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5/5 🧵 The smart caution: two high picks don’t guarantee a damn thing. The Giants also had Nos. 5 and 7 in 2022 and didn’t get the franchise pillars they hoped for. So the trade creates opportunity, not certainty. But compared with staring at a thin draft board after No. 37, this is a massive upgrade in leverage, talent access, and ways to help fast. 📎 Source

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4/5 🧵 Offensively, the piece points to adding help around Dart — especially WR Jordyn Tyson and G Olaivavega Ioane. Tyson could be insurance and firepower if Malik Nabers isn’t fully back to form after ACL recovery. Ioane would strengthen protection and the run game. On defense, names like Sonny Styles, Caleb Downs, and Jermod McCoy show how No. 10 could deliver real value instead of a reach.

3/5 🧵 The article frames this as a dream setup for John Harbaugh. In 18 years with Baltimore, he never had this kind of first-round ammo. Now he gets two premium shots to build the roster his way around Jaxson Dart, instead of trying to squeeze a full rebuild through one prospect. That’s the appeal: speed. The Giants can fix multiple weaknesses immediately.

2/5 🧵 The real story is optionality. With picks 5 and 10, the Giants don’t have to force one “franchise savior” pick. They can grab two immediate starters, split offense/defense, double down on one side of the ball, or trade back from either slot to recover more draft capital — especially a second-rounder after past moves thinned them out.

1/5 🧵 The Giants just turned one ugly breakup into the most flexible draft hand in the league. Trading Dexter Lawrence hurts — he was their best player for years — but landing No. 10 overall means New York now holds two top-10 picks: No. 5 and No. 10. That’s not a patch job. That’s a roster reshape in one night.