New York Post

Giants mock draft 3.0

- By Paul Schwartz paul.schwartz@nypost.com

It is in vogue this time of year for those on the inside to mock the plethora of mock drafts that arise in the weeks leading into the NFL draft. Not Brian Daboll.

“I definitely look at them,’’ the Giants’ head coach said, “because there are probably some people that are communicat­ing with other people and they think this and they think that.’’

Nice of Daboll to admit this, but he goes only so far with all these prognostic­ations.

“I don’t know if a mock draft has ever been 100 percent,’’ he said. “So you trust your work, your evaluation, the people in your building, and then make the best decision for yourself.’’

It’s a big draft for the Joe SchoenBria­n Daboll contingent. Daboll and the entire Giants front office has been eyeing and evaluating quarterbac­ks and there is no doubt the brain trust is seriously considerin­g taking one high in this draft.

For Mock Draft 3.0, we gave the Sportskeed­a draft simulator a whirl and, the way the board fell, it did not make sense to link the Giants with a quarterbac­k. Take a look:

Round 1, No. 6 overall ROME ODUNZE, WR, WASHINGTON Previous picks:

Odunze;

J.J. McCarthy, QB, Michigan First things first. Three quarterbac­ks — Caleb Williams Jayden Daniels and Drake Maye — came off the board with the first three picks.

Wide receivers Marvin Harrison Jr. and Malik Nabers went Nos. 4 and 5, respective­ly, leaving the Giants with a decision to make. Do they go with quarterbac­k J.J. McCarthy from Michigan, Notre Dame left tackle Joe Alt or Odunze? There are no sure things, of course, but Odunze is closer to that as a prospect than McCarthy. He has size (6-foot-3, 212 pounds), speed (4.45 seconds in the 40), production (92 receptions, 13 touchdowns this past season) and an uncanny ability to come down with the ball for contested catches. He has been likened to Larry Fitzgerald — not too shabby. Odunze gives the offense what it desperatel­y needs: A true No. 1 target.

Round 2, No. 47

T.J. TAMPA, CB, IOWA STATE Previous picks: Michael Penix Jr., QB, Washington; Troy Franklin, WR, Oregon For transparen­cy’s sake, QB Bo Nix is already off the board here. Tampa looks the part, a well-built 6-foot-1 athlete with long arms and a physical presence, although he might be better suited to play zone coverage rather than a steady diet of manto-man. He will come up and put a hit on in run support. This is a spot where need meets value. The roster has Deonte Banks coming off an encouragin­g rookie year and then … who? Adoree’ Jackson is a free agent and Cor’Dale Flott and Darnay Holmes are more comfortabl­e in the slot. Maybe last summer’s big story, Tre Hawkins, shows marked improvemen­t in year No. 2. Tampa should get a chance to play right away.

Round 3 , No. 70

TREY BENSON, RB, FLORIDA STATE Previous picks: Kris Jenkins, DT, Michigan;

Max Melton, CB, Rutgers After two years at Oregon, Benson flourished with the Seminoles with

1,896 yards and 24 touchdowns the past two seasons. Rare blend of size (216 pounds) and speed (4.39) with big-play ability and strong ball security (no fumbles in college). Lest we forget, Saquon Barkley now gets paid to run the ball for the Eagles. Benson, built like a tank, could emerge as a workhorse.

Round 4, No. 107 DELMAR GLAZE, OT, MARYLAND Previous picks:

Cade Stover, TE, Ohio State; DeWayne Carter, DT, Duke There is a franchise left tackle on the scene in Andrew Thomas and the Giants still hold out hope Evan Neal can be a sidekick at right tackle. Thus far, though, Neal has not come close to living up to his lofty draft status. Glaze was a three-year starter for the Terrapins and all-Big Ten the past two seasons. Here’s an added plus: He moved inside and played some guard at the Senior Bowl, applying position versatilit­y to his upside.

Round 5, No. 166 NELSON CEASER, EDGE, HOUSTON Previous picks:

Javon Foster, OT, Missouri; Dillon Johnson, RB, Washington Sure, the trade for Brian Burns gives the defense bookend pass rushers, with Burns on one side and Kayvon Thibodeaux on the other side. Plus, Azeez Ojulari is back on a contract year, looking to (finally) stay healthy — he gets sacks when he is on the field. A team can never have enough of these guys. Ceaser is a compact (6-2, 254) high-energy pass rusher with 17 career sacks and 27.5 tackles for loss. The more, the merrier.

Round 6, No. 183 DADRION TAYLOR-DEMERSON, S, TEXAS TECH Previous picks:

Isaac Guerendo, RB, Louisville; Ryan Watts, CB, Texas Xavier McKinney played every snap in 2023 and he’s now with the Packers. Jason Pinnock returns as one starting safety and maybe Dane Belton in his third season is ready for a promotion. TaylorDeme­rson is undersized but he is aggressive and has excellent ball skills (10 intercepti­ons in a fiveyear career).

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T.J. Tampa
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Rome Odunze

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