Are New York Giants’ investments at cornerback paying off?

Are New York Giants’ investments at cornerback paying off?
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Some are, and some have not as of yet

One of my core roster building beliefs is that NFL teams can never have too many good coverage cornerbacks. Do the New York Giants have enough?

GM Joe Schoen is trying, having devoted four draft picks — three of them premium Day 1 or Day 2 selections — to the position.


Current roster: Deonte Banks, Cor’Dale Flott, Dru Phillips, Adoree’ Jackson, Tre Hawkins III, Art Green

Players drafted since 2022: Cor’Dale Flott (Round 3, No. 81, 2022); Deonte Banks (Round 1, No. 24, 2023); Tre Hawkins (Round 6, No. 209, 2023); Dru Phillips (Round 3, No. 70, 2024)

Biggest free agent signing: None ... unless you count bringing back Adoree’ Jackson this season.

Biggest losses: James Bradberry


Schoen often talks about building for long-term sustainability rather than the short-term. His moves at cornerback, sometimes through necessity but most often through design, have reflected that.

  • In his first offseason, Schoen was forced to cut ties with starting cornerback James Bradberry to begin digging his way out of a cap mess he inherited. Bradberry had a terrific 2022 season for the Philadelphia Eagles, but struggled last year and has spent this season on IR.
  • Schoen signed veteran Fabian Moreau as a stop-gap cornerback in 2022. Even though Moreau played well, he was not retained.
  • Schoen waited as long as possible this year before bringing back veteran Adoree’ Jackson to add depth, hoping his young cornerbacks would step up.

If you remember from ‘Hard Knocks’, Schoen and the Giants were interested in cornerbacks KoolAid McKinstry and Kamari Lassiter in the 2024 NFL Draft. Neither made it to the Giants’ pick at No. 47. McKinstry went to the New Orleans Saints at No. 41 and Lassiter to the Houston Texans at No. 42. Both have shown promise, showing that the Giants were right in their evaluations.

The Giants “settled” for safety Tyler Nubin, who has played 99% of the team’s defensive snaps and appears to be a long-term answer at that position in Round 2.

They took slot cornerback Dru Phillips, the second-youngest player on the roster behind wide receiver Malik Nabers, in Round 3. Phillips has been impressive enough that he recently showed up in Round 1 of a Yahoo Sports re-draft and was the 11th-ranked rookie by NFL.com in its midseason rookie rankings.

So, you can argue that after missing out on a cornerback in Round 2 they found two long-term answers in their secondary.

The Giants, incidentally, had three players in the top 25 of that ranking.

Flott, in his third year, was a question mark as an outside cornerback heading into the season. He has played decently with four passes defensed and a 101.1 passer rating against. Despite being in his third season, the only Giants younger than the 23-year-old Flott are Nabers, Phillips and Jalin Hyatt.

How many resources the Giants continue to need to put into cornerback in the next couple of offseasons depends...