• Giants Draft Visits Reveal a Pattern?
    Apr 10 2026

    NY Giants pre-draft visits and local visits are starting to reveal real clues about the 2026 NFL Draft. The players the Giants are bringing into the building may be telling us where Joe Schoen and John Harbaugh are leaning.

    Giants fans, what is your biggest takeaway from this visit list: WR early, trenches first, or secondary help? Drop it in the comments and subscribe so you don’t miss our live Giants draft coverage all month.

    In this live episode, Drew and Rob break down the reported New York Giants top-30 visits and local visits and what those names could mean for the draft board. The biggest thing that stands out is how much attention the Giants are giving to pass-catchers. Jeremiyah Love is one of the biggest names on the list, but the wide receiver traffic is what really grabs your attention, with Carnell Tate, Makai Lemon, KC Concepcion, Ted Hurst, Trebor Peña, and Robby Ballentine all surfacing in the broader conversation around Giants interest. That does not automatically mean the Giants are forcing a receiver early, but it absolutely says the position is getting real time and real attention.

    At the same time, this is not just a flashy-skill-position visit list. The Giants have also brought offensive line names like Spencer Fano, Travis Burke, and Febechi Nwaiwu into the mix, plus defensive prospects like Christen Miller, Arvell Reese, Mansoor Delane, and Thaddeus Dixon. That matters because it suggests the front office is still balancing explosiveness with toughness, versatility, and depth. If fans only focus on the receivers, they may miss some of the more telling clues hidden in the trenches and in the secondary.

    We’re also getting into the local visits, because those are worth more than people think. Athan Kaliakmanis, Jalen Berger, Nahree Biggins, Trebor Peña, Connor Hulstein, and Nick Dawkins all fall into that bucket on public trackers, and even if some of these names are not early-round headlines, local visits can expose late-round interest, priority free-agent targets, and depth planning. We’ll also hit the odd names fans expected to see on the facility-visit list but haven’t yet, including Francis Mauigoa, Sonny Styles, and Caleb Downs. If they are not on the reported top-30 or local list, does that mean the Giants are cooler on them than fans think, or does it just mean the real list is still incomplete?

    We’ll separate out Chris Johnson as a Zoom/meeting note rather than a facility-visit name, and we’ll talk about whether Robby Ballentine is the kind of sleeper report fans should actually pay attention to. This show is about sorting the real draft clues from the noise and asking what the Giants are truly showing us by who they are choosing to bring into the building.

    Thank you for watching & for your support. You made it to the bottom of the description so you must like the show!
    Show Everyone You are a Goofball By Checking Out Our Merchandise Store
    https://2giantgoofballs-shop.fourthwall.com/

    Support the Show on Buy Me a Coffee - Kill Our Livers Buy Us Beers!
    https://buymeacoffee.com/2giantgoofballs

    Subscribe to Our YouTube Channel - Best Way to Watch Our Content
    https://www.youtube.com/@2giantgoofballs?sub_confirmation=1

    Become a Member of the YouTube Goofball Channel for Perks
    https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC-tiLjkehiawtN-v6gMFViA/join

    Follow us On Facebook
    https://www.facebook.com/2giantgoofballs

    Follow us On X
    https://x.com/2giantgoofballs

    Prefer Audio Only? Check Out Those Options Here
    https://2giantgoofballs.buzzsprout.com/

    #Giants #NYGiants #NFLDraft #GiantsDraft #NewYorkGiants

    Send us Fan Mail

    Support the show

    Show more Show less
    46 mins
  • Dexter Lawrence Standoff and the Daniel Faalele Gamble for Giants
    Apr 9 2026

    The Giants may be trying to get bigger and tougher up front, but they could weaken both lines if Dexter Lawrence’s contract fight drags on while Daniel Faalele becomes part of the answer on the offensive line. Is this a smart trench reset or a wrong bet that could backfire before Week 1?

    Follow us on Spotify so you do not miss an episode, and if you listen on Apple, please drop a 5-star rating and review to help more Giants fans find the show.

    In this episode, Drew and Rob go hard on what feels like the real pressure point of the Giants offseason: the trenches. Dexter Lawrence skipping the voluntary program as his contract situation hangs over the team is not just normal spring drama. It puts the entire defensive line under a microscope, because the Giants cannot replace what he means to that front if this gets uglier. The guys break down why they still think this is more about money than a true desire to leave, where Joe Shane may have mishandled the timing, and why the team now has almost no clean options if the standoff lasts any longer. If the Giants want to build a nasty, physical defense, how do they pull that off without their most dominant lineman fully settled? And if they cave too quickly, how do they protect themselves from paying for past production instead of future dominance?

    On the other side, the Daniel Faalele signing turns into a full-blown debate about whether the Giants are making another risky bet on the offensive line. Drew is openly worried this is the kind of Harbaugh-linked move fans were afraid of, especially if Faalele is viewed as a real starting option instead of just cheap depth. The guys get into his ugly recent grading, why Ravens fans were glad to see him go, and why right guard still feels unsettled even after another body was added. Is this just harmless competition, or is it a bad priority for a team that still needs a real answer in front of its quarterback?

    They also hit Paulson Adebo missing the offseason program and why that rubbed them the wrong way, the latest timeline on Cam Skattebo and Malik Nabers, Ryan Miller coming back, Kayvon Thibodeaux trade chatter, and Dennard Wilson’s vision for a violent, suffocating New York defense. But the heart of the episode is simple: if the Giants do not get the lines right, everything else gets a lot harder.

    Merch: https://2giantgoofballs-shop.fourthwall.com/

    Support: https://buymeacoffee.com/2giantgoofballs

    All episodes: https://2giantgoofballs.buzzsprout.com/

    Send us Fan Mail

    Support the show

    Show more Show less
    54 mins
  • Dexter Lawrence Demanded a Trade — Did the Giants Wait Too Long?
    Apr 7 2026

    Keeping Dexter Lawrence would preserve the one player the Giants still cannot afford to lose up front, but paying him now means rewarding a trade demand that came after his most debated season in years. Trading him could bring back major value, but if the Harbaugh era starts by moving its best defender, what exactly does that say about where this roster really stands?

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

    This episode is built around the biggest question hanging over the Giants right now: did Joe Schoen and the front office let this Dexter Lawrence situation drift too long before it turned into a public problem? Drew and Rob go deep on both sides of it. On one side, Dexter Lawrence has been the heart of the defense, he is still underpaid compared to other top defensive tackles, and the Giants’ defensive line without him looks frighteningly thin. On the other side, the show keeps coming back to the same hard question: if last season was really an off year tied to conditioning, attitude, frustration, or all of the above, how comfortable should the Giants be handing out another massive deal right now? Was last year just a bad situation with bad coaching and bad structure around him, or was it a warning sign the Giants cannot ignore? And if John Harbaugh is trying to establish a new standard immediately, can the team afford to blink here and just hand over more money because the pressure went public?

    The discussion spends most of its time on that dilemma: pay Dex now and protect the one elite force this defense still has, or trade him before the contract fight gets uglier and risk blowing a hole in the middle of the roster. Drew makes the case that this is ultimately a Joe Schoen problem because the Giants had warning signs long before this became a trade request, while Rob pushes the other side too by pointing out how badly the roster would suffer without Dexter Lawrence in the middle. They also weigh whether Harbaugh may already be forcing a tougher tone in the building, whether last year’s frustration infected the entire defense, and whether a new contract now would fix the issue or only delay it. The show also hits the rest of the Giants news cycle, including Rakeem Nunez-Roches returning to Tampa Bay, anonymous executive reactions to the Giants’ offseason, the start of voluntary workouts, the medical staff addition, the latest roster cuts, and why Lucas Patrick could still matter more than fans think if the Giants are serious about stabilizing the offensive line.

    Merch: https://2giantgoofballs-shop.fourthwall.com/

    Support: https://buymeacoffee.com/2giantgoofballs

    All episodes: https://2giantgoofballs.buzzsprout.com/

    Send us Fan Mail

    Support the show

    Show more Show less
    50 mins
  • NY Giants Mock Draft - Stay at 5 or Trade Back?
    Apr 3 2026

    Staying at No. 5 gives the Giants a shot at premium talent like Caleb Downs, but it sacrifices the extra picks that could patch multiple holes across the roster. Trading back creates flexibility and depth, but what if moving down costs them the cleanest difference-maker on the board at No. 5?

    Follow on Spotify so you don’t miss the next episode, and if you listen on Apple, leave a 5-star rating and review to help more Giants fans find the show.

    Drew and Rob run two full Giants mock drafts in this episode, and the whole argument keeps coming back to one question: is patience at No. 5 the smart move, or is staying put actually the wrong bet for a roster with too many holes to ignore? In the no-trade version, they work through the uncomfortable reality that the top of the board may offer high-end talent that still does not feel like a perfect fit. That leads to a real debate around Caleb Downs, Jeremiah Love, team needs, and whether helping the defense or helping Jaxson Dart matters more if the Giants refuse to move. The conversation is messy in the best way, because the value is clear but the fit is not.

    Then the trade version changes the tone of the whole show. Once they move off No. 5 and start stacking extra capital, the board opens up and the mock feels more like a real roster-building plan. That path lets them come away with Mansoor Delane at corner, Denzel Boston at receiver, Christian Miller and Lee Hunter up front, and more depth pieces later in the draft. It also sharpens the biggest takeaway from the episode: the Giants may be better off turning one premium slot into multiple answers instead of forcing a pick just because they are sitting in the top five.

    There is a lot of back-and-forth in here, plenty of live-chat influence, some classic Drew-and-Rob arguing over timing and tiebreakers, and a real push-pull between best player available and biggest need. Should the Giants trust the board and make the cleanest pick at No. 5, or should they attack the draft by moving around and fixing more of the roster at once? And if the trade-down path produces a fuller class, is staying put too costly even if the top talent looks better on paper?

    Merch: https://2giantgoofballs-shop.fourthwall.com/

    Support: https://buymeacoffee.com/2giantgoofballs

    All episodes: https://2giantgoofballs.buzzsprout.com/

    Send us Fan Mail

    Support the show

    Show more Show less
    1 hr and 6 mins
  • OBJ, JPP & Giants Nostalgia Debate: Smart or Stuck?
    Apr 2 2026

    The Giants get the buzz that comes with Odell Beckham Jr. and Jason Pierre-Paul resurfacing, but the cost is obvious — attention shifts away from building the next era and back toward players who are no longer what they once were. Is even entertaining these reunions a smart move, or is it exactly how teams get stuck repeating the past?

    Follow the show on Spotify so you never miss an episode, and if you’re listening on Apple, drop a 5-star rating and review to help more Giants fans find us.

    This episode turns into a full debate on whether the Giants are truly moving forward or still getting pulled backward by familiar names. OBJ meeting with John Harbaugh in Arizona sparks the annual cycle of speculation, but the reality discussed here is simple: he hasn’t played in a year, hasn’t produced in multiple seasons, and would not be walking into a meaningful role. Would bringing him back actually help the roster, or just bring the circus back to East Rutherford?

    The same conversation extends to Jason Pierre-Paul, who publicly said he’s ready to return. The numbers don’t support it. He’s played just six games over the last three seasons and logged minimal snaps. At what point does respect for what a player once was stop outweighing what they currently are? That question becomes the center of the episode.

    Beyond the nostalgia debate, the show breaks down the Giants’ offseason decisions and what they say about the direction of the roster. The mystery linebacker trade is revealed to be Drue Tranquill, leading to a discussion about whether the Giants made the right call sticking with Tremaine Edmunds instead of giving up draft capital. D.J. Davidson’s departure to Washington is covered as a depth loss, along with Isaiah Likely taking over the No. 9 jersey after Graham Gano’s release.

    The conversation also shifts to ownership, with Roger Goodell confirming Steve Tisch is no longer an owner after transferring his stake, while still remaining tied to the organization in a leadership role. Is that enough separation, or does it raise more questions than it answers?

    Finally, the episode closes with a full reaction to Matt Miller’s seven-round mock draft, including Caleb Downs at No. 5 and KC Concepcion in Round 2. The debate centers on whether taking a safety that high is justified in this class and whether the Giants are prioritizing the right positions as they try to build a competitive roster.

    Merch: https://2giantgoofballs-shop.fourthwall.com/

    Support: https://buymeacoffee.com/2giantgoofballs

    All episodes: https://2giantgoofballs.buzzsprout.com/

    Send us Fan Mail

    Support the show

    Show more Show less
    41 mins
  • Giants Hot Seat Debate: WhoCould Be Gone After 2026?
    Mar 31 2026

    Cutting Graham Gano gives the Giants cap relief, but the bigger price is that it throws a brighter light on a roster full of players now fighting to prove they still belong in the long-term plan. If 2026 is really the prove-it year Drew and Rob say it is, which Giants are actually safe?

    Follow 2 Giants Goofballs on Spotify so you do not miss the next episode, and if you listen on Apple Podcasts, leave a 5-star rating and review to help more Giants fans find the show.

    This episode starts with the expected Graham Gano move and what it says about where the Giants are right now, but the heart of the show is the 2026 hot-seat debate. Drew and Rob go player by player through the roster and ask which names are entering a year that could decide whether they stay part of this team, slide into backup roles, or start running out of NFL runway entirely. Darius Slayton comes up first, with a real debate about whether his years of overachieving can survive one more season in a more crowded room. Theo Johnson gets put under the microscope for the same reason Giants fans keep getting stuck on him: the route running and flashes are there, but the drops keep turning opportunity into frustration. Andrew Thomas is the bigger-money version of that pressure conversation, because when he is healthy he changes the entire line, but if the injuries pile up again the questions will get louder whether anyone likes it or not. John Runyan Jr. and John Michael Schmitz also get framed exactly the way the show sees them now: not disasters, not long-term locks, just two linemen entering a season where “okay” might not be enough.

    The defensive side gets even more uncomfortable. Dexter Lawrence is still treated with respect, but the episode leans into the hard version of the question: if the production does not bounce back, how long do the Giants keep paying elite-money for something short of elite impact? Micah McFadden gets the prove-it treatment as well, because this year may decide whether he is viewed as a real starter or more of a useful rotational piece. In the secondary, Paulson Adebo, Deonte Banks, Tyler Nubin, and Jevon Holland all get hit from different angles, whether it is contract value, lack of ball production, poor coverage play, or the risk of getting jumped by cheaper competition. Drew and Rob do touch on the owners meetings, John Mara being there, John Harbaugh’s comments, the OBJ noise, and the low-risk swings on Evan Neal and Joshua Ezeudu, but those are supporting stories. The real episode is the Giants hot-seat conversation and the stakes attached to it. Which players are still pillars, which ones are hanging by a thread, and which ones may already be closer to the exit than fans want to admit?

    Merch: https://2giantgoofballs-shop.fourthwall.com/

    Support: https://buymeacoffee.com/2giantgoofballs

    All episodes: https://2giantgoofballs.buzzsprout.com/

    Send us Fan Mail

    Support the show

    Show more Show less
    1 hr and 4 mins
  • 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?

    Follow us on Spotify so you do not miss the next Giants draft episode. If you listen on Apple Podcasts, please leave a 5-star rating and review to help more Giants fans find the show.

    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.

    Merch: https://2giantgoofballs-shop.fourthwall.com/

    Support: https://buymeacoffee.com/2giantgoofballs

    All episodes: https://2giantgoofballs.buzzsprout.com/

    Send us Fan Mail

    Support the show

    Show more Show less
    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?

    Follow us on Spotify and, if you enjoy the show, leave a 5-star review on Apple. That support helps more Giants fans find the show.

    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.

    Merch:
    https://2giantgoofballs-shop.fourthwall.com/

    Support:
    https://buymeacoffee.com/2giantgoofballs

    All episodes:
    https://2giantgoofballs.buzzsprout.com/

    Send us Fan Mail

    Support the show

    Show more Show less
    51 mins