Giants Are Betting Their Secondary Reset On Paulson Adebo

The New York Giants are looking to Paulson Adebo to stabilize their cornerback lineup amidst major offseason changes and justify his hefty contract.

The Giants rebuilt their cornerback room this offseason, but one name never moved: Paulson Adebo.

Deonte Banks slid out of the starting job last season and then kept dropping on the depth chart this spring. Greg Newsome II came in through free agency.

Colton Hood arrived as a second-round rookie. Through all of that turnover, Adebo stayed planted as the boundary starter, and he did it on the biggest contract in the room by a wide margin.

That contract is exactly why the Giants need 2026 to look different from 2025.

Adebo signed a three-year, $54 million deal in March 2025, with $34.75 million guaranteed. At the time, it made him the 14th-highest-paid cornerback in the league.

Now his 2026 cap hit is set to climb to about $23 million, including a fully guaranteed $17.25 million base salary. That leaves the Giants with almost no practical way to move on from him this year.

He is part of the plan whether the performance matches the price tag or not.

That’s the reality of the room. Banks had his fifth-year option declined and is being viewed as a trade candidate heading into camp.

Newsome is on a one-year prove-it deal. Hood is a rookie.

Adebo is the only corner the Giants have tied to real guaranteed money, which makes him the fixed point in a group that otherwise keeps shifting.

The problem is that his 2025 production was solid, not special.

PFF gave Adebo a 58.4 overall grade last season, which ranked 74th out of 114 qualified cornerbacks. His 57.9 coverage grade landed 77th.

Quarterbacks posted a 92.0 passer rating when throwing at him. He gave up 48 catches, picked off one pass, broke up five others, and added 64 solo tackles in run support.

That’s useful starter work. It’s not the kind of output you expect from a corner carrying a top-15 salary.

Even so, compared with Newsome, Adebo still looks like the steadier option. The numbers back that up across the board in coverage. Adebo’s 2025 PFF grades were better than Newsome’s in every category that matters on the outside, and he held quarterbacks to a 92.0 passer rating, more than 15 points lower than Newsome’s 107.2.

2025 PFF (of 114 qualified CBs) Paulson Adebo Greg Newsome II

Overall defensive grade 58.4 (74th) 55.4 (85th)

Coverage grade 57.9 (77th) 56.8 (81st)

Interceptions 1 1

Passer rating allowed 92.0 107.2

That’s why the Giants are building this secondary around him, even if the results last season were closer to average than elite.

New defensive coordinator Dennard Wilson steps into a secondary that was one of the weaker parts of the roster, and almost every corner in front of him comes with some kind of question. Wilson made his name developing defensive backs in Baltimore, and Adebo is the first player who gets to test that background in New York. At 26, and under contract through 2027, he has the kind of setup that could help him get back toward the form he showed in 2023 with New Orleans.

The Giants have spent two offseasons betting that Adebo is a top-half corner in this league. Newsome, Hood, and a demoted Banks fill out the rest of the room, but the whole thing only works if the expensive anchor starts playing like one.

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