
The facility in East Rutherford looked the same. The man walking through it did not. Odell Beckham Jr. stepped back inside the Giants’ building on April 20, 2026, for the first time since the organization traded him to Cleveland. He ran routes. He caught passes. He submitted to a full physical. Somewhere in the building, a coaching staff watched a 33-year-old body try to remind everyone what it used to do. The NFL draft sits three days away, and the clock on this decision is already running.
The last time OBJ belonged to this franchise, he held records nobody had touched. Fastest player to 200 career receptions and 4,000 yards. The only rookie with 75-plus catches, 1,100-plus yards, and 10-plus touchdowns in a single season. He averaged 108.8 receiving yards per game as a rookie. That version of Beckham built a 575-catch, 7,987-yard, 60-touchdown career across five teams and earned a Super Bowl ring with the Rams. The version training in Arizona this offseason carried a very different stat line into that workout.
Nine catches. Fifty-five yards. Nine games with the Miami Dolphins in 2024 before they waived him. Then a failed PED test for elevated testosterone wiped out the first six games of 2025 with a suspension. Nobody signed him after that. So the two-year window between December 2024 and this April workout produced exactly nine receptions. Most fans assume a player with those numbers is finished. The Giants’ young stars apparently disagree, and their reasoning reveals something the stat sheet can’t measure.
John Harbaugh called OBJ “one of my very favorite people in the world” at the NFL annual meetings weeks before this workout. They text regularly. They talk on the phone. Harbaugh’s approval would be required to sign him. And yet the coach still made Beckham fly to New Jersey, run routes, and take a physical before committing a single dollar. Favorite person in the world. Still needs to prove he can move. That gap between personal warmth and professional skepticism is the entire story of this comeback.
Look at the Giants’ offseason moves and a pattern emerges. Harbaugh brought multiple former Ravens players to the roster. Stout. Likely. Faalele. Now OBJ, who played under Harbaugh in Baltimore. This coach is rebuilding the Giants the way a CEO restaffs a new company: with people he already trusts. GM Joe Schoen framed it clinically: “If we find a player that’s gonna help us, that makes sense for the organization, we’ll continue to pursue.” The OBJ workout fits a system, not a sentiment.
If OBJ signs, the deal would likely land near the veteran minimum. That would be the lowest contract of his career by a wide margin. A three-time Pro Bowler and Super Bowl champion accepting minimum wage. The financial risk for the Giants is essentially zero. The psychological cost for Beckham is enormous. Accepting that number means accepting that the league values his presence, his mentorship, his locker room gravity, more than his ability to get open on Sundays.
Quarterback Jaxson Dart publicly supports adding OBJ. Receiver Malik Nabers posted “Let’s play together!” on Beckham’s Instagram. These are the franchise cornerstones, the young players the Giants are building around, and they’re lobbying management to bring in a 33-year-old who caught nine passes last year. That advocacy changes the calculus. If Dart and Nabers believe OBJ’s presence accelerates their development, the Giants traded Dexter Lawrence for the 10th overall pick while simultaneously pursuing a mentor on a minimum deal.
If OBJ signs and contributes, Harbaugh’s model gets validated league-wide: import your trusted people, prioritize cultural continuity over market efficiency, and let young stars choose their own mentors. Beckham has already served his six-game PED suspension, making him eligible from Week 1 if signed. The team gets a free evaluation window. Once you see the structure, it stops looking like nostalgia. Harbaugh built a system where the downside is negligible and the upside is organizational DNA.
The Giants hold the 5th and 10th overall picks on April 23. If they draft a receiver early, OBJ’s role shrinks further. If they address defense or offensive line, the veteran slot stays open. Sources say no signing appears imminent. Harbaugh wants to see how the draft shakes out first. Meanwhile, other teams have reportedly expressed interest. OBJ performed well at the Fanatics Flag Football Classic in March, proving his body still remembers routes even if his game tape says otherwise.
OBJ said it himself at the flag football event: “Looking forward to hopefully getting the opportunity to play this year, and this is kind of just the starting point.” Starting point. After 575 catches, 60 touchdowns, and a one-handed grab that still defines an entire era of football. The real question the Giants are answering has nothing to do with route speed or catch radius. They’re deciding whether a legendary player who accepts a backup role can reshape a young roster faster than a draft pick can.
Sources:
“Odell Beckham Jr. Has Physical, Workout with New York Giants.” The Athletic, April 2026.
“Is Odell Beckham Jr. Returning to NFL? What Recent Workout with Giants Says About 2026 Outlook.” Yahoo Sports, April 2026
“Odell Beckham Jr. Accepts Six-Game PED Suspension.” ESPN, October 2025.
“WR Odell Beckham Jr. Reinstated After 6-Game PED Suspension.” Reuters, November 2025.
“Giants Trade Dexter Lawrence to Bengals for No. 10 Overall Pick in 2026 NFL Draft.” CBS Sports, April 2026.
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