New York Giants offered Patriots 2025 first-round pick to move up

The New York Giants made a “last-ditch” effort to trade up from No. 6 to No. 3 but the New England Patriots chose to stay put and select North Carolina quarterback Drake Maye, who was Big Blue’s target.

The Patriots were said to want a massive haul in return for the No. 3 spot and that turned out to be true.

Albert Breer of Sports Illustrated reports that the Giants offered the No. 6 overall pick in addition to their 2025 first-round pick but were rebuffed.

The Giants, meanwhile, did wind up putting their 2025 first-round pick in their offer to move from No. 6 to No. 3.

The Giants, of course, got a weapon for Daniel Jones, selecting star receiver Malik Nabers.

Even with the additional assets thrown in, the Giants didn’t stand much of a chance. Not only were the Patriots seeking even more than that, but they had a better offer from the Minnesota Vikings which still wasn’t enough.

Earlier this week, Minnesota offered the Nos. 11 and 23 picks, and its 2025 first-rounder, with pick swaps favoring the Vikings as part of the proposal; and that offer ticked up with New England on the clock.

The Giants had the opportunity to select J.J. McCarthy, Michael Penix Jr., or Bo Nix with their first-round pick but ultimately settled on Nabers.

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NFL video reveals Giants’ Dexter Lawrence trash talk vs. Vikings

Dexter Lawrence does more than dominate opponents on the field. He enjoys some old-fashioned trash talk, too.

The Giants’ Pro Bowl nose tackle was mic’d up during Sunday’s wild-card win over the Vikings, and an NFL Films video shows the 25-year-old jawing at Minnesota center Garrett Bradbury.

“Five Six, you gonna take me out? You gonna take me out? You give me more hugs than my girlfriend give me,” Lawrence tells Bradbury in the clip. “Come on, man.”

Lawrence later says, “I know it’s hard. You signed up for this.”

The beginning of the video shows Lawrence attributing some of his success to Pilates.

“That Pilates be getting me right Leonard,” he tells fellow defensive lineman Leonard Williams.

“For real?” Williams replied. “A lot more flexible.”

Giants defensive tackle Dexter Lawrence walks off the field after a win over the Vikings on Jan. 15, 2023.

Giants defensive tackle Dexter Lawrence (97) hits Vikings quarterback Kirk Cousins (8) on Jan. 15, 2023.


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NFL Films also captured rookie linebacker Kayvon Thibodeaux praising Lawrence on the sideline.

“You’re the greatest player I’ve ever played with,” Thibodeaux tells Lawrence, who had six total tackles, including one for a loss, and four quarterback hits in the win over the Vikings.

Lawrence, a second-team All Pro, set career-highs across the board during the 2022 regular season with 68 tackles, 28 quarterback hits, 7.5 sacks, seven tackles for a loss and two forced fumbles.

Giants defensive tackle Dexter Lawrence speaks to reporters after practice on Jan. 17, 2023.

Giants defensive tackle Dexter Lawrence speaks to reporters after practice on Jan. 17, 2023.


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The former first-round pick will be part of one of the most fascinating matchups in Saturday’s Giants-Eagles Divisional Round duel when he lines up across Philadelphia center Jason Kelce, a six-time Pro Bowler and five-time All Pro.

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Post expert’s Giants-Vikings predictions: Not quite a consensus

Here are The Post’s experts predictions on Sunday’s Giants-Vikings NFC wild-card showdown in Minneapolis:

Ryan Dunleavy: Giants 26, Vikings 23

Revenge is a dish best served cold — and it will be about 35 degrees outside the comforts of domed U.S. Bank Stadium. After Greg Joseph’s 61-yard field goal decided the game on Christmas Eve, Graham Gano (8-for-9 on 50-plus-yard field goals this season) gets his turn for a winner as time expires.

Ian O’Connor: Giants 27, Vikings 23

The Giants effectively played to a draw a few weeks ago in Minny, so the Vikings represent the ideal first-round opponent. The inexperienced underdogs might have a little postseason stage fright early, but my guess is the Giants will gather themselves in time to score the upset.

Brian Daboll and Kevin O’Connell
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Paul Schwartz: Giants 24, Vikings 20

Is there any doubt the Giants are an ascending team? Kirk Cousins has not played badly in his previous playoff games, but he is 1-3. Daniel Jones makes his playoff debut on an upswing. The Giants can follow his lead.

Steve Serby: Giants 27, Vikings 24

Daniel Jones and Saquon Barkley, the twin faces of the franchise, are peaking at the right time for their long-awaited first playoff game, and a healthy, ravenous defensive front four and coordinator Wink Martindale won’t allow Kirk Cousins to play catch this time with Justin Jefferson.

Mike Vaccaro: Vikings 28, Giants 24

What we’ve seen out of the Giants all year is not an illusion, but the Vikings aren’t one, either: They know how to win close games, and they’re home. Back at MetLife, the numbers would be reversed.

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Heroes, zeros from Giants’ loss to Vikings: Greg Joseph answers call

Heroes, zeros and the full blitz from the Giants’ 27-24 loss to the Vikings.

Hero

Greg Joseph drilled a game-winning 61-yard field goal despite having made just two of his first seven field-goal attempts from 50-plus yards this season. 

Zero

With four minutes remaining, a Jamie Gillan punt was blocked, gifting the ball to the Vikings at the Giants’ 29-yard line, from where they drove for a lead-extending touchdown. Long snapper Casey Kreiter was bowled over and the block came up the middle. 

Greg Joseph celebrates after drilling the game-winning field goal.
Charles Wenzelberg/New York Post

Unsung hero

Daniel Jones completed 30 of 42 passes for a season-high 334 yards with a touchdown and an interception and ran for another 34 yards. He led the game-tying, seven-play, 75-yard touchdown drive, completing the 2-point conversion pass with 2:01 to go. 

Key stat

11-0 Minnesota’s record in one-score games, the best start to a season in NFL history in that statistic. The Giants fell to 8-3-1 in a NFL-high 12 one-score games. 

NY Post illustration

Quote

“I would love a rematch.” 

— Saquon Barkley on the possibility of a Giants-Vikings meeting in the first round of the playoffs

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Kevin O’Connell’s brand of leadership has Vikings rolling

The father knows best why the Vikings are in good hands with first-year head coach Kevin O’Connell.

“He’s always been a natural leader, even from the time he was a young guy in junior high and high school,” Bill O’Connell told Serby Says of his son. “He was a captain at his high school and he was a four-year captain at San Diego State. And he’s perfected it, too. He’s been a student of leadership, and a student of the mentors he’s played for and coached with and coached for.

“He’s very, very in tune in the modern generation and his generation as to goal-setting and he’s more people-oriented. He believes you can do things being positive and supporting and reinforcing his players, reinforcing the staff and I think he’s a strong advocate that negativism is not gonna get you anywhere, you gotta come every day to the job with a positive attitude and again, not worried about mistakes, just working to avoid them, not repeat them and improve yourself and improve your team and the individual play of his players. He stresses that to his players every day.”

Bill O’Connell will be there Sunday at U.S. Bank Stadium with his wife, Suzanne, and her 88-year-old father, watching his son’s 8-1 Vikings try to beat the Cowboys and close in on clinching the NFC North title.

“You want the best outcome for him,” Bill O’Connell said. “You want him to make good decisions. You want his team to respond. For me personally, there’s a lot of pressure.

“I haven’t drank an alcoholic beverage since he’s played or coached during the game, and I continue to do that. I will not have a beer until after the game,” he said with a laugh.

Viking coach Kevin O’Connell talks to Kirk Cousin.
Action Images via Reuters

Skol, Kevin O’Connell.

“First interaction with this man, you would understand that he’s a leader, or if you’re stranded on an island somewhere, this guy might be the one to coordinate how to get out of there,” Vikings defensive tackle Harrison Phillips told Serby Says. “Just his presence alone kinda demands respect, and then he gains respect by giving respect, and I think that’s a really cool trait he has.”

“I would say it’s a collaborative leadership,” Vikings wide receiver Adam Thielen told Serby Says. “It’s a leadership that takes in account the other leaders of the organization to come with educated answers as far as how to do things, how to structure practice, how to maybe adjust things when they need to be adjusted. So you can really feel that even though that we’re not involved in a lot of those conversations. … It’s not just him making decisions off of emotions or different things like that.”

The town is still buzzing about their Miracle Vikings following the improbable comeback win last Sunday at Buffalo: a 33-30 overtime thriller featuring Justin Jefferson’s ridiculous one-handed catch on a fourth down to keep a fourth-quarter touchdown drive alive before Minnesota recovered a fumble in the end zone in the final minute of regulation.

“He kinda motivates you by just letting you be yourself and finding he best way to make the best version of yourself,” Philips said. “He’s not a big whoop-and-hollering, big-talking guy, so that when he does talk, when he does whoop and holler, you know that it’s big.”

“Sometimes it’s through visually, like showing us on film like, ‘Hey, this is how it’s done, showing examples of players making plays, doing things above and beyond to help his team win,’ ” Thielen said. “It’s a really good motivation technique because guys see that and they want to be on that film in front of the whole team.”

Kevin O’Connell, 37 now, was an Eagles fan who idolized Randall Cunningham, sitting at the Vet with his father, before becoming a 6-foot-5 quarterback who was drafted by the Patriots in the third round out of San Diego State in 2008.

Kevin O’Connell hugs receiver Justin Jefferson.
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“Luckily he got drafted by the New England Patriots,” Bill O’Connell said. “Although unluckily, he got drafted by the New England Patriots.”

Luckily, he got to be a sponge alongside Tom Brady. He was 4-for-6 for 23 yards as a rookie and never threw another NFL regular-season pass at several other stops.

“At that point he viewed Brady as a definite icon and as a leader and as somebody who Day 1 when he walked on the facility at Foxborough, he was completely in awe of Tom,” the father said. “But Tom was fabulous. Tom took him under his wing, and they had a great relationship while he was there and he tried to exchange and teach Kevin quite a bit, as did [Bill] Belichick and the other coaches, Josh MvDaniels. They still have a very good relationship to this very day as friends.”

Luckily, Kevin O’Connell got to observe Belichick as up close and as personal as anyone possibly can.

“I think he learned how to come to work every day and to be expected to give 150 percent and just be the best you could be, cut down on the mistakes, always improve your execution, always improve your personal skills, and just discipline … discipline on the field, discipline in your life,” Bill O’Connell said. “And I think the general orderliness of how Coach Belichick runs a football team and runs a season and runs a game, frankly.”

Bill O’Connell mentions the impact Rex Ryan and Mike Pettine, now Vikings assistant head coach, made on his son when he was with the Jets for two stints in 2009-10 and back in 2011 after a quick stop with the Dolphins.

“It was funny, this thing about him coaching went all the way back to the days of Mark Sanchez when Kevin was kinda the quarterback whisperer if you will, or the father confessor to Mark Sanchez,” Bill O’Connell said.

Kevin O’Connell
AP

It is never easy surrendering your NFL quarterback dream.

“I think it’s tough for any young man like Kevin,” Bill O’Connell said. “There’s 32 starting jobs every season, and there’s many, many talented human beings who play quarterback in the National Football League. … I think he was a precursor to some of the guys that play today. However these guys that play today are highly, highly accurate.”

But the love of the game wouldn’t let his boy leave it after retiring in 2012.

“He just became more and more intellectually involved in the game, and eventually that transition was easy for him because he join realized when his playing days were over, he had a tremendous interest and a love for staying in the game intellectually and just loved the game, and that’s why he’s migrated to the coaching ranks,” Bill O’Connell said.

His son learned his craft at several different coaching venues before joining Rams head coach Sean McVay as offensive coordinator in 2020 and winning Super Bowl LVI this past February at SoFi Stadium.

“I think Sean and Kevin formed a very deep bond and lifelong friendship,” Bill O’Connell said.

Bill O’Connell, who lives in Carlsbad, Calif., developed a friendship with McVay and his staff and players.

“We lived and died and we cried and we cheered,” he said. “It was incredible. It was a fantasy year.”

Some 20 extended family members, including five of Bill O’Conell’s six grandchildren, got to watch Kevin O’Connell hold the Lombardi Trophy.

“The absolute tearjerker for the family was my daughter [Kelly] and grandkids, Kevin’s children, were allowed down on the field after the game and they ran out, and just to watch the whole family jump together and run, and run to him. It was a moment that my wife and I will never ever forget,” Bill O’Connell said.

Now Kevin O’Connell and rookie general manager Kwesi Adofo-Mensah have a team to believe in.

“Everyone’s bought in. … No one is bitching and complaining and talking about not playing or not starting or not getting the playing time they want,” Phillips said. “I haven’t heard any of that in our locker room, which I think is a rarity in this business.”

“It’s a real relationship from coaches and players,” Thielen said. “I’ve never really seen that before in my career.”

There is an easy relatability between the former quarterback, now head coach, and Kirk Cousins, who has five game-winning drives as the Vikings have won seven straight games by eight points or fewer.

“I think he really understands that everybody can’t be coached the same, and he knows that to get the best out of everybody individually you have to do things differently per individual,” Thielen said.

The postgame flights back home, on which first Cousins (aka Kirko Chainz) and then Patrick Peterson, posed shirtless with chains have been a viral sensation.

“The last few plane trips on the way back, I don’t think I sat down once,” Thielen said.

Kevin O’Connell has been a breath of fresh air following Mike Zimmer.

“As a father,” Bill O’Connell said, “your son has one of 32 jobs in the world.”

Bill O’Connell was a 220-pound strong safety and weak-side linebacker at Villanova with an NFL dream, but a neck injury shattered it at the end of his junior year.

“It was a very profound and sad moment for me,” the father said. “But to have a son, and then have him take up the game of football, and have him engage in the playing and then the coaching side of it, it’s the best of both worlds for me, I’ll tell ya.”

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Odds, picks for London game

Our NFL betting expert brings you his best Vikings vs Saints predictions and picks for their NFL week 4 match-up, which is live Sunday on NFL Network at 9:30 a.m. ET.

The Vikings (2-1) overcame deficits of 14 points in the first quarter and 10 points in the fourth quarter to defeat Detroit 28-24 last week.

The Saints (1-2) lost their second consecutive game when they fell behind Carolina 7-0 in the first quarter and never caught up in a 22-14 loss last week.

Vikings vs Saints predictions

  • Vikings to cover -3 @ -110 at BetMGM
  • Saints under 20.5 points @ +115 at BetMGM
  • Under 43.5 total points @ +130 at BetMGM

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Justin Jefferson
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Vikings vs Saints picks and analysis

The Vikings’ offense has been somewhat inconsistent, especially with Dalvin Cook (shoulder) ailing. But they are clicking better than the Saints’ offense, which has been plagued by turnovers, penalties and injuries. New Orleans banks on defense, keeping it in the game, but producing points is another matter.

Vikings -3

Comparable personnel might imply an even matchup, but the Vikings have an important advantage in that they generally have made the plays necessary to win. They showed that last week in their comebacks against the Lions.

The Saints have been making way too many mistakes. They’re last in the NFL in committing turnovers, something that has contributed significantly to their two losses, and they are among the most-penalized teams in the NFL.

The Vikings will make fewer mistakes and be fresh after a later-than-usual arrival to London.

Our Pick: Vikings to cover -3 @ -110 at BetMGM

Saints under 20.5 points

The Saints have generated minimal offense except when they have desperately tried to catch up in the fourth quarter. They have scored 38 of their 51 points in the fourth quarter, which produced a come-from-behind win against the Falcons but has fallen short the last two weeks.

They have been unable to establish a consistent running game and top running back Alvin Kamara is slowed by a rib injury. The pass protection has generally been poor, leaving Jameis Winston with little time to go through progressions.

The top two wide receivers – Michael Thomas (foot) and Jarvis Landry (ankle) – were injured in last week’s game, and it is uncertain whether either or both will be available this week. Rookie Chris Olave had nine catches for 147 yards last week and might have to be the go-to guy again this week.

Our Pick: Saints under 20.5 points @ -115 at BetMGM

Betting on the NFL?

Andy Dalton
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Under 43.5 total points -130

The one positive for the Saints has been that the defense has mostly played well the last two weeks. That should keep them in this game – and keep the score below the number.

The Vikings offense, like the Saints offense, has done much better at producing yards than points. Running back Dalvin Cook suffered a shoulder injury last week and his status for Sunday is uncertain. Even if he’s ready to go, he won’t be 100 percent.

Riding the under this season has been a winning formula, and historically that’s even more accurate in the NFL’s London games.

Our Pick: Under 43.5 total points @ -130 at BetMGM

Vikings vs Saints odds

Odds courtesy of BetMGM. Correct at time of publishing and subject to change.

Team Spread  Moneyline Total Points 43.5
Vikings (-3)  -110 -110 Over   -145
Saints  U 20.5 -110 -110 Under +120 

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Jim Harbaugh says he has ‘unfinished business’ in NFL

Jim Harbaugh sounds like a coach who still has one eye on the NFL.

The 58-year-old doesn’t regret his pursuit of the Vikings’ head-coaching job and admitted falling short of winning a Super Bowl with the 49ers is “unfinished business.” Yet, he is also happy to still be coaching at Michigan, his alma mater.

“I don’t apologize for taking a look,” Harbaugh said in an interview that aired on ESPN’s College GameDay on Saturday, referring to his interest in coaching the Vikings, who opted for Kevin O’Connell instead. “And the one that doesn’t get printed is I don’t apologize for wanting to be at Michigan. Seem to cut off that last part of it. And that’s where [I’m] at, happy as can be.”

Harbaugh is coming off his first trip to the College Football Playoff and first win over Ohio State. The Wolverines are loaded on offense this year and could return to the Playoff. But Harbaugh isn’t ruling out going back to the NFL, either.

Jim Harbaugh walks off the field after Michigan lost to Georgia in last year’s College Football Playoff.
Jacob Kupferman/CSM/Shutterstock

“One of the things that was really kind of driving me is, you know, we were in San Francisco, we got that close to winning the Super Bowl,” Harbaugh said. “That’s always been a thing. There’s unfinished business there. But, hey, winning the national championship, [I] could be really happy with that, too. So that’s the goal. That’s the one we’re chasing.”

For now, at least. 

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