All eyes in New York are on Isaiah Likely, and for good reason. The tight end arrives on a three-year, $40 million deal with expectations attached, following John Harbaugh to the Giants after four seasons in Baltimore. League insiders are treating him like a major piece of this next chapter, and Likely sounds ready for the spotlight.
“I feel like New York was just the best place for me to pick to be able to blossom, show my talents, and show that I’m a top tight end caliber player in this league now,” Likely said.
His case is simple enough: the Giants are giving him a chance to do more than he could in Baltimore, where injuries and the Ravens’ depth kept his role from expanding in 2025. He finished that season with 307 yards and one touchdown, then moved on to New York in free agency.
Likely is hardly the only Giants player drawing attention as camp approaches. The roster has been getting a fresh round of buzz around several key names, starting with Jaxson Dart. The logic around Dart is familiar - quarterbacks often make their biggest leap from Year 1 to Year 2 - and that belief is fueling plenty of preseason optimism about his second season.
There’s also a lot of confidence in the Giants’ defensive makeover. One preseason view described the team as “Regenerated,” pointing to a new coach, young offensive weapons with breakout potential, and a rebuilt defense. Harbaugh’s arrival has also prompted praise from former players, including Kyle Van Noy, who said Harbaugh will return toughness to the Giants.
On defense, Arvell Reese is another name being pushed into the spotlight. The Giants have not had the NFL Defensive Rookie of the Year since Lawrence Taylor in 1981, and Reese is being slotted into a role that fits his skill set.
The plan is to line him up next to Tremaine Edmunds in the middle of the defense, let him attack gaps from the weak side, and use his 4.46 speed to chase plays sideline to sideline. Ohio State defensive coordinator Matt Patricia had him in a read-and-react role, and the Giants expect to use him the same way.
“To me, Arvell Reese was the best player in the draft, and I think a part of that is the hybrid nature of all the ways he can impact your defense,” The Athletic draft analyst Dane Brugler said. “And I think some people see that, and they’re a little scared off by, ‘Oh well, he doesn’t have a true position.’
This isn’t a tweener. And there’s a big difference between being a tweener and then being versatile.”
The Giants’ new-look defense is also getting respect in positional rankings. Tremaine Edmunds checked in at No. 6 after a season with 112 tackles and four interceptions before the Bears released him.
Malik Nabers landed at No. 7 after a rookie year that produced 109 catches for 1,204 yards, though his ACL tear last September left voters leaning toward healthier receivers. An AFC executive said, “He’s easily a top-10 receiver.
The knee situation is worrisome, but hopefully he bounces back soon. But he can do everything you need,”
Likely came in at No. 8, underscoring how much attention he’s carrying into New York.
Even with the upgrades, there are still questions. Center remains the biggest roster concern, with John Michael Schmitz projected to start.
He allowed five sacks and 23 quarterback pressures last year, according to Next Gen Stats, and was also described as underwhelming in the run game. Unless he makes a surprise fourth-year jump, he could be a problem in Harbaugh’s offense.
Still, the broader outlook around the Giants is trending upward. One over/under projection has them at over 7.5 wins, with Harbaugh’s arrival, the addition of Likely, and a defense that now looks dangerous all feeding the optimism. The same projection also pointed to Abdul Carter as a Defensive Player of the Year long shot at 50-1, noting his rookie season included four sacks, 18 quarterback hits and 66 pressures despite maturity issues.
And while the Giants are trying to build something new, the fan conversation still finds room for nostalgia. Ed Valentine asked readers who their first favorite Giants player was, sharing that his was Fran Tarkenton and recalling the No. 10 uniform his parents bought him as a kid - complete with thigh pads, shoulder pads and a helmet.
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That matters even more now that New York has added ArDarius Washington to the mix. The move gives the Giants another option in a safety room that is supposed to be anchored by Jevon Holland, and it quietly raises the pressure on Nubin heading into year three. If he does not take the step forward the team is counting on, the path to a starting role could get a lot less certain. [Read more 🡒]
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The next step is a move inside to right guard, where Neal will be part of a crowded competition for a roster spot rather than a simple return to his old role. For a player whose Giants tenure has already been marked by injuries, inconsistency and uncertainty, the shift offers both a fresh start and another layer of pressure. The team still has other options in the mix, which means Neal has to show he can hold up in a new spot before anything about his future feels settled. [Read more 🡒]
Giants Fans Already Have One Big Reason To Worry About JuJu
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Smith-Schusters early spring has not helped his case, with minicamp and early practices already stirring concern about whether he can secure a final roster spot. In a group that now has plenty of competition for limited openings, the margin for error is thin, and the next stretch of camp figures to say a lot about whether he can steady himself before the roster crunch arrives. [Read more 🡒]
