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Once again this offseason, the Giants are taking a look at a defensive tackle.

Per Ian Rapoport of NFL Network, veteran Eddie Goldman worked out for New York on Tuesday.

Goldman, 32, spent last season with the Commanders. He appeared in 13 games with six starts, recording 26 total tackles with four tackles for loss and one QB hit.

Goldman came out of retirement to play the 2024 season with the Falcons, appearing in 17 games with 10 starts. He tallied 16 total tackles with one TFL, three QB hits, and one sack that season.

A Bears second-round pick in the 2015 draft, Goldman has appeared in 111 games with 89 starts over his career for Chicago, Atlanta, and Washington. He’s recorded 14.0 sacks with 23 tackles for loss and 25 QB hits.

Since trading Dexter Lawrence to the Bengals last month, the Giants have been on the hunt for big men to fill out the interior of their defense. The club has added Shelby Harris, Leki Fotu, DJ Reader, and Zacch Pickens since April 28.


Giants Clips

World Cup surfaces reignite grass vs. turf debate
Mike Florio and Devin McCourty discuss John Harbaugh’s comments on the 2026 World Cup playing surface and break down why most NFL players prefer natural grass fields over artificial turf.

On Tuesday, the Supreme Court declined to accept the NFL’s appeal in the case brought by Vikings defensive coordinator Brian Flores (and Steve Wilks and Ray Horton). The decision allows his case to proceed in court — and, in theory, to culminate with a public trial.

Both sides have issued comments in the aftermath of the Supreme Court’s ruling.

“We respect the Supreme Court’s decision not to grant review,” a league spokesperson said. “Regardless of the forum, we are fully prepared to defend ourselves as this matter proceeds.”

Said Flores’s lawyers: “We are pleased that the Supreme Court declined to accept the NFL’s appeal. The NFL must now accept that its commissioner cannot be the arbitrator over discrimination claims against the league and its teams. We look forward to litigating these claims in court.”

Obviously, the league wants the forum to be its in-house arbitration process. It keeps things secret, and it tips the scales of justice in the league’s favor.

But, no, the NFL won’t suddenly surrender. It will aggressively challenge Flores at every turn, with the goal of securing a victory without having to take the case to trial.

When will that happen? It could take months. Maybe years. After all, it took nearly 52 months to get the case past the threshold question of whether the claims will be resolved in court or in arbitration.


The NFL’s in-house arbitration process isn’t dead, but it’s on the verge of a TKO.

On Tuesday, the U.S. Supreme Court denied the NFL’s petition for appeal in the Brian Flores case.

From the 25-page document submitted by the league in January 2026, this is the question the NFL presented to the U.S. Supreme Court: “Whether an arbitration agreement governing disputes in a professional sports league is categorically unenforceable under the Federal Arbitration Act because it designates the league commissioner as the default arbitrator and permits the commissioner to develop arbitral procedures.”

The league wisely made the question narrow, in order to avoid the possibility that the league’s arbitration process would be taken to its logical extreme. If the NFL can make the Commissioner the default arbitrator for any employment disputes or other legal claims made by employees, every American corporation could make the CEO the default arbitrator for any employment disputes or other legal claims made against it by its employee.

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit had found that the NFL’s arbitration agreement was not enforceable due to the Commissioner’s power over the process. The decision not to take the appeal doesn’t operate as an agreement by the Supreme Court; however, if the Supreme Court wanted to endorse the league’s longstanding in-house process, it could have taken up the case and then reversed the outcome.

The current legal posture doesn’t prevent the NFL from arguing its position in cases that arise in other courts. However, there’s now a clear path to suing the NFL and avoiding the mandatory arbitration clauses in non-player employment contracts by suing the NFL in New York federal court — since the Southern District of New York falls within the Second Circuit.

As to Flores, the development means that his claims against the NFL, Dolphins, Broncos, Giants, and Texans (and the claims made by Steve Wilks against the Cardinals and Ray Horton against the Titans) will be resolved by the judicial process. With full discovery. And, absent a settlement or a successful motion for summary judgment, with a trial in open court. All facts will be introduced and developed and exposed to public scrutiny.

That could spark a settlement, sooner than later. The league uses arbitration due in part to its desire to keep its business secret. Unless it goes away, the Flores case could result in all sorts of things the NFL would rather us not know playing out in the public eye.


They arrived together as first-round picks in 2025. Thirteen months later, things got awkward between them.

And while the dust has settled for now on the one-sided social-media skirmish between Giants linebacker Abdul Carter and Giants quarterback Jaxson Dart, it’s not over.

For those who unplugged over the three-day weekend, here’s a summary. Dart introduced President Donald Trump during a New York rally on Friday. On Saturday morning, Carter expressed disapproval on Twitter. Later in the day, Carter declared that all is well — and chided those who reasonably reacted to Carter airing out internal laundry externally.

Many of the reactions have been predictably hypocritical. They’re wagging a finger at Carter for reacting to Dart’s unforced error. And they’re ignoring the fact that Dart lit the fuse on all of this.

In the broader cost-benefit analysis that should have preceded Dart’s acceptance of the invitation to introduce a polarizing and increasingly unpopular political figure, what was the potential gain? What was the potential loss?

What was it that prompted Carter to sound off on Saturday morning? Was it the product of a stream of texts from teammates and/or family members and/or friends and/or NFL players Carter knows from other teams?

Finally, what led to Carter doing a public about-face?

Plenty of related questions should all be asked (regardless of whether they’re satisfactorily answered) the next time the Giants make coaches and/or players available to reporters. And it will continue until Dart, Carter, and head coach John Harbaugh address the situation in a Q&A that hits the various salient points.

For Dart: Why did you do it? Did you tell the team you were going to do it? Did you seek advice from anyone as to whether it was a good idea to do it?

For Carter: Basically, the same questions as it relates to his Saturday morning tweet.

For both, it will be interesting to know how their conversation came to be. Who called whom? What was said? Was there an intermediary involved?

For Harbaugh: What did you think of Dart introducing Trump? What did you think of Carter’s response? What role if any did you have in getting the fences mended?

These are all fair questions, because the answers will shed plenty of light on whether the hatchet is truly buried — or whether they merely kicked the can for the good of the team. It remains to be seen which questions are asked, and what is said in response to each of them.


Before Giants quarterback Jaxson Dart made a Friday afternoon excursion into presidential politics, the chatter about the second-year signal-caller focused on his excursions when he runs the ball.

In a recent session with reporters, Dart explained that being careful with his body has been a focal point of the new coaching staff.

“That was one of like our first meetings with [quarterbacks coach Brian] Callahan, you know, just pulling up my tape and just going over situationally like, you know, is it worth the risk here in this situation? That’s what we talk about a ton is just situationally just being smart. . . . It’s important for the quarterback to make sure that how he’s feeling one play, that he’s going to feel that same way the next play. And then at the same time, just having the experience last year of sitting out two games. . . . I just hated that time of not being out there with my teammates. So I obviously understand the most important thing is to be out there. You just grow and learn from things. I think I’m gonna do a good job this year, for sure.”

How will he balance being smart with his competitiveness?

“My competitiveness isn’t gonna change at all,” Dart said. “I think just, like I said, it just goes into situationally, just what times it’s worth it, what times it’s not. And just making those mature decisions.”

He’s also taking steps to ensure he’ll be in better shape to take NFL-style hits by working on his physique.

“I’m actually, you know, pretty similar from a weight standpoint,” Dart said. “I just think that I’m just leaner, and our strength staff has done an amazing job.”

He said he won’t be “like Tim Tebow” when it comes to his bulk.

“I think that I’m probably the most mobile that I’ve been in my career right now,” Dart said. “Just my hips and the disassociation from my upper body to my lower body being able to make throws. I think that my body’s in the best shape it’s been.”

He still needs to keep it that way. The challenge becomes controlling the competitive nature during a given play. Knowing when to get out of bounds, when to slide, when to throw the ball away.


Giants linebacker Abdul Carter and Giants quarterback Jaxson Dart have resolved their differences. On the same day Carter publicly disclosed their differences via social media.

“Me & JD6 are good!” Carter tweeted. “We spoke earlier as Men. Yall can keep yall narratives.”

The narratives, of course, came directly from Carter posting a message on Twitter in response to Dart introducing President Donald Trump at a rally on Friday.

“Thought this sh!t was AI,” Carter said. “What we doing man.”

Carter, if he wanted to avoid the narrative, should have spoken directly to Dart without calling him out publicly. There’s a decent chance someone delivered the message directly — and pointedly — to Carter that it’s always better to address a disagreement with a teammate privately than to turn it into a public spectacle.


There has been a predictable external reaction to Giants quarterback Jaxson Dart introducing President Donald Trump at a New York rally on Friday. There has also been an unpredictable internal reaction.

Giants linebacker Abdul Carter, who like Dart was a first-round pick in 2025, posted a Saturday morning message on Twitter after Dart debuted as pro-Donald.

“Thought this sh!t was AI,” Carter said. “What we doing man.”

Carter’s public complaint will make for some interesting text messages among Giants players and coaches this weekend. Things will get even more interesting when the team reconvenes on Wednesday for the next cluster of OTA practices.

Months before the first game of his first season, it’s an unexpected test for coach John Harbaugh, who already has assumed a non-neutral position as to the man who has become one of the most polarizing political figures the nation has ever seen.

Let’s be realistic about the situation. Beyond the fact that the 47th president’s approval rating has fallen far below 47 percent, most of the players in the NFL will be inclined not to embrace his policies, practices, and petulant remarks — dating all the way back to when Trump weighed in on NFL players protesting during the national anthem by saying, “Wouldn’t you love to see one of these NFL owners, when somebody disrespects our flag, to say, ‘Get that son of the bitch off the field right now'? Out. He’s fired. He’s fired!’”

However this one plays out, the Giants have an issue that needs to be resolved. And it traces to a decision made by the second-year quarterback who is trying to establish himself both as a capable player, and as a competent team leader.

Dart has every right to do what he wants. To support who he wants. To say what he wants. But, as Carter’s response shows, the other players on the team have the right to say what they want, too.

And this is precisely the kind of thing that can get in the way of building the kind of rapport necessary to navigate a long and demanding NFL season.


Well, this won’t upset anyone.

Giants quarterback Jaxson Dart introduced President Donald Trump at a Friday event in Rockland County, New York.

It’s a risky move for any player who hopes to appeal to everyone. Especially since Dart plays for a team named for one of the bluest of the blue American cities.

Throw in the fact that Trump’s approval rating is currently tanking, the risk is greater than it would be to show up for and to support a popular political figure. Regardless, Dart can expect to get at least some of the same kind of blowback that those with a different perspective have gotten when they choose to speak out against the policies and practices of the current administration.

But perhaps not as much. One side is much quicker to say to dissenting views, “Shut up and dribble.” While also welcoming the input of athletes and entertainers who chime in with an opinion that meshes with their own.

My own view is this: Say whatever you want. Support whoever you want. But recognize that, yes, there may be some scrutiny and criticism that comes from doing anything other than staying above the fray.

For a guy who has yet to fully establish himself, it’s a bolder move than it would be for a quarterback or any other player who has become one of the best at the position he plays.


The Giants have lost a key member of their defensive line during Organized Team Activities.

Roy Robertson-Harris tore his Achilles during yesterday’s practice, according to Dan Duggan of TheAthletic.com.

Robertson-Harris signed a two-year, $9 million contract with the Giants a year ago and started all 17 games last season. He had been working with the first-string defense at OTAs.

Achilles tendon tears are almost always season-ending injuries. It’s possible that with a fast recovery, a player who tears his Achilles in May could play by the end of the year, but it’s a long shot.

The Giants traded away their best defensive lineman, Dexter Lawrence, last month, so they’ve now lost two defensive linemen who started all 17 games last season. Free agent signings DJ Reader and Shelby Harris become even more important now, as does the development of sixth-round rookie Bobby Jamison-Travis.

Robertson-Harris is the second Giant to suffer a torn Achilles during offseason work. Rookie cornerback Thaddeus Dixon tore his Achilles last week.


By rule, NFL offseason practices are non-contact: No tackling, no blocking, no physical pass coverage, certainly no touching the quarterback. That makes it hard for the players to get the competitive juices flowing.

But Giants coach John Harbaugh says he still wants to see players looking competitive. He just wants them competitive with themselves, trying to get better every day than they were the day before.

“There’s no there’s no contact at all,” Harbaugh said. “You got to work with the guys that do that because guys get fired up, they want to go and you got to make sure that you can’t get near the quarterback. You can’t pull and push guys. There’s no physical contests out here. There’s no competition in the sense of you’re competing one-on-one to make a play because there’s no contact, and football is a contact sport. So, it’s more about I’m competing against myself, my technique, my assignment, my ability to execute really fast.”

Harbaugh says he’s impressed that players manage to avoid contact as well as they do.

“I think one of the things that’s amazing to me, I tell these guys this. . . . You’re standing right here on the sideline and you’re seeing how fast these guys move, right? And how big they are. And there’s 22 guys intersecting full speed. I’m just surprised that there’s not more more collisions in the intersection which goes to show you how talented these guys are. And I think it’s across the league in the NFL. For them to practice fast like this on a no-contact basis and not run into each other is just an incredible thing and it’s a testament to their abilities,” Harbaugh said.

Harbaugh said quarterback Jaxson Dart is a good example of a player who’s competing with himself, demanding nothing but completions when he knows the defense isn’t really competing.

“We are competing against ourselves, against execution,” Harbaugh said. “The offense should complete most passes because passes aren’t being contested at the catch point right now. So if we’re executing and doing things the right way, we should be completing passes out here. The ball shouldn’t hit the ground too often. He understands that and that’s why he wants things to be right, play after play.”