EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — John Harbaugh has done plenty of winning in the NFL, including 12 playoff appearances and a Super Bowl title.
The New York Giants for much of the past decade have done very little of it.
That is not stopping Harbaugh from dreaming big. Taking over as Giants coach, he has plenty of power in shaping their future and a visible eagerness to turn them back into a contender sooner than later.
''I wanted this job,'' Harbaugh said Tuesday at his introductory news conference. ''I wanted this job and to be on the biggest stage in the biggest sport. I know the challenges, I understand the expectations, I know that the fans are hungry for a winner. We're here with one mission, to become — to earn the right — to be called the world champions in New York. And that's what we plan to do.''
Harbaugh after 18 seasons with the Baltimore Ravens faces a challenge in bringing success to a storied franchise that has gone 45-105-1 and not made it past the divisional round since 2016.
As part of his arrangement to accept the gig, the 63-year-old reports directly to ownership rather than general manager Joe Schoen, so Harbaugh will get to mold the organization in his image around the core led by young quarterback Jaxson Dart.
''He's going to be the most important cog in the wheel,'' said Chris Mara, the longtime executive who led the coaching search along with brother John and co-owner Steve Tisch. "But in terms of final say, this is going to be a collaborative effort between ownership, general manager and coach.''
There are plenty of fresh success stories around the NFL of teams pairing a new coach with an established QB and winning right away. New England, Chicago and Jacksonville all made the playoffs this season following that recipe, and the Patriots are in the AFC championship game.