Darius Slayton is walking into Giants camp with a contract that says one thing and a receiver room that says another.
His deal is still on the books for 2026 at a $15.25 million cap charge, the second year of the three-year, $36 million contract he signed in March 2025. That pact included $22 million guaranteed, but the money has already started to shift from a commitment issue to a football one. The Giants have paid him $13 million in cash in 2025, which leaves the real question sitting on the field: what exactly is Slayton’s role now?
That’s where the discomfort starts. At 28, he’s no longer the clear-cut answer in the room.
Malik Nabers is the unquestioned WR1 once he comes back from the torn ACL, meniscus, and labrum that ended his 2025 in Week 4. Darnell Mooney arrived in free agency and is expected to line up opposite him.
Calvin Austin III took advantage of extra snaps this spring while Nabers and Slayton were sidelined. Odell Beckham Jr. is back on a veteran-minimum deal worth $1.3 million, rookie Malachi Fields was traded up for as a big-bodied X, Jalin Hyatt is still fighting for a roster spot, and JuJu Smith-Schuster brings another veteran option who can handle much of the same work Slayton has been doing.
That’s a crowded picture for a player who used to feel essential.
The production has been slipping for a while, and 2025 was the latest step down. Slayton finished with 37 catches on 60 targets for 538 yards and one touchdown, missing three games with a hamstring issue.
It was the fewest receptions and yards he’s had in any season in which he played at least 14 games. He also posted a 13.8-yard average depth of target and dropped six passes.
The grading matched the eye test. PFF gave him a 58.0 overall mark, ranking him 73rd among 81 qualified receivers, and a 59.3 receiving grade that landed 72nd. The vertical role is still there in theory, but the output has thinned out year after year.
Season Rec Yards TD Yards/Rec
2022 46 724 2 15.7
2023 50 770 4 15.4
2024 39 573 2 14.7
2025 37 538 1 14.5
The trend line is hard to miss. Every number is drifting the wrong direction, and the lone touchdown in 2025 was the lowest total of Slayton’s career in a season where he started 12 games.
There’s also the timing of his offseason to consider. Slayton had core-muscle surgery and was expected to be cleared for training camp, but that still leaves him trying to ramp up instead of spending the spring building chemistry. The Giants report veterans to camp on July 28, and that matters in a room where the pecking order behind Nabers is wide open.
First-year head coach John Harbaugh has already changed how the team handles bodies, too. He inherited a rough spring in which three Giants tore Achilles tendons away from live action, including Roy Robertson-Harris and Gunner Olszewski, and the new staff has adjusted its practice and recovery approach in response. Slayton is stepping into that setup needing reps he didn’t get.
And yet the Giants still have real history with him. Across his first six seasons, Slayton has 259 receptions, 3,897 yards, and 21 touchdowns.
From 2019 to 2023, he led the team in receiving yards in four of five years. The contract reflected a belief that the deep threat still had another gear.
Instead, 2025 gave them 538 yards and one score.
That’s the problem in plain view: the Giants are paying top-of-the-room money for a receiver who may no longer be at the top of the room.
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