Giants May Have A Bigger Rookie Role Planned For Arvell Reese

As the Giants prepare to unleash Arvell Reese in a hybrid defensive role, the young linebacker is poised to transform expectations with his raw talent and strategic adaptability.

Arvell Reese is already being handed a big job, and the Giants are treating it like the start of something much bigger.

The rookie linebacker is expected to step into the starting lineup when the Giants open the season against the Cowboys, according to Bleacher Report’s Kristopher Knox, who wrote that "Reese will be in the starting lineup when the Giants face the Cowboys to open the season."

That kind of immediate role makes sense for a fifth-overall pick. Teams don’t spend that kind of draft capital on an off-ball linebacker and then ease him in slowly.

But Reese is also arriving with a timeline that still feels almost unreal. He turns 21 in late August, a reminder that this is still a very early stage of his development even as the expectations around him keep climbing.

At 6-foot-4 and 243 pounds, Reese already looks the part of a centerpiece defender. What makes him such an intriguing piece, though, is that his value was never limited to one lane.

Coming out of Ohio State, plenty of evaluators saw him as a pure edge threat, someone whose 4.46 speed could be used to chase quarterbacks from the outside. The Giants, though, appear to view him as something more versatile and more dangerous.

They see a player built to operate in the middle of the defense, where his size and physical style can matter on every snap. That setup also gives him a chance to learn behind veteran Tremaine Edmunds while handling run defense, pass coverage and the kind of delayed blitzes that let him attack downhill and disrupt plays.

There’s a familiar blueprint here. Micah Parsons began his Cowboys career in a hybrid role, spending time inside before eventually becoming a full-time pass-rushing force. Reese could follow a similar path if the Giants choose to expand his responsibilities over time.

Or he could become something even bigger for them: a long-term anchor in the middle, the kind of defender who brings both the brains and the violence to shape an entire unit for years.

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