04 Mar

Ranking QB options for the Giants, from Aaron Rodgers to trading up for Cam Ward

Item No. 1 on the New York Giants’ offseason to-do list is finding their new quarterback, and this decision will directly affect if head coach Brian Daboll and general manager Joe Schoen will be back in 2026. Matthew Stafford would have been a great fit with the Giants, but now that he’s back with the Los Angeles Rams, what will the Giants do?

New York could swing a deal with the Tennessee Titans and take Miami QB Cam Ward at No. 1 overall, or the Giants could turn their attention to free agency. Regardless of which route they take, this is the most important decision Schoen and Co. will make. Speaking of options, what is the best route for the Giants to take in finding their new quarterback? Is it worth it to trade up for someone like Ward? Should they take another quarterback later in the draft, or is there a sleeper free agent hitting the market?

Below, we will rank the Giants’ best options when it comes to acquiring their new signal-caller.

  1. Trade back and draft Shedeur Sanders
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    team logo
    Shedeur Sanders
    COLO • QB • #2
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    Usually when a team is sitting at No. 3 overall in the draft order, they have a good chance to select their quarterback of the future. However, two QB-needy teams are sitting above New York, and then we don’t exactly know who the QB2 is or where he will go in the draft.

This is how the QB “narrative” in the 2025 NFL Draft has evolved: It started off as a debate between Ward and Shedeur Sanders. Then, it evolved into Ward being QB1 and Sanders QB2. On Saturday, we saw another shift in the narrative, as the NFL Network revealed something incredibly interesting during the 2025 NFL Scouting Combine. It was reported on the broadcast that other quarterbacks like Jaxson Dart and Quinn Ewers are in contention to be QB2/QB3. It’s very much up in the air.

Personally, I think Sanders is QB2 — but is he worth the No. 3 overall pick? Depending on what happens with Travis Hunter and Abdul Carter atop the draft, there could be a market for the Giants to trade down once or even twice. There’s a reality where New York can both acquire draft capital, and find its prospective franchise quarterback in the top half of the draft.

Sanders threw for 4,134 yards, 37 touchdowns and 10 interceptions last season at Colorado. He was named the 2024 Big 12 Offensive Player of the Year after leading the FBS with a 74% completion percentage — which was the sixth-highest in FBS history. Sanders’ 71.8% career completion percentage is the highest in FBS history, and he accomplished this behind a questionable offensive line. No quarterback was sacked more than Sanders was over the last two seasons (94 sacks taken).

Sanders is worth a first-round pick, and he made a good point this past week in saying that he had a hand in two different program turnarounds. The Giants need a “program turnaround.”

2025 NFL mock draft: Giants pass on quarterback, Jets replace Davante Adams in post-combine edition
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2025 NFL mock draft: Giants pass on quarterback, Jets replace Davante Adams in post-combine edition

  1. Pay Sam Darnold
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    Sam Darnold
    MIN • QB • #14
    CMP%
    66.2
    YDS
    4319
    TD
    35
    INT
    12
    YD/ATT
    7.92
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    Darnold will probably be the most popular free agent quarterback on the market — if he even makes it to free agency. The Minnesota Vikings surely have some level of interest in keeping Darnold, but at what price? There are over a dozen quarterbacks making at least $45 million per year on average. Will the Vikings give Darnold a multi-year contract with that kind of AAV? Is he worth more than that? Would he take a pay cut to remain in the system where he found the most success he ever had in the NFL? There are plenty of questions when it comes to Darnold’s future.

Spotrac’s market value tool estimates Darnold could sign a four-year deal that carries an AAV of $40.1 million. That number seems a bit low, but the Giants should at least entertain the possibility of signing Darnold if he hits free agency. Maybe pitch it as some kind of New York revenge tour.

While the season ended on a low note, Darnold still went 14-3 as the starter, while putting up career numbers across the board with a 66.2% completion percentage, 4,319 passing yards, 35 touchdowns and 12 interceptions. He found success pushing the ball downfield to targets like Justin Jefferson and Jordan Addison, as no other quarterback had more completions (34), a higher completion percentage (49%), more passing touchdowns (9) or passing yards (1,182) than Darnold on throws 20+ yards downfield.

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