The New York Giants’ pass rush has been one of the clearest calling cards on defense, and Brian Burns is the engine behind it.
Burns turned in a monster season, piling up 16.5 sacks, 31 quarterback hits, 22 tackles for loss, three forced fumbles and seven passes defensed. That production pushed him onto ESPN’s list of the NFL’s 10 best pass rushers, though just barely.
He landed at No. 9.
ESPN’s ranking was built from ballots submitted by more than 70 voters, with top-10 votes, composite average, interviews, and film study all feeding into the final order. The network said the exercise was meant to answer one question: “Who are the best players right now?”
Burns’ place on the list came with a mixed set of markers. ESPN listed his highest ranking at sixth, his lowest as unranked, and noted that he was an honorable mention last year.
It also pointed out that he finished second in the league with 16.5 sacks and earned second-team All-Pro honors. The sack total was the highest by a Giants player since Jason Pierre-Paul in 2011.
There was a time when Burns’ talent was never in doubt, only the consistency of his production. ESPN cited that history, along with the fact that some evaluators wanted to see him play with more power on a regular basis.
But one NFL coordinator said Burns looked different this time around: “He was different than in years past,” said an NFL coordinator. “He was more of a force consistently, more of a pain in the ass to play against.”
His 31 quarterback hits ranked fourth among all defensive players, and he was the only player in the league with five multiple-sack games last season. Burns had previously been a top-10 selection before slipping to honorable mention in 2025.
The rest of ESPN’s top 10 was led by Myles Garrett, followed by Micah Parsons, Will Anderson Jr., Maxx Crosby, Aidan Hutchinson, Danielle Hunter, T.J. Watt, Nick Bosa, Burns, and Nic Bonitto.
ESPN’s own notes on the list also show how wide the spread was around Burns. Hunter was described as a player whose votes were, in part, a career appreciation nod, while Watt’s pass rush win rate was said to be the lowest in the group and his play “clearly in decline.” Bosa, meanwhile, was ranked despite playing only three games before injury.
Burns’ 2025 season, though, gave the Giants exactly the kind of front-line production that can carry a defense. And by ESPN’s own criteria, it was strong enough to put him among the league’s best - even if only at No. 9.
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