2 Giant Goofballs: A NY Giants Podcast

Did Hakeem Nicks Save the Giants’ Injury-Ravaged 2009 Draft?

Drew & Rob

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The Giants gained a championship-defining receiver in Hakeem Nicks and a multi-year starting left tackle in William Beatty. What they sacrificed was nearly the rest of the 2009 draft class, as injuries, failed development and short careers prevented most of the selections from providing lasting value.

Did Nicks and Beatty do enough to make the class successful, or are Giants fans overlooking how little the other seven picks produced?

We revisit all nine selections and examine what happened during and after their Giants careers. Nicks developed into a two-time 1,000-yard receiver and helped lead the Giants to victory in Super Bowl XLVI, but repeated lower-body injuries ended his prime far too early.

Beatty became a dependable starting tackle when healthy. Clint Sintim’s career was derailed by repeated ACL injuries. The Giants traded up for Ramses Barden, but the towering receiver finished his career without an NFL touchdown. Travis Beckum tore his ACL during the Super Bowl, while Andre Brown overcame a ruptured Achilles and several roster moves to eventually return and contribute for the Giants.

The final three selections—Rhett Bomar, DeAndre Wright and Stoney Woodson—never appeared in an NFL regular-season game. We also discuss where each member of the class went after football, including careers in coaching, athlete development, education, sports business and corporate account management.

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