2 Giant Goofballs: A NY Giants Podcast

Jaxson Dart Hype Has to Be Earned

Drew & Rob

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0:00 | 30:56

The Giants finally have reasons for optimism, but the cost of buying in too early is ignoring the same “ifs” that burned fans before. Jaxson Dart, John Harbaugh, Malik Nabers, Cam Skattebo, Arvell Reese, and Colton Hood all give Giants fans something to watch, but this episode keeps the pressure where it belongs: the team has to prove it.

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Can Jaxson Dart and John Harbaugh make the Giants a consistent winner in 2026? They can, but only if Dart takes a real Year 2 step, Harbaugh’s practice structure translates into September preparedness, and the roster’s biggest “ifs” turn into actual answers.

Drew opens with NFL Media’s Eric Edholm laying out a possible Giants path back to respectability, and maybe even playoff relevance. The optimism makes sense on paper: Dart had rookie flashes, Nabers and Skattebo could return healthy, the offensive line may be trending upward, and the defense still has real talent up front. But Drew pushes back hard on the number of conditions attached to that hope. The Giants went 1-7 in one-score games last year, the Eagles still own the division, and the secondary still has real questions. The message is simple: optimism is available, but the Giants have to earn it.

Is John Harbaugh the one reason this year feels different?

The Harbaugh conversation centers on Charlotte Carroll’s minicamp takeaway from The Athletic. Longer practices, more situational reps, and a tougher tone already separate this regime from the Brian Daboll era. Drew argues that Harbaugh may be the only reason to feel cautious optimism right now, because the Giants too often looked unprepared early in seasons under the prior staff.

The Jaxson Dart section becomes the main quarterback debate. Gary Davenport of Footballguys listed Dart as one of eight players set to explode into stardom in 2026, and the upside is clear: rushing production, early touchdown-drive success, confidence, and a more vocal presence. But the concern is just as clear. Dart’s physical style already created concussion worries, and the offense badly needs Malik Nabers to return as a true top weapon. Andrew Thomas’ comments about Dart’s improved communication matter because he has seen Dart’s growth up close, while Isaiah Likely’s praise carries weight because he came from a Lamar Jackson-led offense.

Are Giants fans putting too much on Arvell Reese too early?

Drew and Rob then move into rookie expectations, starting with Arvell Reese. Frank Bush’s message was not to turn Reese into someone else or overload him too soon. That led to a bigger debate about unrealistic comparisons, especially the habit of comparing every athletic defensive rookie to Micah Parsons. The hosts agree Reese does not need to become a superstar overnight. A realistic rookie year should be about sound football, being in the right spots, flashing athleticism, and growing into the role.

The episode closes with Colton Hood, who may be the rookie the Giants need most. Donald D’Alesio praised Hood’s mindset, strength, and fast learning, and Drew explains why the cornerback room makes Hood’s development so important. The Giants need more than another rotating cast of replacement-level corners. Hood does not have to become an instant CB1, but if he can become a reliable, physical starter, that would change a lot for this defense.

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