Giants place 6 players on PUP list, make 3 other roster moves to start camp

The New York Giants reported to their headquarters in East Rutherford for training camp on Tuesday, the unofficial beginning of their 2023 season.

The team subsequently announced that six players will open the summer on the physically unable to perform (PUP) List after the completion of medical exams. All six players are recovering from knee injuries/surgeries.

Wide receivers Sterling Shepard and Wan’Dale Robinson, cornerback Aaron Robinson, defensive tackle D.J. Davidson, guard Marcus McKethan and defensive tackle A’Shawn Robinson were placed on the PUP list. They can be activated at any time during camp, per NFL rules.

Players are placed on this list during training camp and count toward a team’s 90-man roster. Players can be removed from the list at any time during camp, but can’t be placed back on the list. Players on this list as of final roster cutdowns must be placed on the Reserve/PUP, released, traded or counted against the 53-man roster.

Shepard, 30, tore his left ACL in the Giants’ Week 3 loss to Dallas and was lost for the season. It was the second straight lost season for the former 2016 second-round pick out of Oklahoma. Injuries also limited him to just seven games in 2021. Still, the Giants see value in Shepard, inking him to a one-year deal this offseason.

Robinson’s rookie season was also cut short after tearing his ACL in a Week 9 loss to Detroit. It was the second-round rookie’s best showing of the season with nine receptions for 100 yards.

In other moves, free agent wide receiver Jamison Crowder was placed on the non-football injury list with a calf issue. Veteran defensive tackle Vernon Butler was a no-show and was placed on the reserve/did not report list.

Free agent cornerback Leonard Johnson (knee) was waived with an injury settlement.



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Giants’ Saquon Barkley calls cap on Florio, complicated trade rumor

Hours after the New York Giants finally locked up running back Saquon Barkley for the 2023 season via a one-year deal, a trade rumor involving Barkley popped up that has since mostly been refuted.

It all started with Mike Florio of Pro Football Talk, who reported that Barkley’s representatives requested the Giants explore trading the star running back after they franchise-tagged him earlier this year.

Florio then went on to say that the Giants made calls to about a dozen teams, but had no takers.

Per multiple sources, the Giants called a dozen teams in an effort to find a potential trade partner, back in the March/April time frame. The calls came at the request of Barkley’s representation.

The Giants obviously found no takers. It’s unclear what they wanted. Barkley was trying to get, we’re told, a contract that pays something in the range of $15 million to $16 million per year.

Barkley has since called “cap” on that, which means he’s saying it isn’t true.

Since then, multiple reports have emerged to mostly refute Florio’s.

According to Bob Brookover of NJ.com, multiple sources have confirmed that while the Giants considered it, they never actively tried to trade him.

Further, Ryan Dunleavy of the New York Post reports that while Barkley’s reps indeed requested he be shopped to shape the market, Barkley himself did not request a trade.

Adding to that, Dunleavy notes that the Giants did not consider the request because of how much they value Barkley.

But wait, there’s more…

The Giants did receive at least two calls for the 26-year-old, one of which came from the Miami Dolphins, but the “talks went nowhere,” as the Giants were never interested in dealing Barkley, nor were they ever interested in rescinding the franchise tag, also per Dunleavy.

So, based on all that, Florio’s report is only partly right in the sense that Barkley’s reps did request he be shopped, but it looks like the Giants never considered trading him, let alone did they make calls to try and do so. And, it’s also important to note that Barkley himself never asked to be shopped.



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Schoen glad Giants ‘were able to work things out’ with Saquon Barkley

New York Giants fans are breathing easier today after the news broke that the team came to a contract agreement with star running back Saquon Barkley.

The Giants are also pleased they no longer have to deal with the situation day-in and day-out at training camp, which officially starts on Wednesday.

“Obviously we are glad we were able to work things out with Saquon,” said general manager Joe Schoen. “We all recognize the player and person Saquon is and what he means to our team. He is a good teammate, a leader and a really good player. We are looking forward to getting on the field tomorrow.”

The resolution came when Barkley pretty much caved and agreed to a contract on par with the franchise tag tender of $10.091 million. The Giants sweetened the deal by making $2 million of that an up-front signing bonus and adding $910,000 in incentives that Barkley can earn.

Barkley did not get a release from a possible second franchise tag at the end of this season, however. The Giants still have that option if they again cannot lock Barkley up long-term by next March.

If Barkley is tagged again, it will be at 120% of his 2023 contract, or about $12-13 million. Add that to his possible $11 million salary this year and you have $23 million – close to the amount the Giants had offered Barkley in prior negotiations.

Barkley appears ready to hit the field as he was reportedly in the building at 7:30 a.m. on Tuesday.

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Alex Highsmith’s ‘walk-on mentality’ helped him earn $68 million extension – ESPN – NFL Nation

PITTSBURGH — Standing in the doorway of the media room at the UPMC Rooney Sports Complex, Pittsburgh Steelers coach Mike Tomlin grinned and nodded as linebacker Alex Highsmith detailed his journey to the four-year, $68 million extension he signed a week ago.

Now one of the top-10 highest paid edge rushers, Highsmith is the latest example of the long-standing Steelers’ draft-and-develop method. He embodies the blue-collar attitude of Tomlin and the organization.

“The walk-on mentality is something that’s going to stick with me forever,” Highsmith said Monday. “Just being back in college and getting there in 2015 with no offers, zero stars, and not even going to camp my freshman year … I just wanted to outwork everybody and be the best that I could. I still carry that mindset with me today, because I know there’s always people that are going to work to be better than you.”

Selected in the third round of the 2020 draft, Highsmith had a breakout season in 2022 with 14.5 sacks — almost double his first two seasons combined — and proved to be a complementary piece to 2021 Defensive Player of the Year T.J. Watt.

“He’s an elite Robin,” Tomlin said during mandatory minicamp. “You know, as we say, we like to challenge him in that way. He’s growing. He’s making a name for himself in this thing. He seeks perfection. His maturation has been one that we anticipate and expect to be quite honest with you. We put quality people in this program,and they work within, and they just simply get better, and their tape does as well and he’s an example of that.”

In signing Highsmith, the Steelers continue to invest premium dollars in their defense, bucking a league-wide trend of spending big money on offensive weapons. Division-mates Baltimore,

Cleveland and Cincinnati all rank in the top-10 in offensive spending with at least $121 million allocated to that side of the ball, while the Steelers are 21st with $105 million going to the offense, per Over the Cap.

After leading the league in defensive spending with a payroll of $109.9 million a year ago, the Steelers are fourth this season behind the Chargers, Bills and Seahawks with a defense that checks in at $120.3 million, per Over the Cap. And with Watt on the books for $29 million, the organization is third in edge rusher spending for the 2023 season.

The money, though, gives the Steelers sought-after stability in a position that’s experienced turnover. While the Steelers have a long tradition of elite outside linebacker play, they haven’t entered a season with two starters playing on at least their second contracts since 2014 when Lamar Woodley and Jason Worilds were the team’s starting outside linebackers.

“The guys that we have on defense, I think we’re one of the best — if not the best — … in the league,” Highsmith said, asked about the pressure that comes with the high price tag. “And I think when we played to that ability — I think last year we started playing some of our best ball towards the end of the year. Everyone was healthy. — so I truly think we can be one of not the best units in the league, and so we just got to practice like that. It starts this Wednesday at Latrobe.”

Now, both Watt and Highsmith are under contract for several seasons with Watt scheduled to hit free agency in 2026 and Highsmith in 2028. The Steelers also inked another outside linebacker in Markus Golden during free agency, giving the position the kind of quality depth it’s lacked since Bud Dupree was on the roster with Watt and Highsmith in 2020.

“The past couple years, being able to play alongside T.J., I feel like we’ve continued to get better together and continue to develop more cohesiveness,” Highsmith said. “Being with him has just been awesome because I continue to learn from him. I continue to pick his brain about stuff, about rushing the passer and stuff like that, so it’s been cool, really developing chemistry with him. I look forward to the havoc that we’re going to cause this year.”

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New York Giants adding former Pro Bowler Mike Adams to coaching staff

The New York Giants are reportedly adding former Pro Bowl safety Mike Adams to their coaching staff for the upcoming season.

The news comes from ESPN’s Jordan Ranaan, and the hiring has since been confirmed by the team, via press release stating Adams will be the new assistant special teams coach.

Adams, 42, is a Paterson, New Jersey native who played his high school ball at Passaic County Tech in Wayne before moving on to a collegiate career at the University of Delaware.

Adams went undrafted in the 2004 NFL draft and went on to play 228 NFL games over a 16-year career, beginning with San Francisco and ending in Houston.

He also had stops in Cleveland, Denver, Indianapolis and Carolina, and was was named to two Pro Bowls in his career — in 2014 and 2015 as a member of the Indianapolis Colts.

Adams has one year of coaching experience on his resume as an assistant defensive backs coach with the Chicago Bears in 2021.



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USA TODAY predicts last-place finish in NFC East

The New York Giants were one of the surprise teams of 2022, posting a 9-7-1 record before winning a postseason game in head coach Brian Daboll’s first season.

The challenge now is to repeat or even better that record this season. That won’t be a simple accomplishment, as the Giants have been handed one of the league’s toughest schedules.

In his preseason piece predicting the records of all 32 NFL teams this year, USA TODAY’s Nate Davis sees the Giants taking a big step backwards, finishing last in the NFC East.

New York Giants (6-11): Despite a feel-good 2022 – when this decidedly average team did enough to qualify for a wild-card berth and win a playoff game before getting thoroughly embarrassed by the Eagles in the divisional round – it was hard to get too enthused about Big Blue with such a daunting schedule ahead, including 2022 playoff teams in five of the first six weeks. Then the good feels were further diluted by the failure to reach a contractual commitment to franchised RB Saquon Barkley, who very much appears to be the offense’s linchpin after accounting for nearly 30% of its yardage last season. Seems another team may have to carry the Big Apple’s hopes in 2023.

Giants fans may not want to admit it, but Davis notes some unavoidable realities here.

The Giants will not only run a gauntlet of the NFL powerhouses, they’ll also have to travel an unusual amount of miles to to do it.

They also have several national games, something they have not handled well the past decade. Sure, things have changed a bit under Daboll, but the Giants may come up short this year more often than fans expect.

This season could see the Giants on the outside looking in but that doesn’t mean they will have regressed. They can have a losing season and still make progress for the future.

The best part of predictions such as this for Giant fans is that expectations are  still low, which means they can be a surprise team again this year, believe it or not.

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New York Giants legends chime in on Saquon Barkley situation

New York Giants fans want the Saquon Barkley situation to end amicably and equitably for all parties — and it still may.

The star running back will stage his holdout and then likely report to the team in time for the 2023 regular season. He won’t, however, be any wealthier than he was when it began. Whether or not he will harbor any ill feelings towards the Giants going forward remains to be seen.

Two Giants Ring of Honorees — two-time Super Bowl champions Ottis Anderson and Carl Banks — both weighed-in on the Barkley affair this week and added some level-headed perspectives to the situation.

Anderson told the New York Post that Barkley only has himself to blame for how things unfolded. He said that Barkley should have pulled the trigger on the offer the Giants made him last fall (approximately $12-14 million per annum) instead of trying to squeeze more out of them.

Instead, he’ll be forced to play on the franchise-tag tender price of $10.1 million this year.

“I get where Barkley feels he’s at the point in his career where he wants that one big check, that one big contract, because everybody wants that, because you’re not sure you’re gonna get another one,’’ Anderson said. “Two years from now, he’ll be in his seventh year, and that’s when most teams let go of running backs. I wish him luck, but management is looking at it totally differently than how Barkley is looking at it.

“Management is saying you were great your rookie year, then you had two years or three years in between where you were injured and then you had a great year last year,” he continued. “So they’re looking at it out of five years you only had three good years.’’

Banks, speaking on his podcast with radio partner, Bob Papa, advised the Giants running back to take his medicine and make the best of it, even telling him to hire a branding expert to seek opportunities outside of football in the New York market to make the lost revenue he “left on the table.”

“Don’t be a principled fool,” Banks tweeted.



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New York Giants agree to terms with DT Brandin Bryant

The New York Giants have agreed to terms with 29 year-old journeyman defensive tackle, Brandin Bryant, the team announced on Monday morning.

The length and financial terms of the deal for Bryant, who recently worked out for the Giants, was not disclosed.

The six-foot-two, 305-pound Bryant has spent time with several NFL teams since going undrafted out of Florida Atlantic back in 2016, including the Seattle Seahawks, New York Jets, Cleveland Browns, Miami Dolphins, Houston Texans and Buffalo Bills, as well as two CFL clubs.

Bryant appeared in four games with the Bills last season, recording three tackles while seeing snaps on both defense (74) and special teams (11). He was released by Buffalo last month.

Bryant comes into a crowded defensive line room that contains some heavy hitters such as Dexter Lawrence, Leonard Williams, A’Shawn Robinson and Rakeem Nunez-Roches, as well as veteran Vernon Butler, Ryder Anderson, D.J. Davidson, rookie Jordon Riley and recently signed free agent, Kobe Smith.



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Offensive line has become ‘fine-knit group’

The New York Giants’ offensive line should be better this season as they enter Year 2 of the Brian Daboll era. It will also be their second under offensive line coach Bobby Johnson.

The personnel is finally coming together after years of shuffling. Left tackle Andrew Thomas has become one of the best in the NFL at his position and the Giants hope his counterpart on the right side, Evan Neal, follows suit and takes a huge step forward in his second season.

At center, the team believes they have finally landed a franchise staple in second-round selection John Michael Schmitz. He will be the starter as camp opens next week and the Giants are hopeful he wrests the mantle there and never looks back.

The guard positions are still very much in play. The left side, especially. There will be a glut of players vying for the starting role. Ben Bredeson, Joshua Ezeuzu, Shane Lemieux, Marcus McKethan, Jack Anderson, and Wyatt Davis will all be getting their shot this summer.

On the right side, veteran Mark Glowinski will be the starter again. He is in the middle year of a three-year, $18 million deal and the Giants are hoping he can become a stabilizing force playing in between Neal and Schmitz.

Glowinski feels the offensive line is coming together in its second season. In a recent interview with veteran Giants reporter Pat Traina on her podcast, the eight-year NFL veteran stated the unit is still getting to know one another but is becoming more close-knit.

“I think a lot of it is just us having the ability to get to know one another and all the little things we do outside. If it’s how many times we spend in the cafeteria with one another or little trips we take, I think we’re a fine-knit group of individuals,” Glowinski said.

“So I think a lot of what we did initially, it was just learning plays, but I think even within this off-season alone, I think we’ve done a lot of things to kind of close the gaps in, in different things, especially just getting to know one another and, and you know when you get to know somebody a little bit better. I think that will make us a better group.”

The Giants are most excited to finally have a franchise center in Schmitz. Glowinski knows he’ll initially have to ease the rookie into NFL life both on and off the field and had some simple words of advice for him.

“The biggest thing I can tell ’em is trust what’s happening,” he said. “Trust your coaches; trust the guy next to you. Don’t second have second judgments on things; just go about the things asked of you.”

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Giants’ Xavier McKinney fully supports Saquon Barkley amid holdout

The New York Giants will officially report for training camp on Tuesday but running back Saquon Barkley will not be in attendance. The two-time Pro Bowler will remain absent after he and the team failed to reach an agreement on a long-term deal.

The question becomes how Barkley’s absence will affect the team and his teammates.

During a Saturday appearance on The Jim Rome Show, safety Xavier McKinney offered his insight into the matter. He expressed support for Barkley and insisted that his holdout will not have a negative impact on the locker room.

In fact, McKinney said, he fully supports Barkley and believes that his teammates will as well.

“For me, I’ve talked to him, and regardless of any decision that he makes, whether he’s there or whether he’s not here, I respect it 100 percent,” McKinney said. “I’m behind him 100 percent. I wouldn’t have no hard feelings, no nothing towards him whatever decision that he decides. Obviously, we want him to be there but if he can’t, we understand that as well. I think that’s not just for me but that goes for a lot of guys in our locker room.

“I just don’t want that to be the narrative — if he decides not to come, then nobody’s gonna be mad.”

Perhaps no one in the locker room will be mad but there will no doubt be frustration among the front office and coaching staff. About half of all Giants fans have also expressed a displeasure with Barkley’s pending holdout but that ultimately bears no significance on the situation.

How Barkley’s teammates handle the situation is really the only thing that matters — at least through training camp and the preseason. If he starts missing regular season games we’ll see if that sentiment changes, but McKinney doesn’t believe it will.

“We all with him. We all respect him. We all love him,” McKinney said. “And we all know what he brings for our team, and we know what he’ll bring to any team, as well. And we also know how great he is in this league. So that’s how we approach it, and we’ll just keep it at that.”

“Definitely have been in contact with him, just letting him know that I love him that he’s my brother that I know how much he has impact to our team. Just letting him know those things. Letting him know that I’m with him 100 percent. That’s really about it. I’ve been in contact with him. That’s really all I can really speak on.”

McKinney is due for an extension soon and like Barkley, he’ll be seeking a big-money, long-term contract so it behooves him to express support for the running back given that he’ll be in the same position soon.

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