John Harbaugh’s prudent and at times frugal spending, with a heavy concentration on one-year contracts and Band-Aid deals at positions of need, seems to signal a longer-term approach rather than any rushed urgency toward retooling the current team for an immediate 2026 run.
Not that the Giants are punting on the 2026 season. They can’t. Not with Andrew Thomas and Dexter Lawrence and Brian Burns on those contracts and with quarterback Jaxson Dart stepping into his critical second pro season.
That’s why they recruited a playoff-experienced middle linebacker in Tremaine Edmunds and bought tight end Isaiah Likely at the top of his position’s market. And that’s why they’re throwing numbers at the receiver position, where No. 1 target Malik Nabers’ availability is in doubt as he recovers from a torn ACL and meniscus in his right knee.
Still, Harbaugh was not hired to wave a magic wand on the Giants for this fall. He was hired to get them back on track for the long haul, starting with but not limited to this current core.
So although he is patching together this year’s roster as best he can, it is clear that Harbaugh’s focus here is on long-term sustainability. He is not overcommitting deep into the future to many new players on this roster.
This strategy helps the 2026 team try to return to a baseline of competence by giving the special teams units a complete facelift and targeting veterans such as Calvin Austin II, Darnell Mooney, Greg Newsome II and Ar’Darius Washington at reasonable costs.
But it does not tie up the Giants’ salary cap or sacrifice draft assets in 2027 and beyond.
It keeps the Giants patient. It doesn’t assume the Giants have what it takes to return to the top of the NFC immediately.
It feels like a sound evaluation of the Giants’ current roster: Not close to where it needs to be, needing to learn how to walk before it can run.
The Houston Texans’ Nick Caserio did something like this when he took that franchise over in 2021.
He signed a ton of veterans to two-year max contracts when he came on board, steadied the books, kept losing, found a way to fleece the Cleveland Browns for Deshaun Watson, accrued assets, built through the draft and now is knocking on the AFC’s door.