“You can tell he’s been coached hard,” Saleh said. “He takes coaching, doesn’t make excuses, and competes on every snap. That’s how culture gets built.”
Their paths even intersect philosophically. Both emphasize emotional control — the ability to channel chaos instead of being consumed by it.
“Robert preaches calm amid storm,” said Warner. “And that’s exactly what Dart plays with.”
The Giants’ Perspective: Learning From Admiration
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Inside the Giants’ facility, Saleh’s comments became part of the team’s narrative. Daboll played the clip during a film session, pausing after the word special.
“That’s the respect you earn when you do things the right way,” Daboll told his team. “Not through hype — through habits.”
Teammates nodded. For veterans like Saquon Barkley, who had seen young quarterbacks come and go, Saleh’s validation carried weight.
“When a guy like that — one of the best defensive minds out there — says you’re special,” Barkley said, “you take notice. But then you keep your head down and keep grinding.”
Dart did exactly that, staying late after practices, refining footwork, and studying blitz patterns — including those used by Saleh’s own 49ers.
Beyond the Field: Mutual Respect and Mentorship
Weeks later, during a joint NFL community event in Los Angeles, Saleh and Dart crossed paths again. The encounter was brief but warm.
“He came up, shook my hand, and thanked me,” Saleh recalled. “I told him the same thing I tell my players — stay humble, stay hungry, keep proving it.”
Dart later described that moment as “the best kind of motivation.”
“It’s one thing when your coaches believe in you,” he said. “But when an opponent does? That makes you want to live up to it even more.”
Their mutual respect has since become a quiet storyline — a veteran coach rooting for the league’s next great competitor, even if that player might one day stand in his way.
The 49ers’ Defense and the Evolution of Quarterbacking
Saleh’s praise of Dart also reveals something broader about the NFL’s evolution. Defensive minds like Saleh’s are recalibrating how they measure quarterback success.
“It’s not just arm strength anymore,” he said. “It’s anticipation, adaptability, and leadership under chaos. That’s the currency now.”
In a league where speed and versatility define modern defenses, the quarterbacks who thrive are those who can out-think pressure before it arrives. Dart’s blend of mobility, accuracy, and mental sharpness fits that model perfectly.

“He’s the kind of QB who’ll make coordinators lose sleep,” said one anonymous NFC defensive assistant. “He sees everything.”
The Future: Faith Meets Proof
As the regular season approaches, expectations for Dart continue to climb. Giants fans see in him a potential heir to Eli Manning’s poise and Daniel Jones’ toughness — but with a creativity that feels distinctly his own.
Saleh, ever the realist, cautions patience.
“Talent’s the starting point,” he said. “What makes you special is what you do when it gets hard. The league always finds out who’s real.”
He paused, then smiled.
“But yeah — that kid’s real.”
For a defensive coach whose career has been built on breaking quarterbacks, calling one special isn’t casual flattery. It’s prophecy.
Closing: The Weight of a Word
Weeks after that preseason game, reporters asked Saleh if he regretted giving so much public praise to a rival. He laughed.
“I don’t regret telling the truth,” he said. “This league needs players like him. Guys who love the grind, not the spotlight.”
For Jaxson Dart, those words became fuel. Each time he steps onto the field now, he carries not just the expectations of a city, but the quiet respect of a rival coach who saw his potential before the world did.
And for Saleh — the teacher, the tactician, the competitor — that’s the beauty of the game.
“You spend your life trying to stop greatness,” he said, “but you still have to appreciate it when you see it.”
In a league obsessed with wins and losses, sometimes the truest victory is recognizing future greatness — even when it lines up across from you.
“Jaxson Dart’s got something,” Saleh said one last time. “You can’t coach that. You can only respect it.”
👉 Full coverage continues below — exclusive interviews with Saleh, Giants players, and scouting analysts