Acquired for a seventh-round pick on the eve of the 1984 season, the Yale-educated safety became a key contributor during New York's championship run two years later.
Acquired for a seventh-round pick on the eve of the 1984 season, the Yale-educated safety became a key contributor during New York's championship run two years later.
With Brian Burns, Abdul Carter, and Arvell Reese all locked into the edge room, Thibodeaux enters a contract year that could end in a big payday, a trade, or a departure.
John Harbaugh brought his longtime punter to New York on a record contract, and Stout's leg — and a surprising MetLife Stadium track record — make the bet look smart.
When GM George Young bypassed the offensive line for a linebacker in 1984, fans were baffled. Two years later, Carl Banks delivered one of the most dominant defensive seasons in Big Blue history.
Despite both ranking among the league's most efficient pass protectors in 2025, Sports Illustrated left Thomas and Eluemunor off its top five — and the numbers say that's a mistake.
Isaiah Likely, Malachi Fields, and a crowded backfield are set to redefine who leads the Giants in receiving, rushing, and TDs under Matt Nagy's new system.
The longest-tenured Giant remains serviceable, but declining targets, a bloated drop count, and a crowded receiver room suggest 2026 is his last run in New York.
From his rookie season through Super Bowl XXI, No. 56 redefined what a linebacker could do — and left opposing coaches searching for answers that never came.
A new NFL ranking places Brian Burns and Abdul Carter behind four other pass-rush duos — but 16.5 sacks and a strong finish to Carter's rookie year suggest the Giants' pair isn't done climbing.
The 6-foot-7, 320-pound tackle out of Kutztown was a Gene Upshaw Award finalist and now gets a shot to prove his size and power translate against NFL competition.
After stabilizing a position that chewed through eight kickers in three years, Ben Sauls still has to prove he's more than a stopgap heading into training camp.
Nose tackle Jim Burt never scored a touchdown worth remembering, but from dousing Bill Parcells to hoisting his son after Super Bowl XXI, the undrafted nose tackle built one of football's most unlikely legacies.