Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Giants fill needs with picks

- By TOM CANAVAN AP Sports Writer

EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. (AP)

>> Less than 30 minutes after finishing his second NFL draft with the New York Giants, general manager Joe Schoen still had a lot on his mind and much work to do.

Over the next two days, there will be talks with the agents of players who weren’t drafted about joining the Giants or coming to a rookie camp next weekend. He also wants to circle back and discuss a new contract with running back Saquon Barkley, who’s currently under the franchise tag.

There will be talks with agents for the seven players the Giants drafted and then maybe some time to decompress.

The work never stops, but Schoen was feeling good Saturday. Over the last three days, New York made two trades to move up and got three players Schoen feels have a shot at starting right away: cornerback Deonte Banks of Maryland, center John Michael Schmitz of Minnesota and receiver Jalin Hyatt of Tennessee.

“You never know how it’s going to fall,” Schoen said. “We went through a million scenarios and didn’t know who was going to be there.”

All three filled immediate needs for the Giants, who surprised many last season by going 9-7-1 and making the playoffs for the first time since 2016.

Banks, who was taken with the 24th pick overall after a deal with Jacksonvil­le to move up one spot, is a physical, shutdown cornerback who could play opposite Adoree Jackson.

The need for a center developed after Jon Feliciano and Nick Gates were lost this spring to free agency. Schmitz fit the bill after a long career with the Gophers that was extended by the COVID-19 season.

The steal was getting Hyatt in the third round. The speedster caught 15 touchdowns this season, including a Southeaste­rn Conference record five against Alabama.

Quarterbac­k Daniel Jones, who signed a fouryear, $160 million contract after last season, has not had a deep threat since joining the Giants as the No. 6 pick overall in 2019.

“I feel like I’m just dynamic, explosive,” Hyatt said Saturday. “I feel like I get open 24/7. I think that’s what you want in a receiver, and I feel like really with those three attributes, I think that’s what separates myself from everybody else.”

The move cost the Giants their fourth-round pick but it seemingly was worth it.

Schoen and coach Brian Daboll spent the final three rounds adding depth and special teams help.

Oklahoma running back Eric Gray was taken in the fifth round, Old Dominion cornerback Tre Hawkins III was grabbed in the sixth, and Oregon defensive tackle Jordon Riley and Houston safety Gervarrius Owens were chosen in the seventh.

While the Giants didn’t have a need at running back, they protected themselves by taking Gray in the fifth round. They need to sign Barkley to a multi-year contract extension by July 17 or he will become a free agent after next season.

Gray, who started his career at Tennessee, ran for 1,366 yards and 11 touchdowns last season and caught 33 passes. He also could get opportunit­ies as a return man.

 ?? STEFAN JEREMIAH/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? New York Giants first-round draft pick Deonte Banks, center,is photograph­ed with head coach Brian Daboll, left, and general manager Joe Schoen during a press conference at the team’s training facility in East Rutherford, N.J., on Friday, April 28.
STEFAN JEREMIAH/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS New York Giants first-round draft pick Deonte Banks, center,is photograph­ed with head coach Brian Daboll, left, and general manager Joe Schoen during a press conference at the team’s training facility in East Rutherford, N.J., on Friday, April 28.

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