Giants' John Harbaugh urged to make big NFL free agency news
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New York Giants head coach John Harbaugh.
The New York Giants may have just tipped their hand — or at least their philosophy — with the fifth overall pick in the 2026 NFL Draft.
New head coach John Harbaugh didn’t hedge when asked about the possibility of selecting Ohio State superstar safety Caleb Downs. In fact, he practically endorsed it.
“We favor Hall of Fame safeties,” Harbaugh said on the Mike Francesca podcast. “If we have a chance to draft a potential future Hall of Fame safety in Caleb Downs, that would be just fine with me — I’d take him in a second.”
Those aren’t typical pre-draft platitudes. They’re a declaration of belief — both in Downs’ generational ceiling and in Harbaugh’s long-standing roster-building doctrine: elite talent over positional need.
For a Giants team with glaring holes across the roster, that stance could reshape how Big Blue approaches the most important draft pick of the Joe Schoen era.
Harbaugh’s History Could Signal Giants’ Selection
Harbaugh’s words carry weight because his career has consistently validated them. Few coaches in modern NFL history have maximized the safety position as he has.
He coached Ed Reed in Baltimore, helped oversee Kyle Hamilton’s rise into an All-Pro, and worked with Brian Dawkins in Philadelphia — three of the defining safeties of the past two decades.
That pedigree matters when evaluating Downs. Scouts widely view the Ohio State star as one of the best defensive prospects in years, with rare versatility to play deep, in the box, or over the slot.
In 2025 alone, Downs logged 682 snaps with 58 tackles, 35 run stops, two interceptions, and two forced fumbles while allowing just 171 yards in coverage — production that underscores his three-level impact.
Harbaugh’s philosophy is simple: when drafting in the top five, you chase transformational players, not positional boxes.
“When you draft that high, you take the best player,” he added. “It’s not a need pick. It’s a best player pick… a guy you would like to see one day wearing a gold jacket.”
That approach mirrors how championship organizations operate — stockpiling elite talent first and solving depth charts later.
Drafting Downs Would Send a Clear Message About Identity
Selecting Downs would be controversial. The Giants already invested a 2024 second-round pick in Tyler Nubin and signed Jevon Holland to anchor the secondary last offseason.
Using the No. 5 pick on another safety would likely push Nubin into a reduced role — an uncomfortable reality for a recent premium selection. But Harbaugh appears willing to accept that cost if the reward is defensive greatness.
Downs is widely viewed as a “Swiss Army knife” defender capable of lining up anywhere — deep safety, slot corner, box defender, even linebacker-like roles in sub-packages.
For newly minted defensive coordinator Dennard Wilson, that versatility could unlock schematic freedom: disguised coverages, aggressive rotations, and matchup-specific deployments. More broadly, drafting Downs would signal a philosophical shift in New York.
Blogging The Boys’ scouting breakdown highlighted Downs’ best fit: “He’s best in a defense that lets him move around as a deep safety on one snap, slot or box the next. This way he can use his instincts, range, and tackling to erase mistakes.”
Rather than chasing roster needs after years of patchwork rebuilding, the Giants would be declaring that their future will be built around blue-chip talent — players who tilt the field regardless of position.
And if Harbaugh is right about Downs’ Hall-of-Fame trajectory, positional value debates will become irrelevant.
Because in the NFL, as Harbaugh’s career has repeatedly shown, transcendent safeties don’t just fill roles — they define defenses.