The New York Giants shipped three-time Pro Bowl defensive tackle Dexter Lawrence to the Cincinnati Bengals in a pre-draft trade that netted them a second selection inside the top 10 for the 2026 NFL Draft. The Giants now hold two picks in the draft's opening tier, positioning them to accelerate a roster teardown that began when they missed the playoffs for the fourth consecutive season.
Lawrence, 26, recorded 9.0 sacks and 58 total tackles in 2025 while anchoring a defensive front that ranked 19th in the league against the run. The Bengals sent their No. 8 overall selection to New York in exchange for Lawrence and the Giants' fourth-round pick. Cincinnati's move addresses an interior defensive line vacancy created by DJ Reader's departure in free agency and signals urgency around Joe Burrow's championship window, now in its seventh season.
The transaction gives New York's front office—led by general manager Joe Schoen and head coach Brian Daboll, both entering contract years—maximum flexibility to reset a roster carrying $38.2 million in dead cap space from previous regimes. The Giants already owned the No. 3 overall pick after finishing 4-13 in 2025. With two top-10 selections, they can address quarterback, offensive tackle, and edge rusher in a single draft class, or trade down to stockpile picks across multiple rounds. The last team to hold two top-10 picks in the same draft was the Cleveland Browns in 2018, when they selected Baker Mayfield at No. 1 and Denzel Ward at No. 4. Cleveland made the playoffs once in the following six seasons.
For the Bengals, the trade represents a calculated gamble that interior pressure can extend a contention window built around Burrow, Ja'Marr Chase, and Tee Higgins. Lawrence's contract—four years, $90 million with $60 million guaranteed—runs through 2027, giving Cincinnati cost certainty at a position group that consumed $22 million in cap space last season across four rotational linemen. The Bengals ranked 23rd in pressure rate from interior defensive linemen in 2025, per Pro Football Focus, and allowed 4.8 yards per carry on runs between the tackles, the eighth-worst mark in the league.
The Giants' decision to move Lawrence before his age-27 season reflects a broader NFL trend: teams trading homegrown talent at peak trade value rather than extending into a second contract. Lawrence was entering the final year of his rookie extension, and New York faced a decision point before the 2027 offseason. The trade also clears $22.5 million from the Giants' 2026 cap, though they absorb $12.1 million in dead money acceleration. That freed space will likely fund a veteran bridge quarterback—Derek Carr and Ryan Tannehill are both expected to hit the market—while the Giants develop a rookie taken with one of their top-10 picks.
Watch for the Giants to use the No. 3 and No. 8 selections on quarterback Travis Hunter from Colorado and offensive tackle Kelvin Banks from Texas, or to trade the No. 8 pick to a team chasing a falling quarterback prospect. The Bengals' next move is a contract extension for Lawrence before the 2026 season begins; precedent suggests a deal in the $100 million range over five years, with $65 million guaranteed. Cincinnati's defensive coaching staff—unchanged since 2023—will install Lawrence in a one-technique role previously occupied by Reader, who signed with Detroit in March.
The trade was finalized 48 hours before the draft, the exact window when teams holding multiple first-round picks historically execute positional pivots.
The takeaway
Giants convert peak-value defensive asset into second top-10 pick, accelerating rebuild while Bengals bet **$90 million** on interior pressure extending Burrow's window.
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