
Free agent pickups: Need some pitching? Look to Twins and Astros
Looking for pitching help? Check out Mick Abel of the Twins for Week 4!
The New York Giants traded Dexter Lawrence to the Cincinnati Bengals for the 10th pick in the NFL Draft. This move has sparked discussions about the implications for both teams.
New York Giants news
Good morning, New York Giants fans!
The Giants received the 10th pick in the NFL Draft from the Bengals in exchange for Dexter Lawrence.
The Giants traded Dexter Lawrence as part of a strategy to acquire a higher draft pick, which could help them strengthen their roster.
The Giants are exploring various options to replace Dexter Lawrence, including potential free agency signings and draft picks.
The trade allows the Bengals to bolster their defensive line with Dexter Lawrence, enhancing their chances for success in the upcoming season.

Looking for pitching help? Check out Mick Abel of the Twins for Week 4!

Fernando Mendoza is poised to be the No. 1 pick in the 2026 NFL draft after leading Indiana to its first national championship. His impressive performance at the combine has solidified his status as a top prospect.

Man City beats Arsenal to lead Premier League; Bayern wins Bundesliga
Phillies may replace Rob Thomson with Yankees legend after losing streak.
Liverpool's Curtis Jones impresses in derby, raises future concerns
See every story in Sports â including breaking news and analysis.
The Giants didnât want to get rid of Lawrence, but the relationship reached the point of no return. Once a top-10 pick was on the table, the Giants decided to pull the trigger on the blockbuster trade. That the Bengals were willing to part with the No. 10 pick illustrates Lawrenceâs value. Securing such a high pick was a score for the Giants, who werenât willing to dump Lawrence for a weak return.
Harbaugh avoids the ugliness of a protracted contract dispute with a popular player in the locker room. A hold-in by Lawrence would have started Harbaughâs first training camp on the wrong foot.
SNY touched base with four head coaches in the NFL after the Lawrence trade became official. All were stunned New York got what they did. Three pointed out Lawrenceâs dip in production and conditioning, describing him as someone who needs his snaps limited to maximize his production. Another described him as a âone-position player.â
âTruly crazy return,â one coach said. âI truly thought the most they were getting was a second, maybe a second and fifth.â
John Harbaugh sent his message loud and clear:
You donât want to be here, we donât want you here.
Giants coach John Harbaugh.
General manager Joe Schoen.
Senior vice president of football operations Dawn Aponte.
Not one. Not two. All three.
Together, they made the call for the Giants with input from throughout the organization in ultimately signing off on Saturday nightâs stunning trade of Pro Bowl defensive lineman Dexter Lawrence to the Cincinnati Bengals for the 10th overall selection in this weekâs NFL Draft.
So getting back to the scars that Harbaugh and Schoen bear from 2025, no, there wasnât some sort of gazing into the mirror that the coach or GM did after last year.
âI think itâs just a clumsy way of thinking. Itâs too generic. Youâre doing that every day,â Harbaugh says. âEvery day, youâre looking at everything you do, How can I do this better? How can I say this better? You have regrets, you have things youâre proud of. But on the whole, I think you feel the same way. I look back at everything we did, and I feel really great about it. I know one thing, I know personally, I did the very best I could do every single day.â
âThatâs probably the best way to put itâyouâre always doing that,â Schoen agreed. âWe make so many decisions in a day. Youâre always evaluating the decisions you make. Again, I was deep into the head coaching search, so there was no time, and this week is probably the first time, or this past weekend, we both kind of came up to take a breath for a short amount of time. And now weâre already thinking about the draft and all that.â
One unintended benefit is the approximately $13 million in annual salary cap relief the Giants are getting by shedding themselves of Lawrenceâs contract for the next two seasons. However, it also leaves them with $13.916 million in dead cap. As of Sunday morning, Over the Cap lists the Giantsâ available salary cap space at $18.43 million, while Spotrac has them at $19.41 million.
That will be enough to play their incoming draft class and then some. There are still several free agents the team may be focusing on this spring that they were previously unable to afford, but that they now can sign.
The fact that the Giants got a top-10 pick for a player in that situation, heading towards his third NFL contract, is remarkable â especially considering they didnât have to give anything else up. And the fact that they got it from the Bengals â a team that historically treats draft picks like theyâre gold bullions in Fort Knox â makes the deal even more stunning.
Maybe the Giants canât find a player like Lawrence, but good defensive tackles arenât a rare commodity. And in the right scheme, with the right players around them, that can be enough.
Mike Florio wrote the Giants are taking a calculated risk by announcing the trade publicly, arguing they could have quietly completed all the necessary groundwork â such as Lawrenceâs physical â and ask Lawrence, the Bengals and his agents to keep the proposed deal quiet.
The fact that the deal was done five days before the draft becomes a complicating factor for the Giants. The teams picking behind the Giants will try to speculate on the player they want at No. 10. If a team guesses right and leapfrogs the Giants to the ninth spot (currently held by the Chiefs), the Giants will lose the player they may be coveting.
Thatâs why the best outcome would have been to keep the deal with the Bengals quiet until the pick was on the clock. The Giants surely wonât admit to the world that they lost the guy they wanted, if someone jumps them in the pecking order and takes their guy at No. 9. Still, if it happens, theyâll know.
New York Giants: RB Jeremiyah Love, Notre Dame. The reality is that the Giants running game was already a strength last season. They were fifth in EPA per rush and ran for nearly 2,200 yards as a team. Love would concentrate that production and make it more dangerous, but the Giants have bigger needs.
For instance, the defense was dead last in EPA allowed per rush and the pass coverage wasnât anything to write home about. A defensive playmaker or a receiver to replace WanâDale Robinson are more valuable selections for Harbaugh and Co.
Have a Giants-related question? E-mail it to bigblueview@gmail.com and it might be featured in our weekly mailbag.
BBV on X: Follow @BigBlueView | Ed Valentine: @Valentine_Ed |
Threads: @ed.valentine
Bluesky: @edvalentine
BBV on Facebook: Click here to like the Big Blue View Facebook page
BBV on YouTube: Subscribe to the Big Blue View YouTube channel
BBV on Instagram: Click here to follow our Instagram page