FOXBOROUGH, Mass. — Pat Shurmur had seen enough. One series was all he needed.

Four passes, four completions for 47 yards. That was Daniel Jones’ night in Thursday’s 31-29 Giants win on the final play of the game over the Patriots in the teams’ preseason finale at Gillette Stadium.

Jones, the Giants’ rookie quarterback who has been so impressive this summer, didn’t get the offense into the end zone on his one offensive possession, his first career NFL preseason start. The drive stalled at the New England 13-yard line after two failed short-yardage running plays.

But that’s not the point.

“I think he just checked off another box in his development,’’ Shurmur said. “He went out and executed very well. He’s done everything we’ve asked to this point in terms of how he prepares. This was another opportunity to grow, and I think he did that.’’

Jones’ drive started with a 5-yard completion to tight end C.J. Conrad. Then came a 15-yard connection to veteran receiver Golden Tate, who got a few snaps before his four-game suspension for violating the league’s banned substance policy begins.

The highlight throw of the night was a 23-yard rainbow to Tate down the left sideline, the ball put where only Tate could catch it, over his shoulder and out of the reach of Patriots cornerback Keion Crossen.

“Yeah, ‘Daniel Dimes,’ that’s what we call him,’’ Tate said. “He saw single-high coverage, saw a matchup that he liked and he threw a ball in there and by the time it caught my eye, it was perfectly placed on the sideline where only I could catch it. It was just a glimpse of what’s to come.”

Make no mistake: Tate loves what’s to come.

“The biggest thing that’s impressed me is his composure in the locker room and in the huddle, the way he handles business, his eagerness to want to learn,’’ Tate said. “And he’s become a leader. Obviously, we’ve seen the arm strength, we’ve seen the talent he has. I’ve been impressed with his growth. When the time is right, he’s going to show it.’’

If you’re a true Giants fan, hopefully you enjoyed your preseason preview of Jones and you hope not to see him in a game again until next summer. If that’s the case, the Giants will be enjoying a successful, winning season.

If you’re part of the sports radio call-in rant mob anxious to run Eli Manning out of town and move on to Jones as the immediate starter, relax. Let the season, which begins a week from Sunday in Dallas, breathe.

With the rebuilt offensive line, running back Saquon Barkley back for what figures to be a second spectacular season and a defense that was presumably improved in the offseason, we’re going to know enough about Manning and what he has left to offer in his 16th season at the age of 38 soon enough.

If the Giants are a month or so into this season and the losing of the past couple of seasons looks like it’s happening again, then Shurmur should go ahead and look to the future with Jones behind center.

Until then, can we just let the season begin to play out and be happy with what we saw out of Jones in what was a highly successful preseason that hopefully told us a lot about the kid?

Jones’ final preseason numbers were highly impressive — 29-for-34 (85.3 percent completion rate) for 416 yards with two touchdowns, no interceptions, with two lost fumbles the only blemish.

“I think I’ve improved,’’ Jones said. “I’ve made progress and certainly am a ways from where I was when I started, which helps me feel a little bit more comfortable. But there’s still a lot to learn, I realize that, still a lot of work to be done.’’

That work will now come in the background, in practice and in meeting rooms, with Manning getting the starter reps.

“I’ve said it all along, Eli’s our starter and we’re getting Daniel ready to play,’’ Shurmur said earlier in the week.

Seconds after that answer from Shurmur came this question: “So, you’re not ready to say for sure that Eli will be your starter in Week 1?’’

With that, you could sense Shurmur’s blood pressure rising — and understandably so.

“I just said Eli’s the starter; didn’t I just say that?’’ the Giants coach said, his voice tensing and his tone terse.

Until there’s reason in the regular season to make a change should Manning and the offense struggle, the constant peppering of Shurmur about the quarterback situation is a waste of energy and oxygen.

Enjoy what you saw from Jones on Thursday night and across the entire preseason and ruminate on that, feeling good about the future at quarterback for the Giants and whenever that future becomes the present.