The puzzling part was Umenyiora attended previous mandatory media sessions, and every one of his teammates and coaches were in attendance.
“We weren’t pleased with that, but Osi will participate and be there today,’’ coach Tom Coughlin said.
Umenyiora discovered he missed the session when he returned to the team hotel - where the interviews were taking place - at noon for a 12:15 team meeting.
He learned about the fine later in the day.
“It makes sense because the NFL’s a business,’’ he said of the fine. “Players are the product and the fans are the customers. The only way we can reach them is through you guys, the media. We have to be responsible.
“If it was a $1,000 fine, most of the people, they’ll laugh at that. They won’t even come downstairs and talk. You make the fine substantial enough it’s going to make people want to show up.’’
He added, “It is a big hit. I feed a lot of people. I am responsible for a lot of people. That money could have went to a really, really good cause. It is stupid to have to incur that type of fine for missing something as simple as this, but at the end of the day I didn’t know it was mandatory.’’
Given that Umenyiora and the Giants spent an hour talking to the media Tuesday at Lucas Oil Stadium, he said he was surprised there was another session without even a practice in between. He said he wasn’t sure what he would have talked about had he shown up.
Asked if it would be a distraction to the team, Umenyiora said, “It is a story, but you think these guys, coaches, nobody really cares because it is not like I missed anything team-related. It was Media Day. Obviously, no one wants to sit over here and answer questions about that, so that might be a distraction. It is a non-issue.’’
Everyone loves parade
In a week where party planning and pseudo-guarantees pass for trash talking, Giants defensive tackle Chris Canty added more to the pile when he told New York fans to get ready for a parade on Tuesday.
He was responding to comments Tom Brady made last Sunday in which he said he hoped to see more people at the Patriots’ victory celebration than there were at their Super Bowl send-off at Gillette Stadium.