New York Giants Sign Cornerback Greg Newsome II To 1-Year Deal
The New York Giants had a plan at cornerback. Then Cor’Dale Flott decided he’d rather play for the Tennessee Titans. So much for the plan. One minute, you’re confident about re-signing a key piece of your secondary. Next, you’re scrambling to make calls before the rest of the league picks the cornerback buffet clean. By Tuesday morning, Joe Schoen called Greg Newsome II.
The deal is one year, worth up to $10 million, according to ESPN’s Adam Schefter. Not exactly a blockbuster. But when your cornerback room looks like a work in progress, you don’t get picky.
Who Is Newsome and Why Do the Giants Want Him?
Newsome was the 26th overall pick in the 2021 NFL Draft, selected by the Cleveland Browns out of Northwestern. That’s six spots after the Giants took Kadarius Toney. Newsome, now 25 (turning 26 before the season starts), brings legitimate NFL pedigree to a Giants secondary that was desperately short on it. He has appeared in 71 career games with 58 starts, racking up 4 interceptions, 43 pass breakups, and over 200 tackles.
He’s not a shutdown corner. He’s not going to make an All-Pro ballot anytime soon. But he’s a former first-round pick with starting experience, versatility across outside and slot positions, and something the Giants’ cornerback room sorely needed — a heartbeat.
Newsome’s Road To New York
The path here wasn’t exactly a straight line. After five seasons in Cleveland, the Browns shipped Newsome to the Jacksonville Jaguars last October in exchange for Tyson Campbell and a seventh-round pick. Classic midseason cornerback musical chairs.
He started 11 of 12 games with Jacksonville, posting 1 interception, 6 pass breakups, and 29 tackles. Not jaw-dropping numbers, but he held his own. And in a league where finding a competent starting cornerback in March is harder than it sounds, “held his own” carries real value.
What Newsome Brings To a Revamped Giants Defense
Head Coach John Harbaugh is building something in New York. The Giants have already signed Linebacker Tremaine Edmunds to a three-year, $36 million deal. They brought in Paulson Adebo. They’ve got Deonte Banks.
Newsome steps into that mix and immediately provides something real. According to Pro Football Focus, he’s posted a 98.0 coverage rating and has experience playing outside, in the slot, and even in the box. He’s also blitzed 35 times in his career, generating 5 pressures and a sack. That kind of positional flexibility is exactly what Defensive Coordinator Dennard Wilson can work with.
Will Newsome walk in and lock down a starting job? Not automatically. He’ll compete with Banks, Adebo, Korie Black, and Rico Payton. But that competition is a good thing. The Giants don’t need another player handed a starting role. They need guys who want to earn it.
One Year To Make a Statement
This is a prove-it deal, plain and simple. Newsome gets a shot at a fresh start with a new coaching staff that has no preconceived notions about what he can or can’t do. Harbaugh, Wilson, and Newsome all walk into this Giants era together.
For the Giants, it’s a low-risk move with real upside. If Newsome rediscovers the form that made him a first-round pick, they’ve got a steal. If he doesn’t, they’re not buried in a long-term commitment.
