News Giants Team Notes

Can you guess this Fresno State and Ottawa standout in today’s trivia game?

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Think you can figure out which Giants player we’re talking about? You’ll get five clues to figure him out in our new guessing game!

We’re back for another day of the Big Blue View in-5 daily trivia game. Game instructions are at the bottom if you’re new to the game! Feel free to share your results in the comments and feedback in the Google Form.

Today’s Big Blue View in-5 game​


If you can’t see the game due to Apple News or another service, click this game article.

Previous games​


Friday, April 4, 2025
Thursday, April 3, 2025
Wednesday, April 2, 2025

Play more SB Nation in-5 trivia games​


NFL in-5
MLB in-5
MMA in-5

Big Blue View in-5 instructions​


The goal of the game is to guess the correct Giants player with the help of up to five clues. We’ll mix in BOTH ACTIVE AND RETIRED PLAYERS. It won’t be easy to figure it out in one or two guesses, but some of you might be able to nail it.

After you correctly guess the player, you can click “Share Results” to share how you did down in the comments and on social media. We won’t go into other details about the game as we’d like your feedback on it. How it plays, what you think of it, the difficulty level, and anything else you can think of that will help us improve this game. You can provide feedback in the comments of this article, or you can fill out this Google Form.

Enjoy!

Source: https://www.bigblueview.com/2025/4/5/24401695/sb-nation-giants-daily-trivia-in-5
 
Can you guess this former Giant and Jet in today’s in-5 trivia game?

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Think you can figure out which Giants player we’re talking about? You’ll get five clues to figure him out in our new guessing game!

We’re back for another day of the Big Blue View in-5 daily trivia game. Game instructions are at the bottom if you’re new to the game! Feel free to share your results in the comments and feedback in the Google Form.

Today’s Big Blue View in-5 game​


If you can’t see the game due to Apple News or another service, click this game article.

Previous games​


Saturday, April 5, 2025
Friday, April 4, 2025
Thursday, April 3, 2025

Play more SB Nation in-5 trivia games​


NFL in-5
MLB in-5
MMA in-5

Big Blue View in-5 instructions​


The goal of the game is to guess the correct Giants player with the help of up to five clues. We’ll mix in BOTH ACTIVE AND RETIRED PLAYERS. It won’t be easy to figure it out in one or two guesses, but some of you might be able to nail it.

After you correctly guess the player, you can click “Share Results” to share how you did down in the comments and on social media. We won’t go into other details about the game as we’d like your feedback on it. How it plays, what you think of it, the difficulty level, and anything else you can think of that will help us improve this game. You can provide feedback in the comments of this article, or you can fill out this Google Form.

Enjoy!

Source: https://www.bigblueview.com/2025/4/6/24402274/sb-nation-giants-daily-trivia-in-5
 
Making the case: Shedeur Sanders or Jaxson Dart

Colorado v Kansas

Photo by Ed Zurga/Getty Images

Which quarterback is the right one to choose?

Yet again, the New York Giants are slated to be selected among the top six in the 2024 NFL Draft; this year, they have the third pick. The Giants still lack a long-term plan for the quarterback position. The Tennessee Titans appear infatuated with Miami quarterback Cam Ward, and it seems like he’s set to be the first overall selection in the draft, albeit anything can happen.

New York signed two veteran quarterbacks, Russell Wilson and Jameis Winston; the former is set to receive the opening crack at starting quarterback. Signing the pair of veterans does not preclude the Giants from selecting a quarterback third overall. But is there a quarterback that piques the Giants’ interest enough to forgo selecting one of the two other blue-chip talents on the board: Penn State edge defenerer Abdul Carter or Colorado cornerback/wide receiver Travis Hunter?

The two quarterbacks linked to the Giants at three overall are Colorado signal caller Shedeur Sanders and Ole Miss quarterback Jaxson Dart. The former is the son of Deion Sanders, and the latter is close with Giants legend Eli Manning. Let’s start with Sanders.

Shedeur Sanders, Colorado​


Strengths

  • Good posture in the pocket – maximizes measurables
  • Very good footwork on dropback
  • Sturdy and good balance in the pocket – solid overall composure
  • Does well to maneuver and navigate within the pocket
  • Keeps eyes downfield when pocket gets muddy
  • Smoothly gets his body oriented in quick game
  • Displayed excellent patience to wait for second/third window throws
  • Good fluid OVER THE TOP throwing motion – effortless
  • Smart quarterback with sound comprehension on how to attack defenses
  • Intelligent pre-to-post snap work
  • Plays well within play structure
  • Plus asset in a short – rhythmic – passing attack
  • Creative mind to improvise (lack of athletic ability and arm talent hold him back from maximizing this skill-set)
  • Displayed good anticipation over the middle of the field (seam, DIG)
  • Good overall touch and pacing over the MOF
  • Understands how to throw between the numbers (timing, placement, touch, etc.)
  • Hits the upfield shoulder of WRs on seam and skinny posts over the MOF
  • Excellent timing on his passes
  • Displayed quality touch and pacing in the red zone
  • Solid overall accuracy
  • Distributes the football well in the short-intermediate parts of the field
  • Very used to playing under pressure – stands tall in the pocket
  • Takes massive hits and gets right back up
  • Elite toughness

Weaknesses

  • Slightly undersized
  • Below-average athlete: speed, acceleration, and explosiveness
  • Struggled to escape sacks in college (athletic & OL issues)
  • OL was poor but developed a tendency to bail cleaner pockets
  • Can drift in the pocket too often
  • Devastating losses trying to escape sacks
  • Tendency to burp the baby before releasing football
  • Passes lack velocity
  • Ball tends to float – lack of zip
  • Below-average arm strength
  • Deep passes tend to die in the air
  • Accuracy wasn’t always pin-point – especially on short passes outside the numbers
  • Lackluster off-platform thrower
  • Had tendency to skip or low-ball short passes to his right or left
  • Ran NFL concepts but operated mostly out of the shotgun

Sanders is a high processing distributor who operates a quick rhythmic passing attack well, while possessing a creative knack that fails to be fully actualized due to suboptimal athletic ability and arm strength when off platform. Still, Sanders is mechanically sound and flashed WOW throws at each level of the field, albeit not always consistent. Sanders lacks elite physical gifts, but his overall arm talent is solid, especially over the middle of the field. A lack of elite zip and velocity is evident on his tape.

Sanders struggled to escape sacks at the collegiate level; that issue will be gravely exacerbated in the NFL. Yes, his offensive line was VERY POOR, but evading sacks against Big-12 defenders is much easier than NFL defenders, and Sanders tied for most sacks in the entire FBS. He’s not a terrible athlete but his athletic ability is not an asset to his game.

However, Sanders ability to navigate through muddy pockets, stand tall, and deliver strikes before getting hit is very impressive and a testament to his overall toughness, which is elite. Sanders does well targeting in-between the numbers with anticipation and ball placement. He does well to understand the defense pre-to-post snap while operating through NFL concepts in Pat Shurumr’s offense. He’s a quality decision maker who can keep an offense on script and can improvise.

There are a lot of reasons to appreciate Sanders’ skills. Yet, he does not have the tantalizing physical gifts possessed by many current high-level NFL quarterbacks. He can successfully operate an efficient passing attack predicated on processing and timing. He won’t thrive in every system, but an offense with a stable line that allows him to be the point guard, while efficiently attacking defenses can find success with a player like Sanders.

Jaxson Dart, Ole Miss​


Strengths

  • Slightly shorter but sufficient with solid thickness
  • Good athlete with above-average mobility
  • Light quick feet on drop back – solid footwork
  • Poised under pressure – will take big hit
  • Good overall feel in the pocket on when to run, slide, step-up, or bail
  • Controlled and balanced mover with above-average ability to throw on the move
  • Quickly identified the structure of the defense and found the offense’s answer
  • Was able to quickly find answers pre-to-post snap in Kiffin’s system
  • Excellent decision making in his offense
  • Good overall arm talent with solid arm strength and velocity
  • Solid enough arm talent to throw off-platform
  • Has enough arm strength to rip far-hash throws
  • Good overall accuracy in the short, intermediate, and deep parts of the field
  • Pin-point timing on back shoulder fade routes
  • Very good processing on when to throw with anticipation
  • Can change arm-angle to throw threw the forest
  • Understands touch & pacing – has varying speeds on his passes
  • Can layer footballs over the middle of the field
  • Throws receivers open – leads his receivers to maximize YAC
  • Good distributor of the football at every level of the field
  • Excellent ability to operate out of the RPO
  • Good footwork/patience into the mesh point – puts LBs into conflict
  • Reads and is decisive with the ball on RPO and other packaged plays
  • Effective runner of the football
  • Has good overall vision when taking off
  • Is not afraid to lower his shoulder – good play strength and toughness
  • Excellent gamer – several big plays in key moments through 2024
  • Plays with a chip on his shoulder

Weaknesses

  • Good but not excellent athlete – won’t be a calling card of his at the next level
  • Played in a simplified Lane Kiffin RPO-system
  • Shot-gun exclusive offense
  • Was not pressured much in Kiffin’s system – QB friendly system
  • May need to be more crisp and precise with his feet in certain systems
  • Transition to NFL speed & space may be too much
  • Good overall accuracy but will miss some throws that are frustrating
  • Questions about processing in the NFL are fair
  • Questionable decision making when pressure gets home

Dart is an interesting college quarterback who operated Lane Kiffin’s fast-paced RPO-Spread system efficiently, while leveraging his good overall arm talent to challenge defenses downfield. One of the most controversial parts of Dart’s evaluation is the transition from Kiffin’s offense – which provided isolated QB-friendly reads and packaged RPO plays – to the NFL, where space is limited and the defensive athletes move much faster. Coaches and people with access to Dart may be able to discern his quarterbacking knowledge beyond Kiffin’s scheme, but it remains a bit nebulous to outsiders. With that stated, there are reasons to believe Dart projects well to the next level.

Dart has good overall arm talent and he CAN push the ball vertically with above-average accuracy. I wouldn’t say Dart has elite arm talent or the biggest arm in the world, but it’s sufficient for the NFL game; he has enough arm strength to access every part of the football field. He is willing to stand tall in the pocket and deliver through contact; he is a tough guy. He’s enough of an athlete to escape muddy pockets at the next level; I would say slightly worse than Bo Nix from last year’s draft, who just rushed for 430 yards in his rookie season.

Overall, Dart is about to experience an entirely different – and possibly more challenging – way of playing quarterback, for the NFL is not conducive to the style he thrived within over the last three seasons. Dart was obviously comfortable in Kiffin’s scheme – that’s a good thing! Still, the conjecture about his transition may be detectable in a meeting room or during a workout, but the true nature of that transition may not be ascertained until semi-live reps (training camp). I am also slightly concerned about Dart’s decision making under pressure, which he should see much more of in the NFL. Nevertheless, due to his projectable traits, Dart is a solid prospect to bank on for development.

Final verdict​


If I’m choosing between Sanders or Dart, I’m comfortably going with Sanders. However, they’re two different quarterback prospects with wide projections. Sanders is mechanically sound with a limited ceiling and lacks spectacular arm talent and physical traits. He wins with his mind and timing; he must consistently throw with anticipation and win from within the pocket to reach his potential. The way Tom Brady won exemplifies Sanders’ best path to success, but Brady — obviously — is one of a kind.

Dart is different. Kiffin’s system simplified the offense, yet Dart efficiently thrived with his tasks within the offense. Still, prognosticating his skill set from a mental standpoint to an NFL offense against NFL defenses is difficult. Dart does possess above-average arm talent, is a better athlete than Sanders, and is also a tough — stand in the pocket — type of player.

Ultimately, I don’t want either Sanders or Dart at three overall. Depending on availability, I want the Giants to select either Abdul Carter or Travis Hunter. If I had to choose, though, I would select Sanders over Dart.

Source: https://www.bigblueview.com/2025/4/...aking-the-case-shedeur-sanders-or-jaxson-dart
 
2025 NFL Draft prospect profile - DJ Giddens, RB, Kansas State

Cincinnati v Kansas State

Photo by Peter G. Aiken/Getty Images

Yet another running back with playmaking potential

It really does seem as though everywhere you look, there’s another running back in the 2025 NFL Draft with the potential to be a playmaker at the next level.

DJ Giddens from Kansas State, for instance, isn’t high on many draft boards, and gets little discussion outside of scout circles. Yet he ran for over 1,300 yards and averaged over 6.5 per carry this year with an average of 6 yards per carry for his career.

The New York Giants might not feel a pressing need to draft a running back this year, but the absolute glut of talented backs in this class could make it inevitable. Could Giddens be the next Tyrone Tracy?

Prospect: DJ Giddens (31)
Games Watched: vs. Arizona (2024), vs. Oklahoma State (2024), vs. Colorado (2024), vs. Iowa State (2024)

Measurables​

Kent Lee Platte | RAS.football

Strengths​


Best traits

  • Vision
  • Athleticism
  • Cutback ability
  • Contact balance

DJ Giddens is a good-sized and highly elusive runner.

Giddens weighs in at 6-foot, 212, which is solid size for a modern running back. He combines that with good (4.43-second) long speed as well as impressive short-area quickness.

He bases his game on a combination of excellent vision and his athletic traits, making it very difficult for defenders to land more than glancing blows on him. He runs with excellent tempo behind the line of scrimmage and has a very smooth transmission. He’s mastered the art of “slow to, explode through” when approaching the line of scrimmage. Giddens changes speeds extremely smoothly and has excellent acceleration, allowing him to manipulate defenders with his path to the hole before forcing missed tackles.

Giddens does a very good job of identifying running lanes, as well as anticipating defenders at the second level and where lanes will open. His vision and anticipation allow him to make subtle alterations to his path and speed, often turning would-be tackles into glancing blows. From there, his contact balance allows him to survive the hits and regain his feet for yards after contact.

He’s also a very tough runner who often seeks out contact and looks to finish his runs by delivering a hit – though he does lack the mass to be a really punishing runner. That toughness extends to his blocking, and he’s willing to fight to “lose slow” as a pass protector as well as lead block for sweeps or designed quarterback runs.

Finally, he appears to have upside in the passing game. Kansas State usually used him as a check-down option and he was capable in that role – and there were instances of him getting downfield on wheel routes. Giddens has soft hands and solid ball skills, which should appeal to teams that use running backs as receiving weapons.

Weaknesses​


Worst traits

  • Play strength
  • Short yardage running

Giddens is a tough and determined runner, however he doesn’t quite have the strength or style to consistently produce in short-yardage situations.

He has a slightly taller and leaner build than we see from runners who can make a living running behind their pads and between the tackles. Giddens is an upright runner who is relatively easily stopped when defenders get a square hit on him – easier said than done, but even a lone defensive back can bring him down.

Giddens has the ability to pick up yards after contact. However they largely come as a result of his contact balance or speed in the open field, as opposed to running over opponents at the line of scrimmage.

Giddens could also stand to be more aggressive when coming up to meet defenders in pass protection. He’s a willing blocker, but needs to consistently come up and deliver hits.

Game Tape​


(Giddens is the Kansas State running back wearing number 31.)

Projection​


DJ Giddens projects as an important running back in an active rotation at the NFL level.

He has experience running in a down-hill man-gap scheme, but would likely be best in a zone blocking scheme that allows him to use his vision and cutback ability to their fullest. Giddens’ limitations in short-yardage situations will likely limit his use in the Red Zone, though his receiving and pass protection should make him a viable option on third downs.

Teams will likely want to pair Giddens with a power back, but he has the potential to be a productive, and high volume, runner between the 20’s.

Does he fit the Giants?
Probably not, if they’re looking for a power back.

Final Word: A Day 2 talent who could fall to Day 3

Source: https://www.bigblueview.com/2025/4/...le-dj-giddens-rb-kansas-state-scouting-report
 
NFL Draft rumors: New York Giants could face Abdul Carter, Shedeur Sanders choice at No. 3

2025 NFL Scouting Combine

Abdul Carter | Photo by Justin Casterline/Getty Images

Increasingly, Cam Ward and Travis Hunter are expected to be selected 1-2

It is beginning to look like the New York Giants’ choice at No. 3 in the 2025 NFL Draft will be between Colorado quarterback Shedeur Sanders and Penn State edge defender Abdul Carter.

Following Friday’s Colorado Pro Day, the Tennessee Titans cancelled a private workout for Sanders and cornerback/wide receiver Travis Hunter. The Titans have been considered likely to select Miami quarterback Cam Ward with the No. 1 overall pick, and that would now appear all but certain.

Meanwhile, until recently the Cleveland Browns had been heavily linked to both Sanders and Penn State edge defender Abdul Carter. That appears to have shifted.

There is a “growing belief around the league” from “high-ranking executives and coaches” that the Browns will select Hunter. The team had dinner with Hunter and Sanders on Thursday night.

Cleveland owner Jimmy Haslam, trying to recover from the DeShaun Watson disaster, indicated to media that the Browns won’t “force” a quarterback selection.

“It would be great if we could get the quarterback, but we’re not going to force it,” Haslam said, adding later, “I think the message is if the right person’s there, we’re going to take him. If not, we’ll figure (quarterback) out for a year or two until we get the right person.”

Jared Mueller of SB Nation’s Dawgs By Nature confirmed Howe’s reporting recently on the ‘Valentine’s Views’ podcast.

“Currently from what we understand the Browns do not plan on selecting Shedeur Sanders number two,” Mueller said. “I think for you and I number two and number three are just too rich for Shedeur Sanders.”

Mueller also reinforced Howe’s reporting that it is Hunter, not Carter, that the Browns are eyeing at No. 2.

“Abdul Carter does make sense for the Browns. It is not who I expect them to select, but at this point in time we might be talking 60-40, 55-45,” Mueller said. “When they look at their very terrible offense they see the ability [by drafting Hunter] to be really creative with Hunter, [Jerry] Jeudy, [David Njoku], [Nick] Chubb for a year, [Cedric] Tillman.

“That’s all of a sudden an offense that can do some things whereas just adding another talented defender doesn’t change the direction and the trajectory of the team.”

There is plenty of debate in the draft community regarding whether or not the Giants, after signing Russell Wilson and Jameis Winston and with head coach Brian Daboll needing to win in 2025, can take a quarterback who will begin the season on the bench at No. 3.

Todd McShay of The Ringer, who has Carter as the No. 1 prospect on his Big Board, posted on X that it’s “not a difficult decision IMO.” If you read his newsletter or watch his show on YouTube, you know McShay has been consistent that the Giants should take the best player at No. 3 and trade back into Round 1 for a quarterback like Jaxson Dart.

What would you do faced with a Carter-Sanders choice, Giants fans? Vote in the poll and let us know.

Source: https://www.bigblueview.com/2025/4/...e-abdul-carter-shedeur-sanders-choice-at-no-3
 
Ed’s 7-round New York Giants mock draft: Patience is rewarded

NFL: APR 25 2024 Draft

Photo by John Smolek/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

Giants get elite playmaker and a quarterback with first two picks

Another week, another New York Giants seven-round mock draft.

ESPN has released its 2025 Mock Draft Simulator. To perhaps change up the board from what we have worked with in recent weeks, I used the ESPN Simulator.

Let’s see what happens.

Round 1 (No. 3) — Travis Hunter, WR/CB, Colorado​


Cam Ward went No. 1 to the Tennessee Titans. Shedeur Sanders went No. 2 to the Cleveland Browns. I don’t believe the Browns will take Sanders in this spot, but that’s how this mock worked out.

I get to choose between Hunter and Abdul Carter. Considering that other than quarterback the Giants have added nothing of significance to their roster on offense this offseason, and that Hunter would help on both sides of the ball he has to be the choice.

Where would he end up playing the most? Not my problem. It is a good one for Brian Daboll to figure out, though.

Round 2 (No. 34) — Jaxson Dart, QB, Ole Miss​


A week ago, I moved back into Round 1 to select Dart. There has been at least a bit of national media chatter about the idea that given where the Giants are with a head coach, and perhaps a GM, on the hot seat that John Mara would not sign off on trading away draft assets to go get a quarterback.

So, I pre-determined that in this mock draft I would sit and wait to see what happened. Dart was still the player that I really wanted in this spot, and I still advocate for trading up to get him. It’s what I did in the SB Nation writer’s mock draft a few days ago.

With Cleveland having selected Sanders, there are two likely danger spots for the Giants in trying to wait until 34 for Dart. The Pittsburgh Steelers at No. 21 and the Los Angeles Rams at No. 26.

I feel fortunate that Dart is still on the board. I make this pick with zero hesitation. Renowned NFL draft analyst Todd McShay has Dart in the same tier with the same grade as Sanders in his rankings. I get Dart a full 32 picks later than Sanders was selected, so I see that as incredible value.

Understanding that the odds of finding a franchise quarterback decrease after Round 1 of the draft, I think this is a swing worth taking. If Joe Schoen and Brian Daboll, or whatever regime comes after them, don’t like what they see from Dart this doesn’t stop them from taking another swing at quarterback in 2026 or 2027. Dart is the 28th-ranked prospect on the ESPN Big Board.

Round 3 (No. 65) — Donovan Jackson, G, Ohio State​


This is one of the potentially jarring things about switching simulators. Using the NFL Mock Draft Database and Pro Football Network simulators, Jackson is almost always off the board somewhere in Round 2.

When I saw him available here, I did not hesitate. Long-term, the Giants may need a tackle with Jermaine Eluemunor in the last year of his contract and Andrew Thomas perennially battling injuries. The immediate need, though, is at guard. I see Jackson as a plug-and-play starter and a guy who could have a 10-year career.

Here is a Jackson scouting report from NFL.com:

Broad-framed three-year starter with core power and leg drive to hold the line of scrimmage or change it. He can stick and sustain in-line or on the second level and is a plus finisher. Jackson has the athleticism for all tasks as an outside-zone blocker. He is also able to accelerate and lead the way on long pulls or counters. He leans against stunting/slanting fronts, and he can be tardy in opening his hips and activating his feet for recoveries. He’s long but punches with wider hands and struggles to consistently maintain his edges when mirroring. Overall, Jackson has the measurables, power and movement for any scheme as a starting guard.

For those of you who are not Dart fans, Tyler Shough of Louisville was the top-ranked player on the board when this pick came up.

Other players available: Elijah Arroyo, TE, Miami; Jordan Burch, edge, Oregon; Oluwafemi Oladejo, edge, UCLA; Ozzy Trapilo, OT, Boston College; Carson Schwesinger, LB, UCLA; Alfred Collins, DT, Texas

Round 3 (No. 99) — Ty Robinson, DT, Nebraska​


You might criticize me for drafting for need with both of my third-round picks, particularly this one. Still, Robinson was the top-ranked player on the big board and it is undeniable that the Giants have a crying need for young talent on the defensive line to supplement Dexter Lawrence.

Here is a Robinson scouting report from NFL.com:

Bully with a roughshod playing style that forces blockers to match his physicality. Robinson is built for the trenches with the versatility to play in odd or even fronts. He’s first into contact with his hands and mitigates average knee-bend with brute force in his upper half. He’s powerful to set edges but lacks length to control and quickly shed NFL blockers. He’s an effort rusher with active hands who can exploit a weak edge and thrive in gaming fronts but possesses average creativity. Robinson might not be a star, but his effort, strength and demeanor could make him a productive pro for years to come.

Full disclosure: Alabama quarterback Jalen Milroe is still on the board here. I remain happy with my choice of Dart. While I understand the ceiling of Milroe, he is such a boom-bust prospect that in my view Dart is a better bet.

Other players available: Shemar Turner, DT, Texas A&M; Jaylin Lane, WR, Virginia Tech; Harold Fannin, TE, Bowling Green; Bradyn Swinson, edge, LSU; Demetrius Knight, LB, South Carolina

Round 4 (No. 105) — Demetrius Knight, LB, South Carolina​


I agonized over this choice, going back-and-forth between Knight and edge defender Bradyn Swinson of LSU. It did not help that NFL.com had identical 6.36 “will eventually be a plus starter” grades on both players.

The Giants have a need for edge depth and I will see if I can address that with one of my remaining picks.

The Giants have collected a bunch of inside linebackers in free agency who are — in reality — special teams players and emergency defenders. Knight should be more than that.

Given that there are rumblings that not everyone in the Giants organization is in love with Bobby Okereke, maybe that provides a pathway for Knight to eventually be a starter and key defender.

Here is the NFL.com scouting report on Knight:

Passionate linebacker with great size, good instincts and a feel for how to play the position. Knight is a fluid athlete with average pursuit speed and short-area burst. He uses his eyes and instincts to diagnose quickly and he maneuvers around bodies like a running back. He’s adept at slipping blocks and rarely allows blockers to stick and sustain on the second level. He’s aware and productive in zone but could struggle to stay connected in man coverage. He’s not a twitchy mover but knows how to play the game and has a chance to play on all three downs. Knight’s field demeanor and football character should seal the deal as a future starter at inside ‘backer.

Round 5 (No. 154) — Devin Neal, RB, Kansas​


The Giants had tremendous success a year ago drafting running back Tyrone Tracy in the fifth round. Can they find it with a fifth-round running back two years in a row?

They don’t need to replace Tracy. You have to think, though, that this will be Devin Singletary’s last season with the Giants. Singletary has no guaranteed money in 2026 and the Giants could save $5.25 million against the cap by moving on. They probably will.

Neal profiles as a player who could be a productive committee member. I certainly think he would be an upgrade over Eric Gray.

Here is the NFL.com scouting report on Neal:

Workload runner with NFL size and four years of steady production to help elevate the program. Neal runs with a nice blend of patience and decisiveness to choose the right lanes and maximize each carry. He lacks top-end burst and speed, which will shrink the field for him, but he’s a fall-forward runner with good contact balance and a nose for short-yardage conversions. He has good instincts and soft hands in space and can help as a leak-out or swing-pass option. His blue-collar approach isn’t exciting but it is effective and Neal has the ability to develop into a backup three-down back.

Round 7 (No. 219) — Hollin Pierce, OT, Rutgers​


Remember earlier I was talking about how offensive tackle might be a long-term need. Well, Pierce is a developmental option who could emerge as a starter at right tackle in 2026.

NFL.com says:

Four-year starting tackle with unrivaled measurables and disruptive power for his height. Pierce plays with adequate technique in the run game and imposes his massive frame on static ends to widen the C-gap. He will struggle, however, with shorter edge defenders and athletic penetrators. Pierce is a heavy-legged leaner with average punch timing but exceptional length that keeps rushers out of his frame. His size makes him hard to navigate and he does a nice job of pushing rushers past the pocket. Quick inside counters could eat him up on the next level, though. It won’t always go smoothly, but Pierce’s effective use of his traits gives him a chance to become an NFL right tackle.

Round 7 (No. 246) — Willie Lampkin, iOL, South Carolina​


Honestly, I was stumped by who to take with this pick. In the end, I always default to “when it doubt, pick a lineman.” Teams need more of those — on both sides of the ball — than any other position, so that is never a bad idea.

Besides, the 5-foot-11 Lampkin is a draft crush of BBV draft analyst Chris Pflum. Gotta throw Chris a bone every so often, so here it is.

Wouldn’t it be fun to watch Lampkin block the 5-foot-10 Elijah Chatman in training camp?

Source: https://www.bigblueview.com/2025/4/...w-york-giants-mock-draft-patience-is-rewarded
 
Giants news, 4/7: Shedeur Sanders, Travis Hunter, lots more NFL Draft speculation

Giantshelmet.0.png


New York Giants headlines for Monday

Good morning, New York Giants fans!

From Big Blue View​

More headlines​


Too Deep 96 #1: Travis Hunter Breaks the Draft
There hasn't been an NFL prospect like Hunter in half a century. But please, keep nitpicking his footwork or whatever.

2025 NFL Draft: Biggest Travis Hunter, Shedeur Sanders takeaways from Colorado showcase
Two of the 2025 NFL Draft's biggest stars had NFL decision-makers flocking to Colorado's showcase on Friday. Eric Edholm provides his biggest takeaways from the highly anticipated workout.

Shaun King on Shedeur Sanders, Tyler Shough


“The problem with Shedeur is if you don't think he's a top ten pick, it's like you're hating. I have a late first, early second round grade on Shedeur.”@realshaunking gives his thoughts on Shedeur Sanders: pic.twitter.com/vufL43Re1d

— Ross Tucker Podcast (@RossTuckerPod) April 5, 2025

“The guy that’s really interesting is Tyler Shough. Probably the best ball spinner of the entire class.”@realshaunking breaks down the fast-rising Louisville quarterback: pic.twitter.com/nNM71hdUt7

— Ross Tucker Podcast (@RossTuckerPod) April 5, 2025

More Tyler Shough love


Don’t be surprised to hear Tyler Shough’s name on day 2 of the draft @Nate_Tice and @dpbrugler evaluate Shough’s tape

(via Football 301) pic.twitter.com/yeOUCB3fXy

— Yahoo Sports (@YahooSports) April 5, 2025

Dan Orlovsky knows who he would pick for the Giants

"I'm taking Travis Hunter as quickly as possible."@danorlovsky7 on what the Browns or Giants should do with the 2nd or 3rd pick ✍️ pic.twitter.com/TkoIJ8esiA

— NFL on ESPN (@ESPNNFL) April 4, 2025

Could Browns spoil Giants’ draft plans? - nj.com
The Giants might not have their choice of Travis Hunter or Shedeur Sanders when they draft third overall at this month’s NFL Draft.

New Data Reveals How Giants Roster Building Approach Stacks Up to Super Bowl Winners
How have the Giants performed regarding key roster-building metrics compared to the last ten Super Bowl champions? You might be surprised.

"Neither of them is dynamic" - Ex-Raiders GM gets blunt on Jaxson Dart and Shedeur Sanders' potential before 2025 draft

"Here's where I stand on this group. Jaxson Dart might go in the first just out of necessity. To your point I don't know where Shedeur is going right now," Mayock said. "You know, if Cleveland passes on him and he's sitting there with a bouquet of roses at No.3, the Giants have a head coach and a GM little bit on the hot seat. And if they take Shedeur, it doesn't make their team immediately better."

"So Jaxson Dart, could be played in the first round, he might not be. I look at him very similarly as I do to Shedeur. I think he's a little better athlete than Shedeur. But neither of them is dynamic."

Shedeur to New Orleans?


Sportsbooks are starting to lean toward Shedeur Sanders ➡️ Saints being a strong possibility.

Saints are now the favorite to draft Shedeur Sanders on FanDuel and his draft position O/U is set at 8.5

Do you like this fit? pic.twitter.com/2331sQddOU

— Jaime Eisner (@JaimeEisner) April 6, 2025

BBV mailbag​


Have a Giants-related question? E-mail it to [email protected] and it might be featured in our weekly mailbag.

BBV YouTube​


You can find and subscribe to Big Blue View on YouTube from the show’s home page

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Source: https://www.bigblueview.com/2025/4/...travis-hunter-lots-more-nfl-draft-speculation
 
Your daily Giants trivia game, Monday edition

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Think you can figure out which Giants player we’re talking about? You’ll get five clues to figure him out in our new guessing game!

We’re back for another day of the Big Blue View in-5 daily trivia game. Game instructions are at the bottom if you’re new to the game! Feel free to share your results in the comments and feedback in the Google Form.

Today’s Big Blue View in-5 game​


If you can’t see the game due to Apple News or another service, click this game article.

Previous games​


Sunday, April 6, 2025
Saturday, April 5, 2025
Friday, April 4, 2025

Play more SB Nation in-5 trivia games​


NFL in-5
MLB in-5
MMA in-5

Big Blue View in-5 instructions​


The goal of the game is to guess the correct Giants player with the help of up to five clues. We’ll mix in BOTH ACTIVE AND RETIRED PLAYERS. It won’t be easy to figure it out in one or two guesses, but some of you might be able to nail it.

After you correctly guess the player, you can click “Share Results” to share how you did down in the comments and on social media. We won’t go into other details about the game as we’d like your feedback on it. How it plays, what you think of it, the difficulty level, and anything else you can think of that will help us improve this game. You can provide feedback in the comments of this article, or you can fill out this Google Form.

Enjoy!

Source: https://www.bigblueview.com/2025/4/7/24402866/sb-nation-giants-daily-trivia-in-5
 
How successful are quarterbacks drafted in Round 1?

Houston Texans v Jacksonville Jaguars

Photo by Mike Carlson/Getty Images

Here are the numbers since 2010, and they are not encouraging

With the New York Giants still in the quarterback market, I am updating a series of posts I did last year looking at the success rates of quarterbacks drafted on Day 1, Day and Day 3 of the NFL Draft.

Today, we look at Round 1. The bulk of this post appeared on Big Blue View prior to the 2024 NFL Draft. It has been updated to reflect another year’s worth of data.

We have often talked about the hit rate, the percentage of time NFL teams get it right when drafting a quarterback in Round 1, being somewhere between 30-40%. Well, let’s show the work.

Below, you will find a year-by-year list of quarterbacks drafted in Round 1 since 2010. There have been 49. Bill Barnwell of ESPN did a historical look of his own at quarterback hits and misses in the draft in 2024 and provided a tiered grading system for breaking down the success or failure level of each pick.

I liked it and have adopted it, with my own judgment for which category each selected quarterback falls into.

Here is how Barnwell tiered the quarterbacks:

Hall of Famers are players who have either already made it to the Hall of Fame or have better than a 50/50 chance of making it to Canton someday.

Franchise quarterbacks are players who locked down their team’s primary job and played at a Pro Bowl level for a significant period of time, stretching well beyond their rookie deal, even if they aren’t going to be a Hall of Famer one day.

Solid starters are quarterbacks who were regulars for their teams without ever really challenging the upper echelon of the position, either because of a lack of ceiling, injury or other factors. These players might or might not have earned a second deal with their teams.

Low-end pro careers would include passers who bounced around the NFL as borderline starters or high-end backups without locking down a starting job for a significant period of time. Again, injuries could factor in here.

Disappointments are players who don’t fit into any of the above categories. They might have never earned significant NFL playing time, like Paxton Lynch, or struggled before ending their NFL career quickly, like Johnny Manziel. Teams might consider a solid starter or a low-end pro career as a disappointment depending on where they were drafted, but this group of players basically returned nil value given that it included all first-rounders.

I am including quarterbacks from the 2023 and 2024 draft classes, although there isn’t a big enough body of work to make definitive judgments on those players. That adds an “incomplete” category for several quarterbacks. Consider where I have them listed the 2023 and 2024 draftees as “for now” placements.

By the way, I dropped Daniel Jones from the “solid starter” category to the “low-end pro careers” category.

Round 1 QBs​


2010

No. 1 — Sam Bradford (St. Louis Rams)
No. 25 — Tim Tebow (Denver Broncos)

Future Hall of Famers: 0
Franchise QBs: 0
Solid starters: 0
Low-end pro careers: 1 (Bradford)
Disappointments: 1 (Tebow)

2011

No. 1 — Cam Newton (Carolina Panthers)
No. 8 — Jake Locker (Tennessee Titans)
No. 10 — Blaine Gabbert (Jacksonville Jaguars)
No. 12 — Christian Ponder (Minnesota Vikings)

Future Hall of Famers: 0
Franchise QBs: 1 (Newton)
Solid starters: 0
Low-end pro careers: 0
Disappointments: 3

2012

No. 1 — Andrew Luck (Indianapolis Colts)
No. 2 — Robert Griffin (Washington Redskins)
No. 8 — Ryan Tannehill (Miami Dolphins)
No. 22 — Brandon Weeden (Cleveland Browns)

Future Hall of Famers: 0
Franchise QBs: 1 (Luck)
Solid starters: 1 (Tannehill)
Low-end pro careers: 0
Disappointments: 2 (Weeden, Griffin)

2013

No. 16 — EJ Manuel (Buffalo Bills)

Future Hall of Famers: 0
Franchise QBs: 0
Solid starters: 0
Low-end pro careers: 0
Disappointments: 1

2014

No. 3 — Blake Bortles (Jacksonville Jaguars)
No. 22 — Johnny Manziel (Cleveland Browns)
No. 32 — Teddy Bridgewater (Minnesota Vikings)

Future Hall of Famers: 0
Franchise QBs: 0
Solid starters: 0
Low-end pro careers: 1 (Bortles)
Disappointments: 2

2015

No. 1 — Jameis Winston (Tampa Bay Buccaneers)
No. 2 — Marcus Mariota (Tennessee Titans)

Future Hall of Famers: 0
Franchise QBs: 0
Solid starters: 0
Low-end pro careers: 2
Disappointments: 0

2016

No. 1 — Jared Goff (Los Angeles Rams)
No. 2 — Carson Wentz (Philadelphia Eagles)
No. 26 — Paxton Lynch (Denver Broncos)

Future Hall of Famers: 0
Franchise QBs: 1 (Goff)
Solid starters: 0
Low-end pro careers: 1 (Wentz)
Disappointments: 1 (Lynch)

2017

No. 2 — Mitchell Trubisky (Chicago Bears)
No. 10 — Patrick Mahomes (Kansas City Chiefs)
No. 12 — DeShaun Watson (Houston Texans)

Future Hall of Famers: 1 (Mahomes)
Franchise QBs: 0
Solid starters: 0
Low-end pro careers: 0
Disappointments: 2 (Watson, Trubisky)

2018

No. 1 — Baker Mayfield (Cleveland Browns)
No. 3 — Sam Darnold (New York Jets)
No. 7 — Josh Allen (Buffalo Bills)
No. 10 — Josh Rosen (Arizona Cardinals)
No. 32 — Lamar Jackson (Baltimore Ravens)

Future Hall of Famers: 2 (Allen, Jackson)
Franchise QBs: 0
Solid starters: 2 (Mayfield, Darnold ... I’m putting Darnold here based on 2024)
Low-end pro careers: 0
Disappointments: 1 (Rosen)

2019

No. 1 — Kyler Murray (Arizona Cardinals)
No. 6 — Daniel Jones (New York Giants)
No. 15 — Dwayne Haskins (Washington)

Future Hall of Famers: 0
Franchise QBs: 0
Solid starters: 1 (Murray)
Low-end pro careers: 1 (Jones)
Disappointments: 1 (Haskins)

2020

No. 1 — Joe Burrow (Cincinnati Bengals)
No. 5 — Tua Tagovailoa (Miami Dolphins)
No. 6 — Justin Herbert (Los Angeles Chargers)
No. 26 — Jordan Love (Green Bay Packers)

Future Hall of Famers: 0
Franchise QBs: 4
Solid starters: 0
Low-end pro careers: 0
Disappointments: 0

2021

No. 1 — Trevor Lawrence (Jacksonville Jaguars)
No. 2 — Zach Wilson (New York Jets)
No. 3 — Trey Lance (San Francisco 49ers)
No. 11 — Justin Fields (Chicago Bears)
No. 15 — Mac Jones (New England Patriots)

Future Hall of Famers: 0
Franchise QBs: 0
Solid starters: 1 (Lawrence)
Low-end pro careers: 1 (Fields)
Disappointments: 3 (Wilson, Lance, Jones)

2022

No. 20 — Kenny Pickett (Pittsburgh Steelers)

Future Hall of Famers: 0
Franchise QBs: 0
Solid starters: 0
Low-end pro careers: 0
Disappointments: 1

2023

No. 1 — Bryce Young (Carolina Panthers)
No. 2 — C.J. Stroud (Houston Texans)
No. 4 — Anthony Richardson (Indianapolis Colts)

Future Hall of Famers: 0
Franchise QBs: 1
Solid starters: 0
Low-end pro careers: 0
Disappointments: 0
Incomplete: 2 (Young, Richardson ... Young is trending toward ‘solid starter,’ but I can’t put him there yet)

2024

No. 1 — Caleb Williams (Chicago Bears)
No. 2 — Jayden Daniels (Washington Commanders)
No. 3 — Drake Maye (New England Patriots)
No. 8 — Michael Penix (Atlanta Falcons)
No. 10 — J.J. McCarthy (Minnesota Vikings)
No. 12 — Bo Nix (Denver Broncos)

Future Hall of Famers: 0
Franchise QBs: 1 (Daniels)
Solid starters: 2 (Maye, Nix)
Low-end pro careers: 0
Disappointments: 0
Incomplete: (Williams, Penix, McCarthy ... I need to see Williams in a better situation before even beginning to pass judgment)

Totals​


Future Hall of Famers: 3
Franchise QBs: 9
Solid starters: 7
Low-end pro careers: 7
Disappointments: 18
Incomplete: 5

That’s 19 out of 49 drafted quarterbacks currently in the ‘solid starter’ or above category, a hit rate of 38.8%. If you are looking for Hall of Fame or absolute franchise quarterback as your standard, that’s 12 of 49, or 24.5%. Take out the five incompletes, those percentages are 44.1 and 27.2.

The disappointments category has 18 names or 36.7%. Combine that with the seven quarterbacks in the ‘low-end’ category and that is 51% who did not or have not yet given teams what they hoped to get out of a first-round quarterback.

This means the historical expectation would be that if three quarterbacks are taken in Round 1, only one will have a career justifying the draft capital used on them. Two if teams are lucky.

Barnwell summed up what teams needing or wanting a quarterback should do, and what they should expect, this way:

... knowing history shouldn’t stop teams from drafting quarterbacks. Taking a quarterback in Round 1 is more valuable now than it has ever been, arguably, in the history of the game ... Just have a healthy expectation for what might happen next.

I can’t argue. If you have a need and a chance, you take the swing. Odds are, though, that you are going to get it wrong.

Source: https://www.bigblueview.com/2025/4/...-quarterbacks-drafted-in-round-1-2025-edition
 
Making Travis Hunter a New York Giant in the Pro Football Network writer’s mock draft

NFL Scouting Combine

Photo by Todd Rosenberg/Getty Images

With top two QBs gone, I opted for a two-way star

I recently had the privilege of playing GM for the New York Giants in Pro Football Network Content Creator/Beat Writer Mock Draft. The results of that Round 1 mock draft went live at PFN Monday morning, so let’s discuss it.

Let’s get into how it worked, how PFN’s analysts reacted to it, how I think it would set up the Giants on Day 2 of the draft and, of course, what you think of it.

Cam Ward, of course, went No. 1 to the Tennessee Titans with veteran beat writer and Pro Football Hall of Fame voter Paul Kuharsky making the selection.

The Cleveland Browns, with Tom Moore of SB Nation’s Dawgs By Nature as the selector, chose Colorado quarterback Shedeur Sanders. As we have been learning, that may not be the way the draft actually goes down.

Back-to-back quarterbacks at the top, though, meant I didn’t even have to consider Sanders. I had to choose between Colorado wide receiver/cornerback Travis Hunter and edge defender Abdul Carter.

I chose Hunter.​


Here is what I wrote at PFN:

“This could be the scenario GM Joe Schoen actually faces. You can make good arguments for Travis Hunter or Penn State edge rusher Abdul Carter here. I will opt for Hunter because I see him as really a player-and-a-half with his ability to impact both sides of the ball.

“I don’t know which side of the ball the New York Giants would play him the most, but I can’t imagine an offensive coach like Brian Daboll not wanting to get the ball in his hands. Either way, it’s a nice problem to have.”


Here is how PFN reacted to the pick:

Stats & Insights Analysis: The value of a quarterback on a rookie deal is well known; if the G-Men elect to use Hunter as a Shohei Ohtani-like weapon, could you not argue that this pick could help seriously accelerate the rebuild?

In 2024, New York ranked 28th in the percentage of opponent deep passes that resulted in a touchdown and 29th in deep completions of their own. Either version of Hunter is of use to this team, and his rare potential to impact both weaknesses at some level is appealing.

Truthfully, I think I pick Hunter every time in this scenario.

I think Carter will be a wonderful NFL player, and there is never anything wrong with adding a potentially exceptional pass rusher. There are, honestly, few situations in which I would pass on a player with Carter’s potential for a non-quarterback.

The opportunity to select Hunter, which the Cleveland Browns may deny the Giants in the real draft less than three weeks from now, is one of those.

I hate the “generational talent” phrase and prefer not to use it. So, I won’t use it in reference to Hunter. I like the phrase “transformational player,” and I think that is what Hunter can be at the NFL level.

Hunter would be a difference-maker on either side of the ball, or both.

If you’re the Giants, why not use him on both sides? You have enough talent and depth at both wide receiver and cornerback that he wouldn’t have to play 100% of the snaps on either side of the ball. Maybe it would be a 70-30 split one way or the other, perhaps with some kickoff or punt return duties sprinkled in.

If I were making decisions for the Giants, I would love the opportunity to figure out the best way to capitalize on a player like this.

What about quarterback?​


I fretted about what would happen with Jaxson Dart, Jalen Milroe and even Tyler Shough in Round 1. As I did Sunday in my weekly 7-round Giants mock draft, I held my water and did not trade draft assets to get back into the first round.

Selectors for the Pittsburgh Steelers at No. 21 and Los Angeles Rams at No. 26 both admitted considering Dart, but passed on the opportunity. After Ward and Sanders with the first two picks, no other quarterback went off the board in Round 1.

Unlikely in the real draft? Perhaps. A quarterback-needy team like the New Orleans Saints might make a move at No. 9. The Las Vegas Raiders or New York Jets could move for a quarterback late in the round. There is always the possibility of an unexpected team grabbing a quarterback.

Yet, here, unless the Browns trade No. 33 to a team wanting to jump the Giants for the quarterback of their choosing, I have my choice of Dart-Milroe-Shough. There are pros and cons to grabbing each.

I always default to Dart is QB3, but there are valid arguments for Milroe and even Shough.

Your thoughts, Giants fans?

Source: https://www.bigblueview.com/2025/4/...n-the-pro-football-network-writers-mock-draft
 
NFL Draft rumors: Abdul Carter meets with New York Giants coach Brian Daboll

Capital One Orange Bowl - Penn State v Notre Dame

Photo by Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images

Carter could be in play for Giants at No. 3

Somehow, food always seems to factor into the equation when the New York Giants and top NFL Draft prospects get together. ESPN NFL insider Adam Schefter is reporting that Giants head coach Brian Daboll had breakfast in State College, Pa. on Sunday with Nittany Lions edge defender Abdul Carter, and that Carter will visit East Rutherford, N.J. on Thursday.

There has, of course, been a growing belief in draft circles that the Tennessee Titans will take quarterback Cam Ward No. 1, and the Cleveland Browns will follow suit by selecting Colorado wide receiver/cornerback Travis Hunter at No. 2.

That would leave the Giants with a choice of Carter, Colorado quarterback Shedeur Sanders, or a possible trade down with the third overall pick.

Big Blue View readers were recently asked what they would do as GM in this scenario. Seventy percent (1,512) of 2,166 voters in our poll said they would select Carter, 20% said they would trade down and only 10% said they would select Sanders at No. 3.

Carter reminds many of Micah Parsons, whom the Giants passed on an opportunity to draft in 2021. Selecting him might ease the sting of that ill-fated decision, when the Giants traded down and ended up selecting Kadarius Toney.

The Giants already have 2022 No. 5 overall pick Kayvon Thibodeaux and highly-paid Brian Burns at the edge position. Defensive coordinator Shane Bowen would have to get creative to find maximum snaps and opportunities for all three players.

Being flush with pass rushers, though, is always preferable to not having enough. Just ask former Giants defensive coordinator Steve Spagnuolo.

Source: https://www.bigblueview.com/2025/4/...meets-with-new-york-giants-coach-brian-daboll
 
2025 NFL Draft prospect profile - Billy Bowman, DB, Oklahoma

Tulane v Oklahoma

Photo by Aaron M. Sprecher/Getty Images

Can Bowman be a versatile piece for the Giants’ defense?

The New York Giants have a young and talented secondary, at least on paper. They’ve added quite a bit through free agency and the draft, but are they done building the back end of their defense?

Oklahoma defensive back Billy Bowman Jr. is listed as a safety, however he’s a very versatile player with great movement skills. He can play a variety of positions and alignments in most modern defenses, which could make him a great value if he slips on draft day.

Could that value appeal to the Giants?

Prospect: Billy Bowman Jr. (2)
Games Watched: vs. Iowa State (2023), vs. Texas (2023), vs. Tennessee (2024), vs. Texas (2024)
Red Flags: Hamstring (2021), Knee (2022)

Measurables​

Kent Lee Platte | RAS.football

Strengths​


Best traits

  • Athleticism
  • Ball skills
  • Versatility
  • Competitive toughness

Billy Bowman Jr. is a compact, athletic, aggressive, and versatile defensive back.

Bowman primarily played safety for the Sooners, splitting time between strong and free safety depending on the situation. He has a dense build at 5-foot 9 ⅞ inches, 192 pounds, and combines that with excellent speed (4.42-second 40-yard dash). Bowman also has exceptionally quick feet and his hips are very fluid for a safety, which allows him to execute (off) man coverage assignments well.

His athleticism allows him to quickly get good depth in his zone drops as well as quickly fire downhill from depth. Bowman is quick enough that he doesn’t need to settle before changing directions and has a high play speed.

He flashes impressive instincts and has very good ball skills – he had 6 interceptions, three of which he returned for touchdowns, in 2023 before teams began avoiding him in 2024. Bowman has great range in coverage and is able to close receiving windows from a surprising distance away. Likewise, he’s very physical at the catch point and can jar the ball loose even if the catch is initially made.

Bowman is a very tough player and seems to relish the physical side of the game. He reportedly begged coaches to let him play on special teams despite injuring his knee on a kick return in 2022. He’s also a very willing run defender and a big hitter when he arrives at the point of attack.

Weaknesses​


Worst traits

  • Over-aggression
  • Size

There are two main weaknesses in Bowman’s game, one that could be coachable and one that isn’t.

Starting with the one he can’t do anything about, Bowman is short and has short arms. He isn’t “undersized” at 192 pounds – that’s pretty densely built for a guy measuring 5-foot-10. However, being 5-foot-10 with 29 ½ inch arms will likely lead to size concerns in draft rooms. Bowman could find it difficult to take on blocks at the NFL level, as well as deal with bigger wide receivers in coverage. He doesn’t have a big “catch denial” radius and won’t be able to high-point the ball against longer NFL receivers. His physicality, athleticism, and ball skills will help, but he won’t be out-rebounding 6-foot-3 receivers.

His limited tackle radius also magnifies his other issue: Over-aggression.

Bowman has a consistent issue with biting on misdirection or taking overly-aggressive angles to the ball. Combined with his speed, he’ll often over-run plays and take himself out of position. That can lead to poor or outright missed tackles, and some ugly plays.

Game Tape​


(Bowman is the Oklahoma safety wearing number 2 with white sleeves)

Projection​


Billy Bowman Jr. projects as a high-volume nickel defender at the NFL level.

Whether or not he is named a starter will likely depend on the situation into which he’s drafted.

Bowman could be a starting safety in the NFL, though he might need a year of development before a team is comfortable with him being an every-down player. His over-aggression can lead to big plays, which is a concern. That said, his ability to play a variety of positions could make him valuable as a movable piece.

Regardless of whether he takes the first snap, he should see a high volume of plays per game and he has the potential to be an impact player on any down or distance.

Does he fit the Giants?
Yes

Final Word: A Day 2 value

Source: https://www.bigblueview.com/2025/4/...file-billy-bowman-db-oklahoma-scouting-report
 
Your daily Giants trivia game, Tuesday edition

big_blue_social.0.png


Think you can figure out which Giants player we’re talking about? You’ll get five clues to figure him out in our new guessing game!

We’re back for another day of the Big Blue View in-5 daily trivia game. Game instructions are at the bottom if you’re new to the game! Feel free to share your results in the comments and feedback in the Google Form.

Today’s Big Blue View in-5 game​


If you can’t see the game due to Apple News or another service, click this game article.

Previous games​


Monday, April 7, 2025
Sunday, April 6, 2025
Saturday, April 5, 2025

Play more SB Nation in-5 trivia games​


NFL in-5
MLB in-5
MMA in-5

Big Blue View in-5 instructions​


The goal of the game is to guess the correct Giants player with the help of up to five clues. We’ll mix in BOTH ACTIVE AND RETIRED PLAYERS. It won’t be easy to figure it out in one or two guesses, but some of you might be able to nail it.

After you correctly guess the player, you can click “Share Results” to share how you did down in the comments and on social media. We won’t go into other details about the game as we’d like your feedback on it. How it plays, what you think of it, the difficulty level, and anything else you can think of that will help us improve this game. You can provide feedback in the comments of this article, or you can fill out this Google Form.

Enjoy!

Source: https://www.bigblueview.com/2025/4/8/24403634/sb-nation-giants-daily-trivia-in-5
 
Giants news, 4/8: Abdul Carter meeting, Travis Hunter, mock drafts, more headlines

NFL: New York Giants at Pittsburgh Steelers

Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images

New York Giants headlines for Tuesday

Good morning, New York Giants fans!

From Big Blue View​

Other Giant observations​

2025 NFL Draft: Giants, Browns and Titans headline nine teams that need to ace their picks this April | NFL.com

If New York passes on one and selects a blue-chip talent such as Colorado’s Travis Hunter, it could be a franchise-changing decision. What would the plan be for Hunter: corner, receiver or both? The Giants certainly will try their best to put as much of Hunter's talent to work early if he is indeed the pick, but the plan in this scenario would be important and telling. They ranked dead last in 20-yard pass plays last season and in the bottom five in defensive takeaways. Hunter could help both areas, but he can’t do it alone.

The Giants have five picks in the top 105 overall and can be aggressive. Whether that means trading up for a QB prospect (Shedeur Sanders? Jaxson Dart?) at some point along the way, or hoovering in as much ready-made talent as possible with those picks, they must be ready to strike when opportunities present themselves.

Justin Pugh: Shedeur Sanders can handle the New York City media glare​


Former @Giants OL @JustinPugh believes that @ShedeurSanders could thrive in the New York spotlight pic.twitter.com/hxXxfPP2E1

— NFL Network (@nflnetwork) April 7, 2025

NFL Draft 2025: The bombshell rumor that could change everything | SBNation.com


If the Browns select Travis Hunter at No. 2 things get chaotic. It would be a smart pick for Cleveland, and honestly the best selection for them organizationally. There are two legitimately can’t-miss prospects in this class in Hunter and Abdul Carter, and while the assumption has been that the Browns would take Carter — it’s also a luxury when you already have Myles Garrett as an edge rusher. At the very least Hunter gives you offensive and defensive options, rather than simply overloading on pass rush.

That then creates a nightmare scenario for the New York Giants at No. 3. One of the most difficult decisions any team will face in the 2025 NFL Draft: Take the best player available in Carter, even though he plays the only position you’re set at, take Shedeur Sanders and hope you found a franchise quarterback, or trade down — potentially missing out on both.

New York Giants mock draft 6.0: Here's our latest projection | The Record

So I picked three potential trade partners: the Atlanta Falcons at No. 15, the Cincinnati Bengals at No. 17 and the Denver Broncos at No. 20. I started with a trade package that included the Giants' second round pick and third round pick this year, and tweaked the offer accordingly starting with Denver.
  • Offer to the Broncos that was accepted: No. 34, No. 65 and a 2026 4th rounder
  • Offer to the Bengals that was accepted: No. 34, No. 65 and a 2026 2nd rounder
  • Offer to the Falcons that was accepted: No. 34, No. 65, a 2026 2nd rounder and a pick swap, the Giants' 2026 4th rounder for the Falcons' 2026 5th rounder.

Saints are the betting favorites to pick Shedeur Sanders | Pro Football Talk


Both DraftKings and FanDuel have the Saints as the favorites to select Sanders. DraftKings has the Saints at +300. New Orleans holds the ninth overall pick in the draft. The Giants are next, at +350. The Browns have +425 odds. The Steelers are 7-1. The Jets, Raiders, and Rams are 10-1.

One Surprising Need Each NFL Team Could Address in 2025 NFL Draft | Bleacher Report

Surprising Need: Offensive Tackle. Taking Armand Membou at No. 3 might be a little too rich, but if the Giants end up trading out of the slot then he should be a consideration. Kelvin Banks Jr. sliding into the second round would be a dream scenario. He would be able to play guard if the Giants don't think he's ready to play tackle yet before replacing Eluemunor on the outside when he becomes a free agent in 2026.

NFL Mock Draft 2025: Browns, Cowboys, 49ers Make Bold Trades | The 33rd Team

3. New York Giants Selection: Armand Membou, OL, Missouri. It seems unfathomable New York would pass on Shedeur Sanders because of Russell Wilson and Jameis Winston, but it's something ESPN's Adam Schefter believes happens. We'll roll with that, and if it happens, the Giants will go with Armand Membou. Membou has the traits and play style to be their version of Tristan Wirfs, even if he's a raw prospect.

Coach Coughlin returns to his alma mater​


Great having Syracuse and @NFL legend Tom Coughlin in the building this weekend!

The 2x Super Bowl champion dropped gems all weekend at the first ever Franchise Coaches Clinic

Thank you, Coach‼️ pic.twitter.com/63qu59Eacr

— Syracuse Football (@CuseFootball) April 6, 2025

Giants takeaways: A quirk in Russell Wilson’s contract; Jameis Winston the future starter? | The Athletic

There’s another possible reason for the structure. If things don’t go well, Wilson’s $2 million base salary will make him eminently tradable. It’s not a stretch to imagine a scenario where the Giants are 2-7 again at the trade deadline, with the team wanting to give a young quarterback an extended trial. The Giants and Wilson would both benefit from a separation at that point, and with Wilson only carrying a $1 million salary for the second half of the season, he could be attractive to a contending team with an injured starter or in need of a better backup.

Giants’ Darius Slayton backs Shedeur Sanders after pro day criticism ahead of 2025 NFL Draft | New York Post


The veteran receiver downplayed criticism—including from current players—surrounding Shedeur Sanders patting the football before throwing during the Colorado quarterback’s pro day workout last Friday.

“ I promise he can pat the ball and be just fine if DB’s was so good at breaking on ball pats they’d all have 8+ picks a year. “Same guys that fall for a 2 man dagger concept and give up the dig on 3rd&long every season all season long talkin bout a ball pat what a joke .”

Around the league​


NFL free-agency 2026 rankings: Micah Parsons, Brock Purdy highlight potential class | The Athletic

Commanders add Wes Welker to coaching staff | CBSSports.com

Why the Dallas Cowboys traded for Joe Milton III, and what to expect | The Athletic

Aaron Glenn: Breece Hall in a 'good place,' but Jets plan to use three-running back approach | NFL.com

Jaguars exercise DE Travon Walker's fifth-year option | NFL.com

Raiders releasing starting CB Jack Jones, sources say | ESPN.com

Travis Hunter says he can play every snap from scrimmage if someone gives him the chance | Pro Football Talk

League office, owners at odds over player participation in Olympic flag football | Pro Football Talk

BBV mailbag​


Have a Giants-related question? E-mail it to [email protected] and it might be featured in our weekly mailbag.

BBV YouTube​


You can find and subscribe to Big Blue View YouTube from the show’s home page

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Source: https://www.bigblueview.com/2025/4/...hunter-success-in-drafting-a-1st-qb-headlines
 
How successful are quarterbacks drafted on Day 2?

AFC Wild Card Playoffs: Pittsburgh Steelers v Baltimore Ravens

Kara Durrette/Getty Images

Not as successful as those drafted in Round 1

We recently looked at the NFL success rate for quarterbacks drafted in Round 1, finding that since 2010 only 38.8% turned into solid starters or better. Now, let’s look at quarterbacks selected on Day 2 during that same time period.

This remains unchanged from a year ago when this story first ran. No quarterbacks were chosen on Day 2 of the 2024 draft.

Day 2 QBs​


2010

Round 2

No. 48 — Jimmy Clausen (Carolina Panthers

Round 3

No. 85 — Colt McCoy (Cleveland Browns)

2011

Round 2

No. 35 — Andy Dalton (Cincinnati Bengals)
No. 36 — Colin Kaepernick (San Francisco 49ers)

Round 3

No. 74 — Ryan Mallett (New England Patriots)

2012

Round 2

No. 57 — Brock Osweiler (Denver Broncos)

Round 3

No. 75 — Russell Wilson (Seattle Seahawks)
No. 88 — Nick Foles (Philadelphia Eagles)

2013

Round 2

No. 39 — Geno Smith (New York Jets)

Round 3

No. 73 — Mike Glennon (Tampa Bay Buccaneers)

2014

Round 2

No. 36 — Derek Carr (Oakland Raiders)
No. 62 — Jimmy Garappolo (New England Patriots)

2015

Round 2

None

Round 3

No. 75 — Garrett Grayson (New Orleans Saints)
No. 89 — Sean Mannion (St. Louis Rams)

2016

Round 2

No. 51 — Christian Hackenberg (New York Jets)

Round 3

No. 91 — Jacoby Brissett (New England Patriots
No. 93 — Cody Kessler (Cleveland Browns)

2017

Round 2

No. 52 — DeShone Kizer (Cleveland Browns)

Round 3

No. 87 — Davis Webb (New York Giants)
No. 104 — C.J. Beathard (San Francisco 49ers)

2018

Round 2

None

Round 3

No. 76 — Mason Rudolph (Pittsburgh Steelers)

2019

Round 2

No. 42 — Drew Lock (Denver Broncos)

Round 3

No. 100 — Will Grier (Carolina Panthers)

2020

Round 2

No. 53 — Jalen Hurts (Philadelphia Eagles)

Round 3

None

2021

Round 2

No. 64 — Kyle Trask (Tampa Bay Buccaneers)

Round 3

No. 66 — Kellen Mond (Minnesota Vikings)
No. 67 — Davis Mills (Houston Texans)

2022

Round 2

None

Round 3

No. 74 — Desmond Ridder (Atlanta Falcons)
No. 86 — Malik Willis (Tennessee Titans)
No. 94 — Matt Corral (Carolina Panthers)

2023

Round 2

No. 33 — Will Levis (Tennessee Titans)*

Round 3

No. 68 — Hendon Hooker (Detroit Lions)

2024

Round 2

None

Round 3

None

Totals​


There have been 32 quarterbacks selected on Day 2 of the draft since 2010. To categorize them, I used the same Hall of Famers/Franchise QBs/Solid starters tiers used in the Round 1 quarterbacks post. I added a ‘Solid backups/occasional starters’ category, but what we are really looking for are quarterbacks who fit neatly into ‘solid starter’ or above.

Here is how it breaks down.

Future Hall of Famers: 1 (Wilson ... I don’t know if this is right, but it’s where I had him in 2024 so I will leave him there)
Franchise QBs: 1 (Hurts)
Solid starters: 3 (Dalton, Kaepernick, Carr)
Solid backups/occasional starters: (Foles, Smith, Glennon, Garappolo, Brissett, Rudolph, Lock, Mills, Ridder)
*Levis is To Be Determined

Wilson and Hurts show that it is possible to find a top-tier quarterback on Day 2, though not likely. If you want to argue about whether or not Wilson is a Hall of Fame quarterback, fine. That’s not the point, though. For our purposes, all we are trying to identify is how many of these quarterbacks land in the ‘solid starter’ or above categories.

I have just five of the 32 quarterbacks drafted on Day 2 as ‘solid starters’ or more. That’s just 15.6%. In our look at quarterbacks drafted in Round 1, we found that 38.8% of the quarterbacks drafted in Round 1 landed in the ‘solid starter’ or above category.

That is quite a drop from Day 1. So, even if the NFL isn’t good at identifying and developing Round 1 quarterbacks, it is still far more likely that you will get a quality starter if you take one in the first round rather than trying to find one on Day 2.

Source: https://www.bigblueview.com/2025/4/8/24400531/how-successful-are-quarterbacks-drafted-on-day-2
 
Mel Kiper mock draft: Abdul Carter and an interesting QB to New York Giants

Alabama v Michigan - ReliaQuest Bowl

Jalen Milroe | Photo by Douglas P. DeFelice/Getty Images

Giants land Jalen Milroe at No. 34

Mel Kiper of ESPN is out with a two-round mock draft [Insider only], and the results for the New York Giants are — to say the least — interesting.

Kiper has Penn State edge defender Abdul Carter going to the Giants at No. 3. As has become standard, Kiper has Cam Ward going No. 1 to the Tennessee Titans and Travis Hunter No. 2 to the Cleveland Browns.

ESPN’s draft guru has the Giants selecting a quarterback at 34. He gives the Giants Alabama’s Jalen Milroe. Kiper didn’t choose Milroe over Jaxson Dart (No. 26, Los Angeles Rams) or Tyler Shough (No. 33, Browns), but Milroe and the Giants are an interesting match.

Here is what Kiper said about each pick.

Round 1 (No. 3) Abdul-Carter, edge, Penn State​


Kiper says:

Even after signing Russell Wilson and Jameis Winston, the Giants have been linked to Colorado quarterback Shedeur Sanders. I’m not ruling it out. Neither Wilson nor Winston is a long-term answer. However, the additions mean the Giants can at least toy with passing on the quarterbacks in Round 1 in favor of one of the class’s top two prospects. Travis Hunter is off the board, but Carter would take this New York defense to new heights.

In his first season as a full-time edge rusher (after playing primarily off-ball linebacker in past years), Carter had 12 sacks and 23.5 total tackles for loss. I see elite traits on the tape. And considering the Giants have holes all over their roster, they might opt for the best player on the board. They’d have something with Carter, Brian Burns, Kayvon Thibodeaux and Dexter Lawrence II up front.

Valentine’s View: There are some who might argue for defensive tackle Mason Graham or for the best offensive tackle on the board here. I think, though, that if the Giants stick and pick here Carter is the best play. Because he is the best player.

Graham would be a natural, easy fit next to Dexter Lawrence. I believe, though, that Carter’s ceiling is higher than Graham’s. Yes, the Giants have Kayvon Thibodeaux and Brian Burns. So what? Figure it out. As for offensive tackle, I would prefer an interior offensive lineman somewhere on Day 2 and a developmental tackle later.

Round 2 (No. 34) — Jalen Milroe, QB, Alabama​


Kiper says:

After the Giants passed on Shedeur Sanders in Round 1, they could come back to the quarterbacks on Day 2. There is some love for Milroe in NFL circles right now, and he could fit well in New York. He’d have the chance to learn behind Russell Wilson and Jameis Winston, developing his pre-snap reads and improving his short-to-intermediate accuracy. Milroe throws a great deep ball and can change a game with his legs. He ran for 20 scores in 2024.

This quarterback class doesn’t have the same talent as the classes in 2024 or even 2023 did, but there are some solid middle-tier options. According to ESPN Research, it would be only the seventh time in the common draft era that five or more passers went in the first 34 picks.

Valentine’s View: BBV draft analyst Chris Pflum has been filling my timeline with calls for the Giants to take a flier on Milroe. His reaction when I told him Kiper had selected Milroe for New York?

“Crap. Kiper agrees with me. Time to re-evaluate my whole life.”

Chris here: I wouldn’t say that I’ve been ‘filling’ Ed’s timeline’ with Milroe talk. But I have maintained since about October that I could absolutely see Daboll, Schoen, and Mara all falling in love with Milroe. And as I mentioned in my
Deep Dive on Milroe, he’s probably this draft’s best chance to produce a quarterback that isn’t just good but a PROBLEM for opposing defenses in the mold of Josh Allen, Lamar Jackson, or Jayden Daniels. My question has always been whether or not Schoen and Daboll would get the time to develop him.

Now I need to get back to re-evaluating my life choices. Maybe go on a darkness retreat or something...


Milroe with the Giants/Daboll is such an interesting pairing. Daboll’s greatest success an an offensive coordinator/quarterback developer came with Josh Allen of the Buffalo Bills. There are similarites between Milroe and Allen as outstanding runners, players with big arms and high ceilings, but also quarterbacks with bust potential because of accuracy issues.

Matt Waldman of the Rookie Scouting Portfolio believes Milroe could be the best quarterback in the class. Here is what Waldman, who was a guest on Tuesday’s ‘Valentine’s Views’ podcast, wrote in his draft guide about Milroe:

If I were a pivotal decision-maker for an NFL team, Jalen Milroe is the only quarterback I’m considering within the first three rounds of the draft in this class. I’ll take shots on passers available later who have growth potential as journeymen starters or reserves. Maybe one of them surprises us and proves there’s a lot more to his game.

Otherwise, Milroe is it. Period. End of story ...

Milroe is a quarterback prospect, and a promising one. If anything, I’ve underestimated his accuracy potential in this evaluation and he was already incredibly close to being the QB1 on the RSP’s board.

Milroe is the best pocket player in this class. He has Lamar Jackson’s quiet feet – the ability to make subtle moves so he can continue manipulating defenders and be in position to throw the ball – in the pocket.

Milroe is also one of the best in this class at manipulating defenders.

It is also interesting that Milroe, who has not been expected to be a first-round pick, recently accepted an invitation to be in the Green Room on night one of the draft.

Waldman’s NFL comp for Milroe is Jalen Hurts, another running quarterback whose ability as a passer was questioned entering the NFL. He is now a Super Bowl champ, and that question has been answered.

Coincidentally, Daboll worked with Hurts at Alabama.

With Russell Wilson and Jameis Winston in place to handle 2025, there wouldn’t be pressure on Milroe to play a significant role in 2025. That is development time most believe he needs to become a quality NFL quarterback.

Milroe would also give Daboll an opportunity to show that the work he did with Allen in Buffalo was not a fluke, or a one-off. The question is whether Daboll would get more than a year to work with Milroe and show if that pairing could succeed.

Source: https://www.bigblueview.com/2025/4/...-abdul-carter-jalen-milroe-to-new-york-giants
 
New York Giants draft: Matt Waldman breaks down quarterback options

2025 NFL Scouting Combine

Jalen Milroe | Photo by Brooke Sutton/Getty Images

Skill position analyst visits ‘Valentine’s Views’ podcast

One of my favorite conversations each year as the NFL Draft approaches is with Matt Waldman of The Rookie Scouting Portfolio. Waldman joined the ‘Valentine’s Views’ podcast on Monday for a lengthy conversation about the New York Giants and many of the top quarterbacks in the 2025 draft class.

If you aren’t familiar with Waldman’s work, he is one of the pre-eminent skill position analysts in the industry.

Below is a breakdown of much of what we talked about. The full show is also included at the end of the post.

On the state of the Giants​


“The Giants continue to be a fascinating team and I I like a lot of where the Giants are going even though maybe fans are frustrated with what the expectations were vs. the reality. They intrigue me this year.

“I’m happy coming back and and being able to see that Daniel Jones is out of New York and that Malik Nabers started off so strong even with or without a quarterback.”

An optimistic Waldman believes the Giants are “maybe two to three players away from being a solid wildcard team.”

On Russell Wilson and Jameis Winston​


Even with the veterans Wilson and Winston, the Giants are expected to add a rookie quarterback. Waldman believes the Giants have set up a good quarterback room for whoever that rookie is.

“It’s a good quarterback room for a young quarterback,” Waldman said. “Even though some people might look at the narratives involving Russell Wilson and James Winston and go ‘how can that be a good quarterback room?’ But I think in a lot of ways it can.”

Waldman believes Wilson will give the Giants better quarterback play than they have had.

“Russell Wilson is a strong decision maker who puts the ball in a position for his receivers to win it And that mean that’s great for Malik Nabers. He’s good in the play-action game. So, this is a team that Wilson could provide a lot of stability ... When you watch the best of Russell Wilson you see a player that has an undying belief that he can help his team win.”

Giants a good situation for a rookie QB?​


With GM Joe Schoen and coach Brian Daboll potentially facing the end of their tenures if 2025 doesn’t go well, some might consider the Giants a difficult landing spot for a rookie quarterback. Not Waldman.

“While it seems like the GM and the coach to varying levels are on shaky ground from a Giants perspective the one thing that I’ve always admired about the Giants is that they tend to be patient and see the course about things,” Waldman said. “They tend to give people an opportunity to grow and develop. And I think that in the background ... they’ve built a solid nucleus and they’re not that far away from becoming a really strong nucleus as a team.

“Now you have a quarterback room with two seasoned veterans who have played for multiple teams, who have worked with multiple coaches and systems, who have been to the playoffs, who’ve been to Super Bowls, who have won and lost Super Bowls in dramatic fashion. As a result of all that collective experience in a quarterback room is really important. And to have a quarterback, if you draft one this year, regardless of what happens to the coach the GM and those quarterbacks in the future he’s gonna have one full year to sit and watch ... It’s still not ideal, but it’s better than playing and being thrown every which way and not having veteran leadership mentorship in front of you and then being forced to look at a second scheme and not knowing how to approach it the way a pro would.”

Shedeur Sanders​


“What I see on the field with Shedeur Sanders is a player who who certainly understands that it’s on him to drive this offense,” Waldman said. “And so sometimes he makes conceptual mistakes where in the black zone deep inside his own 20 or in the opponent’s 20 of the red zone where maybe he takes on more than he should and tries to make hero type of plays that he should avoid. But the question becomes is that because the coaching staff has asked you to take that on and knowing that you’re kind of an underdog in every game and that we need you to try and make big plays and they’re okay with that, or is it more about him trying too much when he shouldn’t.”

Waldman said Sanders “might give you the steadiest baseline of quarterback play of the top three guys or four guys in his class.”

“He might never be better than the best version of Geno Smith or Baker Mayfield, but maybe the least likely to be an absolute bust,” Waldman said.

Jalen Milroe​


Giants GM Joe Schoen has said the Giants want a quarterback they can win Super Bowls with.

“I think if you’re going to look for that upside [of] who might be able to win Super Bowls for you there Jalen Milroe might be that guy,” Waldman said.

Waldman feels about Milroe the way he felt about Lamar Jackson and Patrick Mahomes. He said they were “players that people thought were high risk when I thought they weren’t high risk at all.”

Jaxson Dart​


The Ole Miss quarterback is widely considered to be QB3, and is a player I often mock to the Giants at No. 34 or earlier.

Dart is QB5 for Waldman, who has concerns about Dart’s deep ball accuracy.

“He still has a grade that I think is over that median where you could say he could develop into a starter,” Waldman said. “He is very good as a short and low-end intermediate range thrower. The charting on him is very good there. He has the potential to be a strong play-action quarterback.

“The problem with Jaxson Dart right now is that anything beyond 25 yards is suspect with his passing. He is scattershot, literally all over the place where it’s either too long, too short, too wide, too far inside of his target. And it feels like no rhyme or reason why.”

Waldman said sometimes those inaccuracies are tied to mechanical issues, but at other times “I’ve also seen inaccuracies downfield in those ranges where his feet look good, and then I think of a guy like Jake Locker who you look at him throw and you go mechanically it looks all fine but he can’t hit the broad side of a barn beyond certain ranges of the field.”

A surprise in the top five​


Waldman’s QB rankings are:

  1. Cam Ward
  2. Jalen Milroe
  3. Shedeur Sanders
  4. Kurtis Rourke
  5. Jaxson Dart

Yes, you read that right. Kurtis Rourke of Indiana is QB4.

“What you’re seeing is a guy who reads the field well. This is a guy who had 3,000 yards and 29 touchdowns and five interceptions last year on a torn ACL,” Waldman said. “Then you look at how he moves in the pocket, how he is clean with his footwork, compact with his release mechanics, how he holds middle of the field defenders to a side of the field so he can buy room for a target breaking from the opposite side of the field. He does this well in rhythm. He sells things well. He’s confident in tight windows.

Waldman compared Rourke to Brock Purdy.

“This is a guy who’s going to be a good backup regardless, I think, who has potential togrow into something more, Waldman said.

Other guys​


We didn’t talk about Cam Ward. We also did not have time to discuss Tyler Shough or some of the other potential Day 3 quarterbacks. Please give the full episode a listen below. It’s long, so just set the playback speed at an increased clip. Enjoy!

Source: https://www.bigblueview.com/2025/4/...-matt-waldman-breaks-down-quarterback-options
 
2025 NFL Draft prospect profile - Josh Conerly Jr., OT, Oregon

Oregon v Michigan

Photo by Brandon Sloter/Image Of Sport/Getty Images

Could Conerly stay at tackle in the NFL?

The New York Giants offensive line always seems to be a subject of conversation.

The Giants might not be able to draft an offensive lineman at the very top of the draft, but what if one slides a bit?

Oregon left tackle Josh Conerly Jr. is an intriguing option on the edge. He isn’t reckoned as one of the very best tackles in the draft, but he has started the last two seasons at left tackle and performed well at the position. He even had the fourth-best pressure rate allowed on true pass sets of any tackle in the draft.

Cornerly is a bit smaller than ideal, and some teams could view him as a guard because of it, but his ability is undeniable.

Could he be an option for the Giants as a long-term answer for their offensive line?

Prospect: Josh Conerly Jr. (76)
Games Watched: vs. Michigan State (2024), vs. Ohio State (2024), vs. Purdue (2024), vs. Illinois (2024)

Measurables​

Kent Lee Platte | RAS.football

Strengths​


Best traits

  • Footwork
  • Athleticism
  • Competitive toughness
  • Pass protection
  • Zone blocking

Josh Conerly is an athletic and fundamentally sound offensive tackle prospect.

He has unspectacular size, but compensates for it with good leverage, quick and efficient feet, and good hand usage. Conerly has very smooth feet with quick steps that allow him to cover ground and expand the pocket. His feet and footwork allow him to match speed off the edge while also being ready to anchor against power. He isn’t a massive or overpowering lineman, but he does a good job of using his footwork to deal with bull rushers without allowing the pocket to constrict.

Conerly has good hand usage and understands the importance of inside leverage and positioning. He consistently seeks out defenders’ chest plates and uses good grip strength to control them and sustain his blocks. From there, he does a very good job of torquing and using his positioning to seal off running lanes.

His athleticism allows him to be an effective pulling blocker as well as getting in space to block at the second level or on screens. He moves very well in space and is quick to hit his landmarks. Likewise, he’s an effective blocker on zone runs and is able to sustain his blocks while stressing defenses laterally to open rushing lanes.

Conerly also has excellent awareness, consistently looking for work as well as identifying delayed pressure.

Weaknesses​


Worst traits

  • Redirection
  • Play strength

Conerly is a well-rounded offensive lineman with few real weaknesses in his game.

The greatest one is a slight tendency for his feet to freeze when he’s presented with a sudden and well-executed lateral move. In particular, pass rushers who can (very) suddenly switch from attack inside – faking an outside move then attacking the B-gap – can cause Conerly to lunge.

That can cause a cascade of other issues for Conerly, and expose his relative lack of play strength and length.

Conerly is a bit undersized for an offensive tackle at the NFL level. He will probably come in above most teams’ size thresholds, but he certainly lacks ideal measurables. That could lead some teams to consider him a potential guard – or perhaps even center – depending on their blocking scheme.

Likewise, teams that lean heavily into play strength and use down hill man-gap blocking schemes could look elsewhere.

Game Tape​


(Conerly is the Oregon left tackle wearing number 76.)

Projection​


Josh Conerly projects as a starting offensive lineman at the NFL level.

He would likely fit best on an offensive line that makes heavy use of zone blocking schemes. While Conerly can execute man-gap schemes, he lacks the mass and play strength to be a “people mover” for offenses that value such in their linemen.

The question teams will have to answer is where on their line he fits. His measurable traits could suggest a move inside to guard for some teams, however he absolutely has the athleticism to play tackle.

Does he fit the Giants?
Yes

Final Word: A first round talent

Source: https://www.bigblueview.com/2025/4/...ile-josh-conerly-jr-ot-oregon-scouting-report
 
Draft question of the day: Is this really a bold prediction?

NFL: APR 25 2024 Draft

Photo by John Smolek/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

You tell us

Pro Football Network has released its bold predictions for the 2025 NFL Draft. Here is PFN’s “bold” choice for the New York Giants.

Giants Get Their QB… In Round 2​

The consensus opinion has been that the Giants are likely to take one of the top two quarterbacks if either is available at No. 3 overall. But with Russell Wilson around as a short-term starter, the Giants don’t necessarily have to draft a quarterback for 2025.

That could allow New York to take Carter or Hunter, either of whom would likely make a larger impact on the 2025 team than Sanders. While that might feel short-sighted, it’s important to remember the extreme pressure both head coach Brian Daboll and GM Joe Schoen are facing. Without a competitive season, it’s almost certain both will be gone.

Therefore, the Giants might feel their best win-now plan is to take a premium prospect at No. 3 overall and the best available quarterback prospect at No. 34 overall in the second round. PFSN’s Mock Draft Simulator has scenarios where Ole Miss quarterback Jaxson Dart falls to the second round, which would be a reasonable swing for a long-term solution.

Does that really even qualify as a bold prediction? It might be a bold choice by the Giants, but increasingly it seems to be the consensus opinion.

Your thoughts, Giants fans?

Source: https://www.bigblueview.com/2025/4/...n-of-the-day-is-this-really-a-bold-prediction
 
New York Giants to host former Bears DE for free agent visit

Seattle Seahawks v Chicago Bears

DeMarcus Walker | Photo by Cooper Neill/Getty Images

DeMarcus Walker had 7.0 sacks playing for Shane Bowen in 2022

With attention focused on the upcoming NFL Draft, it is easy to forget that there are still useful free agents on the market. The New York Giants are reportedly hosting one of those for a visit on Wednesday, as eight-year veteran defensive end DeMarcus Walker is scheduled to visit the Giants.

Walker, who will be 31 in September, was a second-round pick by the Denver Broncos in 2017. He played four years for the Broncos, one each for the Houston Texans and Tennessee Titans, and the last two seasons with the Chicago Bears. As a member of the Titans in 2022, Walker played for Shane Bowen, Tennessee defensive coordinator at the time. Walker had a career-best 7.0 sacks that season.

Walker started all 17 games for the Bears in 2024, finishing with 3.5 sacks and a career-high 47 tackles.

In 100 career regular-season games, including 42 starts, Walker has 26.5 sacks.

The Giants added veteran defensive tackles Roy Robertson-Harris and Jeremiah Lebetter, and edge defender Chauncey Golston earlier in the offseason.

Source: https://www.bigblueview.com/2025/4/...bears-de-demarcus-walker-for-free-agent-visit
 
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