Marcus Mbow gave the Giants something they have been missing up front: a young offensive lineman with real flexibility and a reason to keep building around him.
The rookie fifth-round pick logged 325 offensive snaps, played in 13 games, and made three starts last season, with two coming at left tackle and one at right tackle. For a player pressed into action early, that was enough to put him on the radar as more than just another developmental body. His preseason debut against Buffalo even sparked steal-of-the-draft talk, and the tape showed why Purdue’s line benefitted from his athletic profile.
The numbers tell the more cautious side of the story. Mbow’s 54.0 PFF overall grade ranked 79th of 89 qualified tackles, which is a blunt but fair snapshot of a rookie learning on the fly.
The upside is still obvious, though. He has the movement skills, and the Giants clearly see a 22-year-old worth investing in while the technique catches up.
What separates Mbow from a lot of other late-round linemen is the range of his background. At Purdue, he played both guard and tackle and had some limited work at center as well.
That kind of versatility is exactly what New York values, and the coaching staff has even talked about using his interior experience instead of limiting him to swing tackle duties. In a league where one backup who can handle multiple spots can save a season, that matters.
The route to playing time is not wide open, but it exists. The Giants’ projected starting five appears settled with Andrew Thomas and Jermaine Eluemunor at tackle, John Michael Schmitz at center, Jon Runyan Jr. at left guard, and first-round pick Francis Mauigoa at right guard. That leaves Mbow looking more like the top reserve than a Week 1 starter, with his best shot at snaps coming through an interior competition or an injury to a line that leaned heavily on depth last season.
That is why Mbow stands out as more than a fill-in. He is cheap, he is under team control for three more seasons, and he already looks like the kind of developmental piece the Giants have not often had in front of their quarterback.
He does not need to win a starting job in July to matter. If he keeps showing he can handle four spots, the Giants will find a place for him.
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