• Top 10 WRs: Which WR Is Worth No. 5 for Giants?
    Mar 27 2026

    If the Giants use No. 5 on a wide receiver, they could give Jaxson Dart another real weapon and find the best complement to Malik Nabers. But if this class is as tight from WR1 through WR5 as you argued on the show, are they wasting premium draft value when a similar fit could still be there after a trade down?

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    In this episode, Drew and Rob rank their top 10 wide receivers in the 2026 NFL Draft, but the real Giants question running through the show is fit versus cost. They open by saying wide receiver is one of the few true strengths in this draft, which is exactly why the decision gets tricky at No. 5. If the separation between the top tier is not dramatic, then the conversation stops being “who is the best receiver?” and becomes “which receiver is worth that pick for this roster?” That is why the show keeps circling back to the top of the board, the different archetypes in this class, and whether the Giants should chase size, explosiveness, polish, or flexibility.

    The rankings still matter, and the full board gives listeners the whole picture. You work through ten receivers because this is one of the deepest areas in a weak draft, and because teams are going to value these players very differently based on role. Some of these guys project as outside boundary targets. Some are cleaner separators. Some are more explosive-play threats. Some feel safer, while others feel like swing-for-the-fences bets. That is what makes the episode useful for Giants fans. It is not just a list for the sake of a list. It is a real argument about what kind of receiver this team should want if they are serious about helping their quarterback and building the room the right way.

    The Giants-specific tension is strongest near the top of the rankings. You make it clear that just liking a player is not the same as liking him at No. 5. That is the pressure point. If a receiver such as Carnell Tate is good but not clearly separated from the rest of the upper tier, then why force the pick there? Why not trade down and still land a receiver who fits what this offense needs? On the other hand, if one of these top prospects is truly the best stylistic match for what this roster lacks, passing on him could mean missing the cleanest answer at the position. That is the heart of the debate, and it gives the episode real stakes instead of making it just another draft board rundown.

    The show also digs into what different prospects actually bring. There are discussions about outside size, route polish, downfield production, slot value, special teams utility, injury concerns, and long-term upside. Some receivers feel like clean fits for what the Giants may want to do. Others may be talented but come with enough overlap or enough development risk that the value only makes sense later. That makes this a real Giants team-building episode wrapped inside a top-10 WR show, which is why the ranking conversation stays interesting all the way through.

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    1 hr and 11 mins
  • Should the Giants Risk Caleb Downs at No. 5?
    Mar 26 2026

    The Giants could land a rare defensive weapon in Caleb Downs at No. 5, but they could also pass on help in the trenches or a safer draft path if the knee concern is real. If Downs is that special, is this the right swing for the Giants, or are they making the most important pick on the board harder than it needs to be?

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    This episode is built around the biggest argument from the live show: should the Giants even consider Caleb Downs at No. 5? Drew and Rob dig into the Ohio State pro day fallout, Downs pushing back on the knee rumor, and Pat McAfee’s report that multiple NFL teams were not deterred by what they saw medically. But that still leaves the real Giants question untouched: if you take a safety that high, he has to be a difference-maker on a rare level. That is the center of the debate here. Is Downs worth a bet this aggressive, or is the smarter move to avoid the risk and go another direction?

    That tension carries the whole episode. The show pushes back on the Francis Mauigoa-at-five idea, questions why the Giants would project a player to another spot that early, and leans harder toward the Field Yates path of Caleb Downs in Round 1 with interior offensive line help later. There is also clear trade-down support in the conversation, because if the Giants do not feel fully sure about taking a safety this high, moving back could be the cleanest answer. That is why this episode works: it is not just about whether Downs is talented. It is about whether he is the right kind of talent for this exact pick and this exact roster.

    The rest of the show supports that main debate instead of replacing it. The hosts cover Mansoor Delane’s big pro day and why he looks like the top corner in the class, the Shelby Harris visit and what it says about the defensive front, plus the quieter additions of Zach Triner and Cam Jones. There is also an update on Kayvon Thibodeaux, with the sense that the Giants are not looking to dump him, along with quick hits on James Hudson landing in New England and the possibility that the Giants open 2026 on the road because of the MetLife World Cup transition.

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    51 mins
  • Did Giants Free Agency Reveal Their Draft Plan?
    Mar 24 2026

    The Giants can stay at No. 5 and force a premium pick, but that may be the exact mistake this front office is trying to avoid. If free agency already showed what this roster still lacks, is the smarter move to trade down, add picks, and attack the real holes instead of pretending this is a true top-heavy class?

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    Drew and Rob break down why the Giants’ free agency period may have already revealed their draft roadmap. They start with the Sam Roberts signing, discuss why it looks like a depth move more than a true answer in the trenches, and then work through what the rest of the offseason has shown about how this team may attack the draft. The core argument is simple: free agency was not random. It exposed what the Giants believe they fixed, what they still clearly have not fixed, and where John Harbaugh’s new staff may be pushing this roster next.

    The episode argues that wide receiver no longer feels like a true early-round need after the additions of Darnell Mooney, Calvin Austin III, and Isaiah Likely. Running back, on the other hand, still feels very much in play. Drew and Rob explain why this may not be a desperate need, but it is clearly a position the Giants are willing to upgrade if the right player is there. That conversation naturally leads into the bigger debate around No. 5 overall, including whether Jeremiyah Love would even make sense there if the Giants cannot find a trade-down partner.

    Cornerback gets major attention because the Giants clearly tried to address it and still do not look fully settled there. The show also makes the case that offensive line depth may not be the early priority many fans expect, especially if the staff is more comfortable with the current bodies than the fan base is. And hovering over everything is the same ugly truth: this team still has to fix the run defense. Whether that means defensive tackle, linebacker, or both, Drew and Rob make it clear that stopping the run should be one of the biggest goals of this draft.

    They also hit the latest Odell Beckham Jr. chatter, several draft visits and meetings, Madelyn Burke leaving for SportsCenter, the Giants’ rising franchise valuation, and the NFL’s latest 18-game-season idea.

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    49 mins
  • Giants at No. 5: Will Forcing a Pick Backfire?
    Mar 20 2026

    The Giants can stay at No. 5 and take a premium prospect, but the tradeoff is obvious: they may be forcing a top-five pick in a draft that does not have true top-five value. Is that the wrong bet for this roster? If the board is weak at the top, why force a move that could backfire instead of trading down and building the team the right way?

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    Drew and Rob spend most of this episode working through the real problem with the Giants picking fifth overall: this is not viewed as a strong, top-heavy draft, and that makes the risk of forcing a pick much higher. They rule out the obvious non-starters first, including another quarterback after drafting Jaxson Dart and another edge rusher after investing so heavily in Abdul Carter, Brian Burns, and Kayvon Thibodeaux. From there, the conversation keeps coming back to the same question: if the Giants do not love the board, why act like they do?

    The linebacker debate gets real attention, especially with Sonny Styles and Arvell Reese, but even there the discussion comes back to value. The same thing happens at safety with Caleb Downs, where talent is acknowledged but the positional value and roster context make No. 5 feel rich. Running back gets the strongest pro-pick push because Jeremiyah Love is viewed as one of the few true difference-makers in the class, yet even that conversation is framed through the lens of board value, roster construction, and whether taking a back that high is actually the smartest use of the pick.

    Cornerback, offensive line, and wide receiver all come with some level of appeal, but the episode repeatedly questions whether any of those options are worth forcing at No. 5 in this specific class. That is why the trade-down angle dominates the show. The argument is simple: in a depth-heavy draft, the Giants may be better off moving back, adding picks, and still landing a player who fits what John Harbaugh and the new staff want to build. Instead of chasing a shaky top-five valuation, the smarter move may be stacking assets, filling real holes like corner, guard, or defensive tackle, and giving the roster more long-term help. Take the flashy name now, or avoid the bad priority and build this thing the right way?

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    1 hr and 16 mins
  • 2026 NFL Draft RB Debate: Is This Class Worth the Pick?
    Mar 19 2026

    This 2026 NFL Draft running back class gives you burst, receiving value, and a few backs with real starter upside, but the sacrifice is using a meaningful pick on a group that also feels thin, injury-heavy, and full of role-player projections. If a team chases the wrong traits here, are they buying speed and flash while passing on better value somewhere else?

    Follow us on Spotify so you do not miss the next live-to-audio upload, and if you enjoy the show, give us a 5-star rating and review on Apple Podcasts.

    In this episode, Drew and Rob kick off their 2026 draft coverage by breaking down the running back class from the bottom up and asking the question that hangs over the whole show: is this actually a class worth investing in, or is it a bad year to force a pick at the position? The discussion keeps coming back to the same tradeoff. There is clear upside in this group, but there are also durability concerns, ball-security problems, pass-protection flaws, age concerns, and more than a few backs who feel like complementary pieces instead of true long-term answers.

    The show spends time sorting through the role-player and value tier first, including Seth McGowan, Kaelon Black, J’Mari Taylor, Kaytron Allen, Jaydn Ott, and Le’Veon Moss. Some bring size, some bring steady downhill value, and some have enough traits to stick in an NFL backfield, but most of them come with obvious limitations. Whether it is injury history, a capped ceiling, pass-protection concerns, or overlap with what the Giants already have, Drew and Rob make it clear that a lot of these backs feel more like depth options than players you should be excited to spend real capital on.

    Then the conversation shifts into the more compelling names in the class. Nicholas Singleton gets real respect for his size, speed, receiving value, and pass protection, but there are still vision and medical questions that keep him from being an automatic RB1. Mike Washington Jr. has the size-speed profile teams love, but the ball-security issue is loud enough to make the projection risky fast. Jonah Coleman gets praised as one of the safer all-around evaluations, even if the big-play ceiling is limited.

    The biggest praise in the episode goes to Emmett Johnson, Jadarian Price, and Jeremiyah Love. Emmett Johnson is framed as one of the most underrated backs in the class because of his workload, receiving production, consistency, and overall football value. Jadarian Price gets strong support for his burst, return value, and ability to maximize touches even while sharing a backfield. Jeremiyah Love lands at the top because of the explosive profile, home-run ability, and feature-back upside, even though Drew still pushes back on the idea that he should be treated like some untouchable generational prospect.

    By the end, the show is not just ranking backs. It is drawing a line between exciting traits and smart draft value. That is the real debate running through the whole episode: when this class has so many questions attached to it, how early is too early to take a running back, and which of these backs is actually worth betting on?

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    1 hr and 17 mins
  • Did NY Giants Free Agency Help Jaxson Dart?
    Mar 17 2026

    The Giants gave Jaxson Dart more help with Patrick Ricard, Darnell Mooney and Isaiah Likely, but they also let key spots stay shaky and still look exposed at right guard and corner. Did Joe Schoen really make this roster better, or did he upgrade the fun positions while leaving the biggest pressure points sitting there?

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    Drew and Rob go unit by unit through the roster and argue where the Giants actually improved after free agency and where the roster still feels unfinished. Quarterback gets an even grade because the room did not really change, but the offense around Jaxson Dart is where the excitement kicks in. Patrick Ricard completely changes the run-game conversation, and the show leans hard into how his fit with Cam Skattebo could give the Giants a more old-school, smash-mouth identity. At wide receiver, the group may have lost the best individual player in Wan'Dale Robinson, but the room looks deeper with Darnell Mooney, Calvin Austin III, Isaiah Hodgins and Gunner Olszewski behind Malik Nabers and Darius Slayton. At tight end, Drew and Rob make it very clear they see Isaiah Likely as a major upgrade over Daniel Bellinger, especially with how Likely fits a quarterback like Dart.

    That is where the tradeoff starts to matter. The show keeps coming back to the same concern: what good is improving the weapons if right guard is still unsettled and corner still feels like a hole? The offensive line gets a worse grade as it stands today because that spot is still unresolved, and the defense gets a more mixed review depending on the unit. Some areas look stronger. Some still feel incomplete. The overall tone of the episode is optimistic, but not blind optimism. Drew and Rob are excited about what the Giants added, especially on offense and in terms of roster depth, while still pushing the harder question that matters most: did free agency actually solve enough, or did it just make the roster more interesting without fixing the biggest risks?

    If you heard the live show, drop your answer: are the Giants truly better right now, or are the holes at right guard and corner still too big to ignore?

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    57 mins
  • Jason Pinnock Back With the Giants: Smart Fit or Repeat Mistake?
    Mar 14 2026

    Jason Pinnock gives the Giants a cheap downhill safety they already know, but bringing him back only works if this defense finally uses him the right way. If the Giants ask Pinnock to live in coverage again, is this a smart reunion or just the same mistake all over again?

    Follow 2 Giants Goofballs on Spotify so you never miss an episode, and if you listen on Apple Podcasts, leave us a 5-star rating and review to help more Giants fans find the show.

    Drew and Rob break down why the Jason Pinnock move is more interesting than it looks on the surface. The numbers from San Francisco were rough, but the bigger argument in this episode is that Pinnock was being used in a role that never matched what he does best. When he can play downhill, attack, and work like a robber-style safety, he looks like a useful player. When he is asked to turn, cover, and move laterally too much, the flaws show up fast. That is why this signing feels like a real debate instead of an easy win. The Giants may have found a cheap fit, or they may be betting on a player they still have not fully figured out.

    The episode also gets into the Brian Burns restructure and why freeing up cap room matters even if it is not the kind of move that leads to some massive late free-agent splash. From there, the conversation shifts to Greg Newsome betting on himself in New York, why his press-man mindset fits this defense, and why Isaiah Likely’s comments about Jaxson Dart and John Harbaugh sound like more proof that players are buying into the new direction of this team. There is also more on why not every big name on the market is actually a good fit, and why the Giants’ bigger story right now may be identity more than headlines.

    This is the audio from yesterday morning’s live show.

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    46 mins
  • Calvin Austin Adds Speed, But Are Giants Still Too Small at WR?
    Mar 13 2026

    The Giants added real speed and return juice with Calvin Austin III, but they also added another smaller receiver to a room that still has real questions about size, blocking, and true depth. Is this a smart low-cost addition, or are the Giants making another small bet at wide receiver instead of solving the bigger problem?

    Follow us on Spotify for more Giants reactions, and if you listen on Apple, please drop a 5-star rating and review to help the show grow.

    This episode is built around the Calvin Austin signing because that was the real debate of the night. Drew and Rob break down why the deal itself makes sense on paper at one year and $1.5 million, why the incentives matter, and why Austin’s speed gives this offense something it badly needed. They get into the 4.32 speed, the return ability, the gadget usage, and why Austin could absolutely carve out a role if the Giants use him the right way. They also make the case that fans are too quick to dismiss a player just because he is not a headline name. If Austin gives this team a few hundred receiving yards, return value, and real speed stress, that is strong value on this contract.

    At the same time, the episode keeps coming back to the real tradeoff. Austin is still undersized. He is not the guy you want winning jump balls. He is not bringing much as a blocker. And if the Giants keep stacking smaller complementary receivers without adding enough size and complete skill sets around Malik Nabors, are they really building a better room or just adding another specialist? That is the tension running through the entire discussion. The guys also talk about whether Austin is really a Jalin Hyatt replacement, whether Jackson Dart could benefit from this type of weapon, and why the Giants may still need to draft another receiver even after making this move. The overall takeaway is that the contract is good, the role makes sense, and the value is real, but the broader receiver room still feels unfinished.

    The rest of the show touches on the other Day 4 moves and reactions, including Chris Board being released, Aaron Stinnie and Ryan Miller returning, the Abdul Carter No. 3 jersey buzz, and media comments from Tremaine Edmunds, Jermaine Eluemunor, Micah McFadden, Patrick Ricard, and Jason Sanders. But the center of gravity is Calvin Austin and what this signing says about how the Giants are trying to build the offense.

    This is the audio from yesterday morning’s live show.

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    53 mins