NY Giants discussion: Have you ever met a Giants player or coach in real life?

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We’re beyond the Super Bowl and almost to the start of the new league year so it’s a somewhat quiet time in the NFL. Let’s pass the time by talking about the Giants.

Where’s the most random place you’ve run into a Giants player or coach, and who was it?

You could always tell us about any experience you’ve had meeting a Giants player (or multiple players if it’s happened more than once) in real life.

Join the conversation!​


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Scroll down to the comment section below to weigh in with your experiences.

Source: https://www.bigblueview.com/new-yor...ver-met-a-giants-player-or-coach-in-real-life
 
NY Giants news: Premier blocking TE re-signs; what it means for New York

New York Giants tight end Chris Manhertz prior to a game against the Minnesota Vikings

New York Giants tight end Chris Manhertz prior to a game against the Minnesota Vikings | Getty Images

The New York Giants have re-signed tight end Chris Manhertz, per his agent and via ESPN’s Adam Schefter.

The Giants originally signed Manhertz back in 2024 and will retain the soon-t0-be 34-year old for a third season. Manhertz isn’t known as a receiving threat and has been targeted just 46 times over the course of his 10-year career. However, it’s his blocking that makes him a valuable commodity for the Giants, as Manhertz is regarded as one of the better pure blocking tight ends in the NFL.

Manhertz could see his role expand further under John Harbaugh, who is expected to favor a more run-heavy approach than the Giants have used in recent memory. But for now, the Giants are relying on Theo Johnson and Thomas Fidone II as their receiving threats from the tight end position.

Re-signing Manhertz could also mean tight end Daniel Bellinger will be moving on .

Re-signing Manhertz also fits with what we’ve seen recently from the Giants, making relatively small moves as they prepare for the start of the “Legal Tampering Period” and 2026 free agency. The team previously released linebacker Bobby Okereke and offensive tackle James Hudson III to create cap space. Meanwhile, they re-signed special teams ace Gunner Olszewski last week.

The Giants would like to address a number of positions in free agency, notably, right tackle and right guard, wide receiver, cornerback, and linebacker.

We’ll update with the details of Manhertz’s contract as we get them.

Source: https://www.bigblueview.com/nfl-fre...ocking-te-re-signs-what-it-means-for-new-york
 
NY Giants news: Giants lose S Dane Belton to the NY Jets

New York Giants safety Dane Belton reacts after a tackle.

New York Giants safety Dane Belton reacts after a tackle. | Getty Images

The New York Giants have lost another member of the 2022 NFL Draft class, as safety Dane Belton has agreed to terms with the New York Jets.

Belton has been a key contributor for the Giants on special teams as well as a consistent contributor on the defensive side of the ball. While Belton was never able to be a consistent starter for the Giants, he has a playmaker’s instincts, with 6 interceptions, 16 passes defensed, 4 forced fumbles, and 4.0 sacks over the last four years.

Belton is a good blitzing safety whose best fit is close to the line of scrimmage. He’s a good blitzing safety and has a chance to earn a starting job in Aaron Glenn’s defense for the Jets.

Belton is the fourth member of Joe Schoen’s first draft class to depart in this year’s free agency, and possibly the fourth to earn a starting job elsewhere.

Source: https://www.bigblueview.com/nfl-fre...news-giants-lose-s-dane-belton-to-the-ny-jets
 
NY Giants NFL free agency 2026: Grades for New York’s Day 1 moves

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Jordan Stout | Getty Images

The New York Giants had a busy first day of NFL free agency. They signed seven players, lost five, and missed out on guard Alijah Vera-Tucker. I already offered my thoughts on Day 1. What did others think? Let’s check the Day 1 NFL free agency grades to find out.

What do our polls say?​


We polled the Big Blue View community on three of the seven signings. Here are the results:

LB Tremaine Edmunds​


Most Giants fans seem to like it. Of 2,080 respondents, 1,110 (53.7%) gave the signing a B grade. The signing received an A from 786 voters (37.79%). Ten curmudgeons (.48%) gave the deal an F.

P Jordan Stout​


The Giants gave the former Baltimore Ravens All-Pro a record contract for a punter. Voters loved it. Of 1,748 votes, 43.19% (755) graded the move an A. Another 38.4% (665) gave it a B. There were 51 voters (2.48%) who don’t appreciate excellent punting and gave the signing an F.

TE Isaiah Likely​


Only 946 votes came in for the Likely signing. Does that mean Giants fans likely don’t care? Anyway, 470 (49.68%) of voters graded the move a B. The move got an A from 329 voters (34.78%). There were 12 F votes, 1.27%.

How others graded the Giants​


Pro Football Focus:

Eluemunor | Above average
Likely | Above average

The Athletic:

Eluemunor | A+

Eluemunor is a well-above-average right tackle, and the Giants got him back on one of the best value deals of free agency. His 98 percent pass blocking efficiency ranked sixth among all tackles last season, according to PFF. He uses his core strength, his superpower, to sink onto his heels and smother bull rushers. Eluemunor is also a very crafty run blocker. It was a thin tackle group in this year’s free agent class. As a result, I figured Eluemunor would approach the $20 million range. This feels like a potential hometown discount.

Likely | B

The Ravens allowed Likely to depart after extending Mark Andrews, and they just might have parted with the younger, more effective tight end. John Harbaugh pounced, bringing the fifth-year pro to New York with him, hoping that Likely can build on the potential that he has displayed while averaging 11.6 yards per reception and 15 touchdown catches while serving as the No. 2 tight end in Baltimore.

FOX Sports:

Likely | A-

Likely, a 6-foot-4, 245-pounder, has plenty of untapped potential, and no one knows that better than new Giants coach John Harbaugh. Likely’s production was always capped in Baltimore, mostly because of the prominence of Ravens TE Mark Andrews. But in limited opportunities, Likely always showed he had reliable hands and could stretch the field.

Tremaine Edmunds | B

If there was one position the Giants were desperate to upgrade on defense, it was linebacker. And when they cut veteran Bobby Okereke, it was clear they wanted to get younger, too.

The 27-year-old Edmunds fills that need and gives the Giants a strong leader in the middle, who still has the sideline-to-sideline speed to help against the run. He may not be a Pro Bowler anymore, but he’s topped 100 tackles in each of his eight NFL seasons. Also, at three years and $36 million, he’s affordable and came cheaper than he would have in a trade.

SB Nation:

Likely | A

Likely will given the New York passing game a great option over the middle and underneath, and Likely does have the athleticism to stretch defenses a bit from a tight end alignment.

This looks like a great move to help develop [Jaxson] Dart, which is a priority this offseason in New York.

Bleacher Report:

Likely | B-
Edmunds | C
Eluemunor | B+
Ar’Darius Washington | C

Source: https://www.bigblueview.com/new-yor...r-isaiah-likely-tremaine-edmunds-jordan-stout
 
NY Giants news: FB Patrick Ricard agrees to terms; what it means for New York

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Patrick Ricard | Getty Images

New York Giants head coach John Harbaugh continued to stockpile players from the Baltimore Ravens, his former team, on Tuesday evening as New York reportedly agreed to terms with six-time Pro Bowl fullback Patrick Ricard.

The two-year deal with Ricard will reportedly make him the highest-paid fullback in the NFL. Per NFL insider Mike Garafolo, the deal will be worth a maximum of $8.5 million, with a base value of $7.63 million that will make Ricard the league’s highest-paid fullback on a per-year basis.

— More to come

Source: https://www.bigblueview.com/new-yor...ohn-harbaugh-baltimore-ravens-nfl-free-agency
 
3 things to know about ‘absolutely awesome’ NY Giants PK Jason Sanders

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Jason Sanders

The New York Giants’ signing of former Miami Dolphins placekicker Jason Sanders on Tuesday was the latest example of head coach John Harbaugh’s commitment to special teams. I turned to Kevin Nogle of SB Nation’s The Phinsider, which covers the Dolphins, to find out more about the 30-year-old.

Below, three quick questions and answers.

How good is Jason Sanders?​


We can read Sanders’ statistics and the accolades. He is a 2020 First-Team All-Pro with an 84.6% career field goal percentage and 33 made field goals of more than 50 yards.

Nogle says:

“Sanders is the most accurate field goal kicker in Dolphins history (more than 30 FG attempts). He is an absolute beast from 50 yards, going 12 for 14 from distance in 2024. He’s a one-time First-Team All Pro, and was a draft pick for a reason. He’s just an absolutely awesome kicker.”

What about that hip injury?​


Sanders missed the entire 2025 season.

Nogle says:

“The question becomes his health. He sustained an odd hip injury in training camp last year and somehow missed the entire season. It just never seemed to heal. The Dolphins opened his IR-Return practice window last year, but he wasn’t activated.”

After the two sides could not agree on a contract, the Dolphins now are expected to release kicker Jason Sanders, per source. Sanders leaves Miami with a streak of 27 straight made field goals, and 9-of-9 on his last 50+-yard field goals. pic.twitter.com/dowhkjfi48

— Adam Schefter (@AdamSchefter) March 6, 2026

Why did Miami move on from Sanders?​


As we have seen with the Giants the past few seasons, quality NFL-caliber placekickers should be valued.

Nogle says:

“Unfortunately, the Dolphins’ cap situation is untenable this year, and they had to move on to a cheaper kicker. I would have loved to see him back out there next year, but they couldn’t work out a deal that made sense for both sides. The Giants are getting a great kicker (assuming his hip has fully recovered).”

Source: https://www.bigblueview.com/new-yor...t-pk-jason-sanders-free-agency-miami-dolphins
 
NY Giants news: Evan Neal, stunningly, returning to New York; what it means

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Evan Neal | Getty Images

The New York Giants are bringing back guard Evan Neal, per multiple reports. That is a stunning move after a year in which the former first-round pick did not play a snap. The contract is reportedly one-year deal for the minimum salary.

The seventh overall pick in the 2022 NFL Draft, Neal spent three injury-plagued seasons unsuccessfully trying to prove he could play right tackle in the NFL. The Giants moved him to guard last season, but the 6-foot-7, 340-pound Neal never played a snap.

What it means for the Giants​


It means, first and foremost, that new head coach John Harbaugh must believe in giving players a clean slate. Especially monstrous offensive linemen who show some potential to run block.

The Giants have an issue at right guard, where last season’s starter — Greg Van Roten — has yet to re-sign. BBV’s Chris Pflum posted some ideas for how the Giants could deal with that issue. Bringing Neal back was never a consideration.

Harbaugh, apparently, thought otherwise.

The new coaching staff, including Harbaugh, offensive coordinator Matt Nagy, offensive line coach Mike Bloomgren, and senior offensive assistant Greg Roman is said to want bring Neal to training camp and work with the former first-round pick.

We will see if it pays dividends. Neal’s presence will certainly be an interesting storyline.

Source: https://www.bigblueview.com/new-yor...neal-signing-return-to-new-york-john-harbaugh
 
What Evan Neal showed the Giants while playing guard last preseason

New York Giants right guard Evan Neal before the snap against the New England Patriots in the pre-season

Evan Neal | Getty Images

The New York Giants re-signed 2022 seventh-overall pick Evan Neal.

The move was… Surprising? Shocking? Stunning? Pick your favorite “S” adjective and roll with it, because it’s a move nobody expected.

I even wrote in my look at potential solutions for the Giants’ right guard problem that,

“I’m going to assume that the Giants wouldn’t be interested in Evan Neal, Josh Ezeudu, or Mekhi Becton.”

I was told every time I asked about Harbaugh and Schoen considering giving Neal a second chance that the team is moving on. And considering how the last three years went… Yeah. I could get that a fresh start would be best for everyone invovled.

And yet here we are.

So I thought I’d go back and take a look at Neal playing guard for the Giants in the 2025 pre-season and see whether there’s a realistic chance that he could actually be a solution. That might be the dream scenario for the Giants: A seventh overall pick play like it, earn a starting job and perhaps a long-term contract, and provide them with a starter from a draft class that might have just supplied four (4) starters to other teams.

But is it realistic? Let’s go to the tape.

What he does well​


He is an undeniably powerful run blocker, particularly when blocking downhill. He’s a people-mover who can distort the line of scrimmage and drive defenders yards off the ball. His height works against him, as he has to work that much harder to maintain leverage against defensive tackles. But even so, he’s a strong dude.

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Neal is also very quick to hit his landmarks as a pulling guard, as well as quick to work to the second level.

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He still does still need to improve his hand placement in zone blocking, but he’s strong enough to still control defenders without winning the leverage battle outright.

Neal works well with his teammates, which is impressive considering his size. He never seems to interfere with his teammate’s footwork, gets hip-to-hip well and is an asset on combo blocks. He also has solid awareness and is always looking for work. His help is noticeable, and he’s strong enough that even a shove is enough to knock an otherwise occupied defender off his rush.

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Neal does have good overall lateral agility for a guard and is able to mirror interior rushers when he gets his hands on them. He does a good job of keeping them in front of him and his play strength means they never really made headway into the backfield.

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What he doesn’t do well​


There are a couple main issues in Neal’s tape.

First and foremost, he has a real tendency to “hug” defenders when blocking laterally in zone schemes. He has a tendency to let his hands drift wide and engage with defenders’ shoulder pads instead of using his punch to access their chest plates.

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He simply doesn’t have his usual ability to control and sustain the blocks, making it easier for opponents to get off them and make the tackle. It isn’t a regular thing, but certainly worth noting.

Neal’s big issues at offensive tackle came in redirection. He had a tendency to over-set to the outside against speed and be unable to get back to defend the B-gap against a quick inside move. That showed up once at guard as well.

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Final thoughts​


I came at this tape with fresh eyes, at least as fresh as possible.

After the third preseason game last year I thought the Giants had something with Evan Neal at right guard. Was he great? Well… No. But I also wasn’t expecting greatness from a guy who was playing the position for the first time in about six years with two games and limited practices under his belt.

However, I also didn’t see much difference between Neal and Greg Van Roten. I thought that suggested upside for Neal, all things considered. I thought the Giants would give him a chance to lose the job — after all, they still had Van Roten as a fallback option if Neal obviously couldn’t cut it in the regular season.

Instead of giving Neal even a short leash to earn their trust, he was exiled to the bench.

Now, most of a year later… I still think there’s something there.

I’m not sure Neal is the solution at right guard, but I do think he could be. At the very least, I don’t think he’s a less-likely solution than most of guard prospects in the 2026 NFL draft.

The best answer might once again be to give Neal a chance to win the job, but also have a good back-up option in place just in case he can’t. In fact, signing another veteran (like Van Roten) and drafting a guard prospect who could either develop as a future right guard — or left guard to replace Jon Runyan Jr. if Neal is the guy at right guard — might be the best course of action.

Source: https://www.bigblueview.com/new-yor...the-giants-while-playing-guard-last-preseason
 
NY Giants news: Giants sign WR Calvin Austin III; what it means

Wide receiver Calvin Austin III (19) runs with the ball after making a catch against the Baltimore Ravens.

Wide receiver Calvin Austin III (19) runs with the ball after making a catch against the Baltimore Ravens. | Getty Images

The New York Giants have signed wide receiver Calvin Austin III to a one-year, deal with a maximum value of $4.5 million, per his agents.

Austin, 26, was a fourth-round pick (138th overall) out of Memphis by the Pittsburgh Steelers in the 2022 NFL Draft. While an undersized receiver at 5-foot 7¾ inches tall, 170 pounds, Austin is highly athletic with rare explosive traits.

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Austin’s 4.32-second 40-yard dash is blazing, but his 1.44-second 10-yard split, 39-inch vertical, and 11-foot-3 broad jump are legitimately rare. And unlike many speedsters, Austin also has excellent agility and movement skills as well.

Austin has appeared in 48 games for the Steelers with 16 starts over the last three years. He’s caught 67 passes over the last two years, for 920 yards and 7 touchdowns to just five drops. Austin must have stuck in John Harbaugh’s memory, as he scored the game-winning touchdown in his last game as the Baltimore Ravens’ head coach.

Calvin Austin scored the game-winning touchdown for the Steelers against John Harbaugh and the Ravens in Week 18 to eliminate Baltimore from the playoffs (and essentially get Harbaugh fired). Now, he will play under Harbaugh with the Giants in 2026. https://t.co/Fi1uYNFyhT pic.twitter.com/RPe87nhIVi

— Anthony Rivardo (@Anthony_Rivardo) March 12, 2026

What it means for the Giants​


Austin doesn’t solve the Giants’ need at wide receiver all by himself, however he does fill the hole at slot receiver left by Wan’Dale Robinson. Austin also gives the Giants another true speed threat that they can use to help stretch the field and either punish defenses for stacking the box to defend the run or force light boxes.

Austin is also an experienced punt returner with 72 career returns, including a touchdown against the Giants in 2024.

The Giants likely still need to find a starting caliber outside receiver to play across from Malik Nabers, but this is a high-upside move that gives the Giants’ offense another big play threat.

Source: https://www.bigblueview.com/nfl-fre...iants-sign-wr-calvin-austin-iii-what-it-means
 
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