when he is ready, and we’ll do our best to protect him.” 

Winston, who began the season as a third-stringer, will be backed up by Russell Wilson against the Lions. He led three touchdown drives against the Packers but committed two fourth-quarter turnovers. 

“I prepare every single week,” Winston said. “You’re saying the life of being a backup [quarterback], this is the life of being an NFL quarterback: staying ready so you don’t have to get ready. Pressure is for the unprepared.” 

Dart’s next chance to play would be Dec. 1 on “Monday Night Football” against the Patriots. The Giants also could slow-play Dart’s return and hold him out until after the bye week that follows the trip to New England. 

“He’s looked great,” Winston said after Thursday’s practice. “Nothing’s changed. He’s a young superstar, and he’s continued to improve every day.” 

Winston said that the only thing that changes for him as the starter is more communication with the receivers between Friday and Sunday. 

“I do some emojis every now and then, mainly the one where you’re like blowing out the smoke, like, ‘Let’s go get it!’ ” Winston said. “That one.”