Giants 'Monitoring' Trade for Key Rival
That isn't to say upgrades aren't possible. Neither receiver Darius Slayton nor Wan'Dale Robinson is an above-average starter, and a flashy tackle could feasibly push lineman Jermaine Eluemunor inside at some point.
Advertisement
New York's weakest point on offense, though, is at tight end. Round 4 rookie Theo Johnson was rather mediocre as a rookie, failing to fill the shoes Darren Waller abruptly left. Despite being a size/speed/strength freak, Johnson's passing game impact was limited to just 29 catches for 331 yards and a touchdown.
General manager Joe Schoen might not address the position early (or at all) in the upcoming NFL Draft. Instead, he may search the trade block for an expendable veteran.
According to Jordan Raanan, the Giants are 'monitoring' a potential trade for Philadelphia Eagles tight end Dallas Goedert – albeit an unlikely endeavor.
"I heard at one point they looked into Dallas Goedert," Raanan said on "Giants After Dark." "He sounds like a guy who is going to get traded at some point in this draft.
Advertisement
"Now, I am not expecting Dallas Goedert to get traded to the Giants, but the fact that they checked in on it definitely made me scratch my head a little bit. . . It's something they are at least monitoring."
Goedert has dealt with bumps and bruises across recent seasons and only played in 10 games in 2024. He managed to log 42 catches, 496 yards, and two touchdowns. Goedert is a quarterback-friendly target, but his versatility shouldn't be understated, either. He has long been a quality run blocker, allowing him to spend time in the slot and in-line with similar levels of proficiency.
Goedert's cap implications may push any deal into June, if at all, as his dead cap would fall from $21.3 million to $7.7 million. The Eagles likely aren't all that eager to ship the starter away, either, and the Giants seem to be confident in Johnson's development.
"They do think highly of Theo Johnson. They think he can be a significant player," Raanan said. "Russell Wilson said he could be a star."
Advertisement
With an upgrade under center and a year of experience to his name, Johnson is poised to have more success in Year 2. Goedert, while an easy upgrade, doesn't make quite enough sense to be moved, especially with New York already strapped for cash.
If nothing else, Johnson is entering a pivotal second season. Struggling in 2025 opens the door for a more significant move to be made at tight end.
Related: Giants Year in Review: Reflecting on Theo Johnson's Rookie Season
Related: One Quarterback Still Makes Most Sense for Giants

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
23 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Sinner withdrawn from US Open mixed doubles draw
World number one Jannik Sinner, who was forced to retire during the final of the Cincinnati Open, and playing partner Katerina Siniakova were removed from the US Open mixed doubles draw on Tuesday. The withdrawal comes a day after illness forced Sinner to concede defeat to great rival Carlos Alcaraz after going 5-0 down in the first set of the Cincinnati final on Monday. The 24-year-old did not speak to journalists after the loss, issuing a statement saying only that he would definitely play at the US Open in New York, where the singles main draw starts on Sunday. "I love Grand Slams a lot, they are the main tournaments for, for my season and my career," reigning US Open champion Sinner said. "The US Open is going to be a tough tournament, but in the same time, I'm looking forward to it if I'm ready, physically and mentally." The statement did not address his participation in the mixed doubles -- organised on Tuesday and Wednesday in a new shortened format that brings together the world's best singles players -- raising doubts about whether he would be able to compete. The pair replacing Sinner and Siniakova will face Switzerland's Belinda Bencic and Germany's Alexander Zverev in the first round. dga/law/nf/pb
Yahoo
23 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Biggest fantasy football ADP risers/fallers for the third week of August 2025
It's Week 3 of our series covering the biggest risers and fallers in Yahoo ADP, and we've got more big names on the move heading into late-August and the heart of fantasy football draft season. For more context, check out our early August and mid-August pieces from this series. Let's get right into it! [Join or create a Yahoo Fantasy Football league for the 2025 NFL season] 5 Biggest ADP Risers Honorable Mentions For starters, don't skip this section! Three names from last week's Honorable Mentions jumped into the top-five risers (below). This is almost like a teaser trailer. Tyrone Tracy Jr. just missed the top five this week amid Cam Skattebo's continued injury absence. If Tracy holds on to bell-cow volume because of the rookie RB's persistent hamstring issue, he'll be a great value, even in a questionable offense. Elsewhere, rookie fever is running rampant, with Tetairoa McMillan, Omarion Hampton and Matthew Golden all making the top-10 risers after two weeks of preseason action. All three are first-round draft picks in offenses with tons of opportunity to shine: each of them could be difference-makers at their positions. 5. Ricky Pearsall, San Francisco 49ers, WR (ADP -8.04) Second-year rookie receiver Ricky Pearsall was my All-Breakout Team FLEX pick, and I strongly considered him as the team's WR2. While he had an up-and-down rookie season initially derailed by a gunshot wound sustained before the season, Pearsall showed plenty of flashes and has quickly become a favorite to lead the San Francisco receiving corps into 2025. As I said in the breakout article: "Deebo Samuel Sr. is gone, Brandon Aiyuk is recovering from a multi-ligament knee injury (and will be through most of the 2025 season) and Jauan Jennings is currently mired in turmoil both physical (calf) and financial (contract dispute). Even if the Jennings cloud clears and Aiyuk returns by midseason, Pearsall might top the pecking order just on talent and investment alone." In a Kyle Shanahan system with Brock Purdy at the helm, Pearsall is climbing in ADP for a very good reason: he's been heavily undervalued (and still is). While he's up to WR37 on Yahoo, I'm ranking him much closer to WR27 (or higher). Take him somewhere in that range in your upcoming fantasy draft. 4. Jakobi Meyers, Las Vegas Raiders, WR (ADP -8.35) There hasn't been any hype on Jakobi Meyers, and he hasn't done anything of note in the preseason, so it's somewhat surprising to see his name in the risers this week. Maybe it's growing faith in Geno Smith and the Vegas offense. Maybe it's a realization that the rest of the depth chart is ... subpar at best. Regardless, it makes sense for Meyers, who is going at WR36, one spot ahead of Pearsall. In a 2024 season with inferior quarterback play — i.e. Gardner Minshew and Aidan O'Connell — Meyers caught 87 of 129 targets and finished as the WR23 overall. He doesn't have the breakout upside of a guy like Pearsall, Rome Odunze or Emeka Egbuka in the same range, but he's perhaps the most likely of the group to finish reliably above his draft price. If you're looking for a safe WR3, Meyers is one of the best options in the later rounds and belongs a little higher on draft boards. 3. TreVeyon Henderson, New England Patriots, RB (ADP -10.96) Last week, Rhamondre Stevenson cracked this list on the merits of his usage in Week 1 of the preseason. Since then, he missed multiple practices with an unspecified injury before returning early this week sporting a non-contact jersey. Meanwhile, rookie TreVeyon Henderson bulldozed his way into the limelight. The reports out of camp have been nothing but glowing for the explosive rookie, and while Stevenson figures to maintain an early-down or short-yardage role, Henderson is gaining steam as the true No. 1 back in New England. I expect we'll continue to see his ADP rocket upwards — he's reached RB23 at the 5-6 turn, but could easily crack the top-20 running backs and the fourth round before Week 1. If you draft before then, don't hesitate to be aggressive and reach a little for Henderson. 2. Tank Bigsby, Jacksonville Jaguars, RB (ADP -11.44) The roller coaster of Jaguars running back ADPs continues, as Tank Bigsby has worked his way ahead of Travis Etienne Jr. on Yahoo. Notably, after some chaotic hype around Etienne's usage on the first drive of the preseason, it was Bigsby who dominated the opening opportunities last week against the Saints. And looked good doing it. All that we've really learned so far is that the Jaguars are still learning themselves. But the curriculum says Bigsby will win this job. He is a perfect analog for Bucky Irving in Liam Coen's offense, while Etienne plays the Rachaad White role. I had Bigsby as the All-Breakout Team RB2 for these reasons, and believe he has a similar ceiling to Irving's RB14 finish last year. Even with this bump in ADP, Bigsby is arguably the cheapest "lead back" in fantasy. If he secures the job and Jacksonville improves under Coen's tutelage, he'll be one of the best values in 2025 drafts. 1. Emeka Egbuka, Tampa Bay Buccaneers, WR (ADP -15.21) After a couple weeks of the fall of Chris Godwin and rise of Emeka Egbuka, we're in full-blown to-the-moon territory now. The first-round rookie receiver has been tearing it up in camp, scoring in preseason action and earning the label "absolute stud" from Baker Mayfield, making an airtight case to start alongside Mike Evans from the first snap of Week 1. Meanwhile, Godwin remains sidelined (likely through multiple regular-season games), and Jalen McMillan also got banged up in preseason action. Plus, I'm on record saying Evans might be slowing down at 32 years old, coming off an inefficient 2024 season. Egbuka's floor is steadily climbing towards "weekly FLEX" territory, but his ceiling might be similar to Ladd McConkey's or even Malik Nabers' from last year. 5 Biggest ADP Fallers Honorable Mentions This week, Godwin has graduated from the honorable mentions to the top (bottom?) of the fallers, but there are a couple names worth noting in his stead. DJ Moore experienced an odd dip this past week, possibly due to rising expectations for Rome Odunze and the rest of the busy (young) Bears receiving corps. I'm buying the dip. Stevenson lost all the gain he saw last week (preseason is a fickle friend) to balance out Henderson's rise. And Justin Herbert continues to slide as well, despite the addition of Keenan Allen to a potentially underrated group of pass-catchers — he's a solid discount option if you wait on QB or want insurance for a guy like Justin Fields. 5. Zay Flowers, Baltimore Ravens, WR (ADP +4.84) Little has changed in Baltimore, no one (of note) is hurt and Zay Flowers has played multiple NFL seasons and more or less proven who he is ... so why the ADP drop? I think it's because drafters are finding wideouts they actually want to draft on the WR2/WR3 fringe, rather than settling for Flowers because "he'll probably finish around there." The names going right after Flowers in Yahoo ADP — Calvin Ridley, Jameson Williams, Tetairoa McMillan — all have far more upside. Riskier receivers like Rashee Rice, Travis Hunter and Rome Odunze — going a round later — are more intriguing than a Ravens wideout who will probably hit 1,000 yards and five touchdowns and call it a day. Heck, Meyers (see above) is basically Flowers, but two rounds cheaper. If you're okay spending a sixth-round pick on a high-floor, low-ceiling WR3, Flowers might be your guy. But he's not the type of pick that wins fantasy championships, and the ADP shift is starting to reflect that. 4. Davante Adams, Los Angeles Rams, WR (ADP +5.40) The dip for Davante Adams can be summarized in three words. Matthew Stafford's back. The veteran quarterback had missed quite a bit of time with back pain that was growing into a legitimate concern for Rams fans. Until Monday. Now "Matthew Stafford's back" is actually the best news Adams could ask for ... as in, Stafford's back at practice. Whether it was the infamous "rejuvenation chamber" or whether the 37-year-old just needed a few well-earned veteran days off, the panic in Los Angeles should fade in the coming days, and Adams' ADP should correct. That said, if you can snap him up in the late fourth round as a result of lingering worries, I would do it. His upside as the red-zone threat and WR1B across from Puka Nacua is sky high. He's going between Garrett Wilson (who I'm avoiding at all costs) and Terry McLaurin (who's floating in front-office limbo right now). Give me Adams, who's "red flags" aren't even about him, and who arguably has the highest upside in this range of drafts. 3. Jayden Reed, Green Bay Packers, WR (ADP +6.08) As first-round draft pick Matthew Golden makes a name for himself in the fantasy community, Jayden Reed is going to continue to see his ADP plummet. It was already headed downhill as Reed dealt with a foot injury in training camp, but now the athletic rookie is more or less replacing him as the "lightning rod" of the Packers offense. Reed had already been inconsistent — as has every Green Bay receiver since Adams left — but now he'll likely be relegated to WR2A or B or C or some other letter in a murky depth chart, while Golden takes the "alpha" role (whatever that entails out in Wisconsin). As we speak, Reed is still technically one spot ahead of Golden in ADP, but I expect that to flip in the coming days. He'd need to drop another round or two to pique my interest, and even then, drafting him means taking on quite a bit of risk for a questionably lucrative reward. 2. Cam Skattebo, New York Giants, RB (ADP +8.65) As one of Cam Skattebo's biggest truthers coming into (and even out of) the draft, this hurts. But we have to face reality. The rookie running back has been dealing with a hamstring injury for most of training camp and is now reportedly unlikely to be ready for Week 1 of the regular season. That puts quite the damper on any sleeper excitement for the unique, hard-running, pass-catching pinball of a back. Even if and when Skattebo returns, hamstring injuries headed into the season are a major red flag for me. He's worth stashing, in case he does return quickly to full strength (and manages to stay healthy), but is falling from the "RB3 with upside" range to the "question-ridden RB4" range ... and justifiably so. 1. Chris Godwin & Baker Mayfield, Tampa Bay Buccaneers, WR (+18.95) & QB (ADP +15.00) We've touched on Godwin and his agonizingly slow recovery from ankle injury, and Baker Mayfield was the No. 1 faller last week as well, but these situations bear reminding. Drafters are liable to see Godwin's recognizable name and hit "Draft" in the 10th round, but the way things are trending, we may not even see him on the field for a month (or more) after the start of the season. I'd need to see him fall another round or two (past guys like Khalil Shakir and Josh Downs) to consider drafting him with confidence. As for Mayfield, everything I said last week remains true: he was being drafted far too high based on unsustainably efficient 2024 numbers, and needs to fall to the very back of QB1 range (or out of it) to earn a legitimate look in your drafts. As it stands, I'd still rather take Dak Prescott or Kyler Murray, the guys going right after him in drafts, without question.
Yahoo
23 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Colts name Daniel Jones starting quarterback over Anthony Richardson: Reports
The Indianapolis Colts have named Daniel Jones their starting quarterback, according to multiple reports. Jones had been in a training-camp competition with Anthony Richardson, who started 11 games for Indianapolis last season. The Colts signed Jones on a one-year deal in March after he was benched and then released by the Giants last November. He spent the rest of the 2024 season with the Minnesota Vikings but did not see the field. This breaking news story will be updated.