
The Giants held the No. 5 pick, stared at Caleb Downs, the Jim Thorpe Award winner ranked the consensus No. 1 safety in the 2026 class, and said no thanks. They took Arvell Reese instead, a hybrid linebacker-edge out of Ohio State who ran a 4.46 forty, among the fastest at his position group at the Combine. Within hours, Malik Nabers went on a Bleacher Report livestream and expressed that he would have preferred Downs. That was Thursday night. By Friday morning, everything had changed.
New defensive coordinator Dennard Wilson builds aggressive, multi-look coverage schemes featuring two-high safeties, press corners, and defenders who can line up in multiple spots. That philosophy devalues a pure specialist and inflates a hybrid like Reese, whose college snaps were distributed across outside linebacker, inside linebacker, and some defensive back work. Reese recorded 69 tackles, 10 tackles for loss, and 6.5 sacks in 2025 on an Ohio State defense that allowed just 9.3 points per game — No. 1 nationally. Wilson’s system doesn’t need the best safety — it prioritizes the most deployable weapon.
Reese stands 6-foot-4, 243–246 pounds with long arms, a frame the Sporting News called “almost an evaluation dream” at linebacker. He was rated a 4-star recruit out of Glenville High and played just 81 snaps as a freshman in 2024 before breaking out as a sophomore. Mel Kiper Jr. ranked him the No. 4 overall prospect in the draft and his top off-ball linebacker. That’s the profile Harbaugh prioritized over Downs.
Dallas held the 12th pick. After the Giants passed on Downs at No. 5 and again at No. 10, the Cowboys traded picks No. 177 and No. 180 to Miami to move up exactly one spot, from No. 12 to No. 11, and grabbed him. They had called landing Downs a longshot before the draft. Then the Giants handed them the opportunity twice. Every snap Downs makes in a Cowboys uniform becomes a referendum on Harbaugh’s decision.
Downs began his career at Alabama under Nick Saban, recording eight tackles in his first college game and finishing as SEC Freshman of the Year before transferring to Ohio State. In 2025 he aligned 208 snaps as a half-field safety and another 97 as a middle-of-the-field safety — a multi-role résumé that makes his Dallas fit immediate. He became only the third Ohio State player ever to win the Jim Thorpe Award. Downs himself publicly welcomed landing in Dallas after the Giants passed.
Sitting next to Packers edge rusher Micah Parsons on the livestream, Nabers didn’t hedge. “I’d rather get [Caleb Downs] than play against him. I even told him, I said, ‘I’m coming to get you,'” Nabers said. A star wide receiver, recovering from a torn ACL suffered in Week 4 of 2025, publicly questioning his new head coach’s first draft pick on camera. That’s not background noise. That’s a franchise player telling the world he disagrees with the plan.
Most coaches would have fined Nabers or frozen him out. Harbaugh instead engaged him directly and walked him through how Reese would be deployed in Wilson’s defense. “Malik wants to know how we’re going to use our first-round pick? I want to show him. I want to explain it to him. And the fact that he says it publicly, who cares?” Harbaugh told reporters. By the end of the meeting, per Harbaugh, Nabers was “fired up about it.” From public doubt to alignment in under 24 hours.
Before the draft even started, the Giants traded three-time Pro Bowl defensive tackle Dexter Lawrence to Cincinnati for the No. 10 pick. They used that pick on Miami offensive lineman Francis Mauigoa to protect young quarterback Jaxson Dart. They moved on from a proven defensive lineman to fund a hybrid experiment. Every move traces back to one philosophy: versatility over pedigree.
The quiet part nobody’s discussing: Reese is viewed by most analysts as an outside linebacker or edge rusher. The Giants plan to deploy him primarily at inside linebacker in Wilson’s scheme. Tremaine Edmunds is already signed to play inside linebacker, creating immediate depth-chart questions. Harbaugh drafted a player whose projected college role contradicts the one he’s been assigned. That’s a bet on coaching. If that conversation fails, the whole architecture wobbles.
The Giants didn’t stop at Reese and Mauigoa. On Day 2 they selected Tennessee cornerback Colton Hood at No. 37, a fringe-first-rounder, then traded up to grab Notre Dame wide receiver Malachi Fields at No. 74. Day 3 added Auburn defensive lineman Bobby Jamison-Travis (No. 186), Illinois offensive lineman J.C. Davis (No. 192), and BYU linebacker Jack Kelly (No. 193). Analysts called it “arguably the best three-pick start to any draft class this year.”
Behind every Giants pick sits Jaxson Dart. Mauigoa was the betting favorite to be the top lineman drafted and the Giants got him at No. 10 specifically to anchor Dart’s protection. Giants Wire named Dart the biggest winner of the Giants’ draft: a left tackle of the future, a downhill back behind him, and another outside weapon in Fields. The hybrid-defense bet only works if the offense it protects actually develops.
Harbaugh told reporters he had “a great conversation” with Nabers and framed the public comments as honest feedback rather than insubordination. That’s a notable standard. Players across the league watched a star question his coach on camera and get transparency instead of punishment. Every future coaching hire now gets measured against this openness.
The Giants’ class has drawn strong early marks from national analysts. Giants.com aggregated expert reactions calling Reese “a strong candidate to go second overall” who simply fell to five. Dallas’ class, anchored by Downs, has been similarly well-received, with multiple outlets listing Downs among the five biggest steals of Round 1. Both front offices get a public win — but only one can be right about philosophy.
The Cowboys paid two fifth-rounders for a consensus top safety — one of the bargains of the draft. If Harbaugh’s system-fit philosophy proves correct, conservative front offices and consensus-driven scouts lose influence. If multi-role defenses proliferate, pure specialists may lose draft value league-wide. Watch the Giants-Cowboys head-to-heads this season. One franchise bet on the proven mutual fund. The other bet on the growth stock.
If Reese thrives in Wilson’s scheme, Harbaugh becomes the coach who proved draft value is system-specific, not universal. Other teams may adopt more flexible defensive philosophies, and the 2027 draft class could shift toward hybrid athletes. If Reese underperforms, Nabers’ livestream becomes the most famous “I told you so” in recent Giants history. Either outcome reshapes how NFL franchises evaluate talent.
Two divisional games a year will now function as live philosophy tests. Downs’ tackle counts, pass breakups, and coverage snaps will be stacked against Reese’s alignment variety, pressure rate, and run-stop production. The Giants didn’t just make a draft pick. They placed a bet on an entire theory of football, and the results will ripple for years.
Sources:
Ohio State Athletics, “Arvell Reese 2025 Bio,” ohiostatebuckeyes.com, Dec. 31, 2025
Ohio State Athletics, “Caleb Downs Is 2025 Paycom Jim Thorpe Award Winner,” ohiostatebuckeyes.com, Dec. 11, 2025
NFL Communications, “Giants Select Arvell Reese With No. 5 Pick in 2026 Draft,” NFL.com, April 23, 2026
NFL Communications, “Cowboys Select Caleb Downs With No. 11 Pick in 2026 Draft,” NFL.com, April 23, 2026
New York Giants, “Giants Trade Dexter Lawrence to Bengals for No. 10 Draft Pick,” Giants.com, April 19, 2026
Bleacher Report, “B/R NFL Draft Night: Malik Nabers and Micah Parsons Livestream,” bleacherreport.com, April 23, 2026
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