The New York Giants traded three-time Pro Bowl defensive tackle Dexter Lawrence to the Cincinnati Bengals on Monday, acquiring the 9th overall pick in this week's draft plus additional compensation. The Giants already owned the 3rd overall selection. Two top-ten picks for a franchise entering Year Two of a rebuild changes the leverage calculus in every pre-draft war room from now until Thursday night.
The Bengals sent the 9th pick, a 2027 second-rounder, and a 2026 fifth-round selection to New York. Lawrence, 26, is entering the final year of his contract with a $30.5 million cap hit. Cincinnati gets a player who logged 88 pressures over the past two seasons per Pro Football Focus and fills an interior line need without spending draft capital on projection. The Giants get optionality: two swings at franchise cornerstones, or one pick used and one flipped for veteran help or future assets.
The timing matters. Six days before the draft, this trade resets the top ten. Mock drafts spent March and April assuming the Giants would take a quarterback at 3 or trade down. Now they can draft the quarterback and the edge rusher, or the quarterback and the offensive tackle, or trade one pick for a haul and still secure a blue-chip prospect. Teams picking 4th through 8th—the Cardinals, Chargers, Titans, Browns, and Falcons—just lost visibility. If the Giants stay at both spots, five teams slide one slot down. If New York trades 9 to a quarterback-needy team behind them, someone in that cluster gets leapfrogged entirely.
For Cincinnati, this is a win-now move with expiration risk. Lawrence is a free agent after 2026. The Bengals have $18 million in projected 2027 cap space before any extensions, and they will need to pay Lawrence or let him walk. That suggests they view their window as this season and next, which aligns with Joe Burrow on a five-year, $275 million extension signed in 2023. The defensive line was a problem: Cincinnati ranked 28th in run-stop win rate last season. Lawrence fixes that immediately, but if the Bengals do not make the playoffs in 2026, they gave up premium draft capital for two years of a rental.
Giants general manager Joe Schoen now controls the draft conversation. He can dictate terms to teams trying to move up for a quarterback, or he can take two players and let the board fall as it will. League sources expect at least three teams—the Raiders, Saints, and Buccaneers—to call about the 9th pick before Thursday. The going rate for moving from the mid-teens into the top ten typically includes a future first-rounder. If Schoen extracts that, New York enters 2027 with three first-round picks, assuming they finish with a top-fifteen selection again.
The trade also clarifies the Giants' view of Lawrence's contract situation. Rather than negotiate a $100 million-plus extension with a defensive tackle, they converted him into draft capital while his trade value remained high. That decision will look smart if the two picks become long-term starters, or wasteful if Lawrence anchors a Cincinnati playoff run while the Giants miss again.
Watch the Raiders' front office this week. Las Vegas sits at 13 and needs a quarterback. If they believe one of the top prospects will fall to 9, they will pay to jump four spots. The Giants' leverage peaks Wednesday night. Also watch whether Cincinnati attempts a Lawrence extension before the season. If talks begin in July, the front office believes this was a two-year rental with conversion upside. If the Bengals wait until next March, they treated 9th overall as the cost of a playoff push, nothing more.
The Giants take the podium twice in the top ten Thursday. The Bengals take the field in September with a three-technique who can two-gap and rush, and a ticking clock on whether the trade becomes a cornerstone or an expensive rental.
The takeaway
Giants now hold picks **3** and **9**, creating maximum draft leverage and forcing five teams to adjust boards six days out.
nfl drafttradegiantsbengalsdexter lawrencedraft capital
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