Malik Nabers’ name shouldn’t be sliding down trade boards the way it has.
The Giants wideout looked like he was barreling toward superstardom after a rookie season that put him in the conversation with the league’s top receivers. Then came the sophomore year that never really got going, cut short by a torn ACL and meniscus in Week 4. Since then, plenty of people seem to be acting like that first season never happened.
That’s the part that’s hard to square. Nabers is showing up outside top-10 position lists, and ESPN’s Bill Barnwell left him off a group of players he believes “would land a first-round pick (or more) via trade.” Barnwell’s reasoning centered on health, writing, “The hope will be that Nabers recovers and lives up to the promise we saw before the injury, but it would be tough to justify trading a first-round pick for him before that happens.”
Sure, any team trying to pry him away from New York has to factor in the injury. He’s coming off a major knee issue and has already had two surgeries since.
Availability matters. No one is pretending otherwise.
But there’s a difference between caution and underrating the player. Nabers turns 23 on July 28, and he still comes with at least two more years of cost-friendly team control, plus a club option for 2028. That kind of age and contract situation matters a lot in trade conversations, especially when the talent is this obvious.
And the recent market for big-name players backs that up. The Giants sent Dexter Lawrence to the Cincinnati Bengals for the 2026 No. 10 overall pick, which became offensive lineman Francis Mauigoa.
The Philadelphia Eagles got a 2028 first-rounder and a 2027 fifth-round pick from the New England Patriots for A.J. Brown.
Lawrence and Brown were both entering their age-29 seasons, and both were considered distressed assets when they moved. Brown also reportedly has a degenerative knee condition that the Patriots knew about. Even with those concerns, teams still paid up.
Barnwell noted that front offices have gotten “really aggressive targeting proven pass-rushers and defensive disruptors,” but the same logic applies to established receivers. Brown is one example. Nabers, younger and under contract, and able to beat any coverage, belongs in that same tier of trade value at the very least.
The lesson is simple: the injury changed the conversation, but it shouldn’t have erased the value.
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