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Following Brian Burns’ trade with the Carolina Panthers, the New York Giants are putting together a formidable defense.

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Following Brian Burns’ trade with the Carolina Panthers, the New York Giants are putting together a formidable defense.

The New York Giants made a trade on Monday with the Carolina Panthers that sent OLB Brian Burns to the Giants for a 2024 second-round pick, fifth-round pick swaps in 2024, and a 2025 fifth-round selection.

The Panthers were criticized for this move because they could have dealt Burns to the Los Angeles Rams for a couple of first-round selections before last year’s NFL trade deadline.

To go along with the trade, the Giants were able to sign Brian Burns to a five-year deal worth $150 million, and $87.5 million of it will be guaranteed, according to NFL Network’s Ian Rapoport and Mike Garafolo.

Burns last season with the Carolina Panthers recorded 50 tackles, eight sacks, one forced fumble, one fumble recovery, and two pass deflections. He is only 25 years old and is about to enter the prime of his NFL career.

Carolina selected him 16th overall in the 2019 NFL Draft out of Florida State. The Panthers were the worst team in the NFL last season at 2-15. This was a job well done by New York Giants general manager Joe Schoen.

A lot of New York Giants fans are happy about a Brian Burns, Dexter Lawrence, and Kayvon Thibodeaux pass rush. This is how the Giants won their four Super Bowl titles. Cornerback Deonte Banks and linebackers Bobby Okekere and Micah McFadden also played a huge role in the defense last season.

They will need to address the safety position after losing Xavier McKinney and they will need to find another defensive tackle and cornerback. The core of this defense is set with Burns, Lawrence, and Thibodeaux moving forward.

When Burns was acquired via trade on Monday after the Giants lost running back Saquon Barkley to the Philadelphia Eagles, a lot of fans on Twitter were funny about the potential of this defense. This is what some of them had to say about the trade:

It is an interesting trend that the Giants fanbase wants this core of Kayvon Thibodeaux, Dexter Lawrence, and Brian Burns to stuff Philadelphia Eagles running back Saquon Barkley next season and other players. The fanbase knows that this defense has potential with new defensive coordinator Shane Bowen after Wink Martindale left in the offseason.

The Giants will need to address the offense and the quarterback position next. Dreaming about the potential for this defense in 2024 is a very good thing.

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Though the Carolina Panthers lost a host of playmakers on Monday, the team isn’t willing to make a trade that would solve a primary issue.

Carolina doesn’t plan to use any of its draft capital to trade for disgruntled Cincinnati Bengals wide receiver Tee Higgins, who requested a trade Monday, a few weeks removed from being franchise-tagged.

“With Carolina now in possession of picks 33 and 39, there had been some talk of packaging those in a trade for a player like WR Tee Higgins,” lead CBS NFL insider Jonathan Jones writes in a post on X. “A league source tells me no conversations have taken place between Carolina and Cincinnati, and a trade is not likely to happen.”

Though the Panthers have sought a No. 1 receiver to pair with sophomore-year quarterback Bryce Young, Dan Morgan values his second-round selections more than solving the team’s primary concern.

“The Panthers know they need to build through the draft, especially without a first-round pick this year,” Jones writes. “Source says it’s unlikely those picks would eventually be dealt for a veteran.”

Carolina has shown interest in South Carolina wide receiver Xavier Legette. A large contingency of scouting and coaching personnel visited his Pro Day.

The Panthers have also held a top-30 visit for USC wide receiver Brenden Rice, the son of NFL legend Jerry Rice.

Still, Higgins makes the most sense for the Panthers, but Morgan is unwilling to make the sacrifices it takes to land a top talent.

Though leadership around the Panthers has changed, some things don’t. Making offseason mistakes appears to be rule No. 1 of being the general manager for the franchise.

 

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