Should the Giants re-sign Tommy DeVito, who heads into the offseason as an exclusive rights free agent, or should they move on?
New York Giants general manager Joe Schoen has already revealed his plans for quarterbacks Tommy DeVito and Drew Lock.
The New York Giants are expected to bring quarterback Tommy DeVito, an exclusive rights free agent, back for the 2025 season.
The New York Giants played themselves out of a franchise quarterback again. Brian Daboll’s team won a meaningless game down the stretch for the second consecutive season, which hurt their positioning in the NFL Draft.
We begin our New York Giants position unit reviews by looking at all the players who suited up for the team at a position group, their impact, and where the position group stands as we head into the offseason. Up first is the quarterback group.
The Giants failed to upgrade the backup tackle position following Andrew Thomas’ season-ending injury in 2023. Instead, they stuck with third-year lineman Joshua Ezeudu to serve
DeVito saw action in three contests during the regular season, completing 31 of 44 passes for 257 yards, zero touchdowns and zero interceptions. He also carried eight times for 32 yards.
The New York Giants need a quarterback in 2025. Make that multiple quarterbacks, with third-stringer Tommy DeVito the only one on the roster who has a contract for the upcoming season. “That’s obviously the number one issue for us going into this offseason,
The New York Giants were 31st in the NFL in scoring in 2024. That, though, was not because they lacked playmakers at the wide receiver position. Let’s take a look at wide receiver as we continue our position reviews for the 2025 Giants.
Schoen ad Daboll will get a fourth season to fix an ailing Giants franchise that just finished its worst season in its 100-year history.
The New York Giants will pick No. 3 in the 2025 NFL Draft. The Giants capped a miserable season with a loss to the Philadelphia Eagles backups to fall to 3-14 on the year. Unfortunately for the Giants,
The Giants went 2-8 in Jones’ starts. By virtually every metric, he was among the worst passers in the league, epitomized by an expected points added per play that ranked 33rd among 42 passers with at least 200 plays. It wasn’t passable and, eventually, it wasn’t startable.