The Giants’ tight end conversation keeps circling back to the same names, but the veteran who may matter most in the trenches is Chris Manhertz.
Isaiah Likely has been the headline magnet in recent weeks, with John Harbaugh still plenty fond of him from their Baltimore days and the fifth-year tight end drawing breakout buzz. Theo Johnson is also in the mix and looks set to stay one of Jaxson Dart’s reliable outlets.
But when it comes to the third tight end spot, Daniel Bellinger is gone, off to the Titans to reunite with Matt Nagy on a deal that included a $14 million guarantee. That opens the door for Manhertz, and he should still be expected to be on the field in Week 1.
His value isn’t in the box score. Manhertz is there to block, and he does it at a high level.
Pro Football Focus ranked him as the Giants’ third-best run blocker, trailing only Andrew Thomas and Cam Skattebo. That kind of grading can stir debate, but the larger point is clear: he’s an important part of the run game, especially when Skattebo, Dart and Tyrone Tracy Jr. are all healthy.
Manhertz has never been much of a pass catcher. Over 154 games, he has just 30 receptions.
Since becoming a full-time player in 2017, he’s averaged 3.2 catches and 33 yards a season, with only three touchdown grabs in that stretch. At 34, he’s almost always used in multi-tight-end packages as an extra blocker.
That role has followed him everywhere. He’s done it while helping protect Cam Newton and Christian McCaffrey in Carolina, and he’s doing it again for the Giants’ rushing attack. New York brought him back on a one-year, $1.5 million deal earlier this offseason, and while cutting him wouldn’t create much cap pain, there’s little reason to think he’s on the roster bubble.
The Giants’ personnel choices also point in the same direction. Harbaugh and Nagy both lean on multiple tight ends, with Nagy’s Chiefs using 13 personnel at a top-ten rate last year.
Manhertz and fullback Patrick Ricard are expected to be part of that mix, and all signs suggest Manhertz makes it through final cuts. Ricard, a six-time Pro Bowler for Harbaugh in Baltimore, is also expected to split time between fullback and tight end.
For all the attention on the receiving options, Manhertz is the kind of veteran who can quietly shape how the Giants run the ball from Week 1 on.
In Other News...
Evan Neals Giants Future Suddenly Feels More Dangerous Than Ever
Evan Neal entered the offseason with a straightforward path back into the Giants plans, after New York brought him back on a minimum-level deal with the idea that he could fight for the right guard job. The move made sense as a low-cost reset for a former high draft pick who has spent much of his Giants career trying to find a better fit, and coach John Harbaugh has still sounded open to the possibility that Neal can help somewhere along the line.
The problem is the depth chart around him has changed fast, and not in his favor. With the Giants adding more competition up front, Neal is no longer just battling for a starting role, and the margin for error is much thinner now. His future in New York feels more precarious than it did a few months ago, which turns every practice rep into something closer to survival than development. [Read more 🡒]
Giants Still Have A Few Cheap Fixes Left In This Overhaul
John Harbaugh and general manager Joe Schoen have already knocked out plenty of the Giants biggest offseason needs, but the roster still has a few thin spots that could use a cheap veteran patch before 2026. Linebacker depth remains one of the more obvious concerns, especially with Micah McFadden coming off an injury-marred season and rookie Jack Kelly still in the mix behind the starters, while the back end of the defensive line could also use another steady body.
The same kind of low-risk thinking applies in the backfield, where the Giants could keep looking for an affordable third running back even with Devin Singletary still around. Among the bargain names that fit the bill are Kenneth Murray Jr., Elandon Roberts, Najee Harris and Greg Gaines, a short list that gives New York a few different ways to add experience without spending much more to keep the overhaul moving. [Read more 🡒]
