ALBANY, N.Y. – Tiki Barber wanted a more intense, fiery Eli Manning. The New York Giants quarterback gave Tiki what he wanted in a loud ripping voice on Tuesday.\nTwo days after being criticized on national television by Barber for a lack of strong leadership, Manning ripped his former teammate and current NBC football analyst for distracting the team last season with his early retirement announcement and his criticism of coach Tom Coughlin.\n“I guess I’m just happy for Tiki that he’s making a smooth transition into the TV world,” Manning said. “You know, I’ll be interested to see if he has anything to say (about a team) besides the Giants, and what his comments will be on that.”\nNormally reserved and never one to criticize a coach or teammate, Manning seemed to enjoy going after Barber, the Giants’ all-time leading rusher who retired after last season at age 31 to pursue a television career.\nSpeaking during the halftime show of the Sunday Night Football game between the Giants and Baltimore Ravens, Barber said that Manning’s attempt to lead an offensive meeting in the 12th week of the last season was “comical” at times.\nManning didn’t find the comment funny.\n“It’s just one of those deals. I’m not going to lose any sleep about what Tiki has to say,” Manning said. “I guess I could have questioned his leadership skills last year with calling out the coach and having articles about him retiring in the middle of the season, and he’s lost the heart (to play).\n“As a quarterback you’re reading that your running back has lost the heart to play the game and it’s about the 10th week,” Manning said. “I can see that a little bit at times. But I’m not going to get concerned. I’m going to go out there and play ball.”\nBarber was not immediately available for comment.\nGiants teammates came to Manning’s defense on Tuesday.\nWide receiver Amani Toomer, who played his entire career with Barber, was stunned.\n“I thought Tiki and Eli were pretty good friends,” Toomer said. “It’s kind of strange to have him say something like that and to make a point of it like that. Maybe he had somebody else in his ear kind of coaxing him into saying stuff, because I don’t believe he really believes that. I don’t know why he’d say something like that.”\nCenter Shaun O’Hara said Manning is progressing as a leader, especially for a fourth-year player.\n“I don’t have any problems with Eli’s leadership and the way he does it,” O’Hara said. “He’s doing it his way. I think players appreciate that. It’s a shame everybody wants Eli to be somebody they think he should be instead of just letting him be himself.”\nO’Hara noted that Manning might be under the microscope more than most young quarterbacks because he is the brother of Peyton Manning.\n“For me, you can be Johnny Rah-Rah, but if you’re not doing your job, if you’re not pulling your weight, it doesn’t matter what you say,” O’Hara said. “Being loud, that doesn’t make you a great leader.”\nTackle David Diehl said Manning showed his leadership Sunday night, getting the offensive lined up right when the Ravens threw a couple of new looks at them on defense.\nGiants new quarterbacks coach Chris Palmer added that Manning does everything a coach wants.\n“Everybody leads in a different way,” Palmer said. “If you buy any business books, there are 101 ways to lead. He’ll lead in his own particular fashion.”\nWhile Barber praised Manning at times for his play, he also questioned whether he could be a leader of men and make plays when the chips were down.\n“His personality hasn’t been so that he can step up, make a strong statement and have people believe that it’s coming from his heart,” Barber said on the show.\nBarber then told the story about Manning being uncomfortable talking to the offense in Week 12.\n“He didn’t feel like his voice was going to be strong enough and it showed,” Barber said. “Sometimes it was almost comical the way that he would say things.”\nWhile Barber rushed for 1,662 yards last season, the second highest single-season total in Giants history, he also was a distraction in an 8-8 season that saw the Giants make the playoffs.\nHe went on record in early October saying that the 2006 season would probably be his last. He also created problems for Coughlin when he criticized him for pulling away from the running game too soon in a loss to Jacksonville in November.\nIt was the second time he went after his head coach.\nAfter a playoff loss to the Carolina Panthers in 2005, Barber said Coughlin was outcoached by Panther coach John Fox, a former Giants assistant.
Former Giants teammates exchange sharp words
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