Jaxson Dart Just Got The Kind Of Snub Giants Fans Hate

As Jaxson Dart is overlooked in a recent poll of top NFL quarterbacks, the young Giants QB is set to use the slight as a catalyst for success this season.

Jaxson Dart didn’t crack the conversation in ESPN’s annual quarterback survey, and that kind of omission tends to stick with a player like him.

Twenty quarterbacks picked up at least one vote from league executives, coaches and scouts in the poll that ranked the NFL’s top passers. Dart, the Giants’ second-year quarterback, was left out completely.

That put him outside a group that still found room for names like the Jaguars’ Trevor Lawrence, the Bucs’ Baker Mayfield and the Colts’ Daniel Jones. Around the NFC East, the standard was even clearer: the Cowboys’ Dak Prescott landed at No. 6 overall, while the Eagles’ Jalen Hurts and Commanders’ Jayden Daniels were honorable mentions.

It’s not exactly a surprise that Dart, 23, wasn’t near the top of a list like this after winning only four games as a rookie. Titans quarterback Cam Ward, the only quarterback drafted ahead of Dart in 2025, also got no votes.

Still, this is the kind of slight that can land hard on a young quarterback with a point to prove. Dart has already shown he’s wired to use that kind of doubt as fuel. Last season’s talk about his reckless playing style, sparked by an internal Giants leak, became motivation for him to push back and prove people wrong.

The Giants’ new coaching staff is working with Dart to strike the right balance with his aggressiveness depending on the situation. But the edge is still there, and so is the appetite to turn skepticism into production.

So no, Dart wasn’t part of the top-quarterback discussion entering 2026. But that doesn’t mean he’ll ignore it. If anything, it gives him exactly the sort of bulletin board material he seems built to use.

In Other News...

Giants Left Guard Battle Could Lead To A Surprising Camp Move

Jon Runyan Jr. has been the Giants primary left guard in practices, but his spot is no longer feeling locked in as training camp and preseason approach. The team is weighing its options along the interior line, and the conversation has widened beyond a simple depth chart check, with the possibility of a camp competition now hanging over a position that looked settled not long ago.

Daniel Faalele is among the names in the mix after joining the Giants, and the group of alternatives also includes Evan Neal and Lucas Patrick. For a line still trying to find the right combination, the question is no longer just who starts in Week 1, but whether the Giants are willing to make a bigger move before camp even gets rolling. [Read more 🡒]

Giants Camp Already Has A Health Problem Fans Feared Most

The Giants are heading into camp with the kind of health concern no team wants to be talking about in July. After a spring that already included multiple notable injuries, the focus now is less on scheme and more on how quickly the roster can get through the early part of the summer without adding to the list. Head coach John Harbaugh said the team has added new monitoring technology to help track players, but he also made clear that injuries like these are hard to forecast and that the practice load itself has not changed.

For a club trying to sort out its depth chart, the timing is especially rough because the injury picture does not stop there. Malik Nabers is expected to open camp on PUP after a second knee procedure, Darius Slayton is still rehabbing core muscle surgery, and Cam Skattebo is on track for Week 1. Even before the pads come on, the Giants are already dealing with the kind of availability questions that can shape a season before it really starts. [Read more 🡒]

Giants Insider Just Cast Serious Doubt On One Young Defensive Lineman

Dan Duggan of The Athletic offered a pretty sober read on rookie defensive tackle Anquin Barnes Jr., and it was the kind of evaluation that usually gets attention in late summer. Barnes came to the Giants after stops at Alabama and Colorado, arriving as an undrafted free agent with the sort of profile that makes every practice rep matter, especially for a young lineman trying to carve out a place on a crowded roster.

For Barnes, the next few weeks may be less about long-term projection and more about earning every chance he gets in preseason action. The Giants still have room to sort through the back end of the defensive line, and Barnes will need to show enough to keep himself in the conversation for a 53-man spot, even as the questions around his college rsum continue to linger. [Read more 🡒]