Brian Burns Just Got Eye-Opening National Praise Before Giants Camp

Brian Burns garners unexpected recognition in the preseason rankings, prompting discussions on player classification and his impact in the league.

Brian Burns has picked up an unusual bit of praise heading into Giants training camp, and it comes from a place the Giants will happily take.

CBS Sports’ Pete Prisco unveiled his top 100 players and slotted Burns at No. 56.

Malik Nabers also made the cut at No. 99, even though he missed most of last season with a knee injury. But the eyebrow-raising part of Prisco’s list is where he placed Burns among linebackers: second in the NFL, behind only 49ers star Fred Warner, who checked in at No. 16 overall.

Burns backed up his place on the list with a big season, earning second-team All-Pro honors after piling up an NFC-best 16 ½ sacks. He also finished with 22 tackles for loss, seven pass breakups and three forced fumbles.

“Burns is an explosive, twitchy edge player who can wreck a game,” Prisco wrote.

Now entering his third year with the Giants, Burns did not show up on Prisco’s 2025 rankings.

The placement is the kind of offseason list that usually exists to spark debate, but in this case the Giants probably won’t mind the extra attention. Burns belongs on any serious top-100 conversation, even if the linebacker label is where things get messy.

That’s because Burns is the sort of player most fans would call an EDGE rusher, while Prisco listed Myles Garrett as a defensive end and gave him the No. 1 spot after Garrett’s NFL-record 23 sacks with the Browns. Warner, by contrast, is a classic middle linebacker whose game is built around tackles, forced fumbles and the occasional interception.

That’s what makes the comparison so strange. Burns is being valued for the havoc he creates rushing the passer, while Warner is being judged as a field-tilting off-ball linebacker. They’re both impact defenders, but they do their damage in very different ways.

Still, the headline for the Giants is simple: one prominent NFL analyst sees Burns as the league’s second-best linebacker, and that’s not the kind of praise anyone around the building is likely to argue with.

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