Skip to main content
New York Giants homepage
Advertising

Giants News | New York Giants – Giants.com

2026 NFL Combine

Presented by

Combine Notebook (2/26): The value of valuable safeties; top corners meet the media

COMBINE-DEFENSIVE-BACKS-ELEVATE

John Harbaugh's teams have picked in the single digits just once with him as head coach. The Giants, who hold the No. 5 overall selection in the upcoming draft, hope he will never have to do it again.

The year was 2016. Baltimore used the No. 6 pick on Ronnie Stanley, who has now started 120 games at left tackle for the Ravens and made two Pro Bowls.

Other than that, the next highest selection was Kyle Hamilton at No. 14 in 2022.

If a team picked Hamilton nine spots earlier, no one would question positional value in hindsight. Hamilton, a safety, is a perennial All-Pro and Pro Bowler. The Ravens are also 42-22 with him on the field, which is where the true value shows.

"At the end of the day, it's who's the best defender," Caleb Downs, a two-time unanimous All-American safety from Ohio State, said Thursday at the NFL Scouting Combine. "It's not like really positional value. It's who affects the game. If you affect the game in a lot of ways, that's what's most important. That's all I can really worry about, honestly. I can't care about what anybody else says or what the coaches have done. At the end of the day, my film is what it is, and they're going to make a decision based off of that."

Harbaugh knows the value of valuable safeties.

A former defensive back at Miami (Ohio) University, Harbaugh won a Super Bowl with Ed Reed. That year, the safety made the ninth and final Pro Bowl of his Hall of Fame career.

In addition to Hamilton, Harbaugh was also around for the majority of Brian Dawkins' gold jacket tenure in Philadelphia. Harbaugh also coached Dawkins when he was in the Eagles' defensive backs room in 2007, the year before he took over in Baltimore.

Harbaugh said recently on Mike Francesa’s podcast that he is a "big fan, big fan" of Downs.

"We favor Hall of Fame safeties, so if we have a chance to draft a potential future Hall of Fame safety in Caleb Downs, that would be just fine with me," Harbaugh told Francesa. "We'll take the best player. When you draft that high, you take the best player. It's not a need pick; it's a best player pick because you're going for the guy that's going to be that kind of a player. You're talking about a player that you would like to see someday wearing a gold jacket if possible. That's what the goal is with that pick."

Downs was asked about hearing the praise from the Giants' new head coach.

"It's an honor, honestly," Downs said. "He's a legend of the game, and it would be an honor to meet him whenever I do. So, that'll be great. I'm looking forward to meeting him."

The 6-foot, 205-pound Downs is No. 9 on Daniel Jeremiah's top 50 prospect list after the Buckeye won the Jim Thorpe Award and the Lott IMPACT Trophy in his final collegiate season.

"Downs is a versatile safety prospect with outstanding instincts and intangibles," Jeremiah wrote in his scouting report. "He moved around in Ohio State's scheme but primarily lined up underneath as a nickel, strong safety or nickel 'backer. In the passing game, he is a smooth mover and utilizes his eyes/instincts to close and limit windows. He's physical and has enough speed to mirror tight ends in man coverage. He didn't get challenged much at the college level, which limited his ball production, though he did snag a pair of interceptions in each of his three seasons. He is an outstanding blitzer, showing timing and feel. He excels against the run. He takes proper angles, attacks ball-carriers and is a dependable tackler. He handles most of the communication for the defense and the staff raves about his intelligence and leadership. Overall, Downs lacks "wow" traits, but he's a plug-and-play starter who makes others better around him."

Hesitant to leave anyone out, Downs answered the typical combine question of listing his favorite current NFL players at his position.

"Brian Branch, I like his game a lot," he said. "Kyle [Hamilton]. I love how Budda [Baker] plays, the intensity he plays with. Kevin Byard, his film this year was crazy. I'm going to leave somebody out, honestly. There's no right answer. I'm going to go Derwin [James] right now, though."

But what really excites Downs is deeper in the archives.

"I love watching the old heads, honestly," Downs said. "Guys like Troy Polamalu, Ed Reed, that impacted the game in a lot of ways. Even guys like Bob Sanders, who had just crazy years."

While they reminisce about Reed's heyday, Harbaugh and Downs can also bond over their respective football families.

His brother, Josh Downs, was a two-time All-ACC receiver at N.C. State and drafted in the third round by the Colts in 2023. Their father, Gary Downs, was a running back drafted in the third round by none other than the Giants in 1994.

"My brother set the tone for me in a lot of ways," Caleb Downs said. "He had a great career in college, and that allowed me to believe in myself knowing that I could do it. Then my dad, I grew up around a lot of his old NFL friends, so it always felt like – people would always ask like, 'Did you ever think you weren't going to be able to do it? No.' I was around everything that I needed to be around, and it never was a thought like, 'Am I going to be able to do it?' It was just like, 'I'll get there at some point.'"

View photos from the Giants' suite in Indianapolis, where the team is gathered to evaluate the top draft prospects.

Top corner had 'surreal moment' with Harbaugh

LSU's Mansoor Delane, the No. 8 overall prospect in Jeremiah's top 50, grew up 30 miles southwest of Baltimore's M&T Bank Stadium. Naturally, he was a Ravens fan and watched Harbaugh win the Super Bowl when he was 8 years old.

Now he has met with him at the NFL Scouting Combine.

"Seeing Coach Harbaugh, I'm from Maryland, so I'm a Ravens guy," said Delane, who is from Silver Spring, Md. "I just told him personally that it's just a surreal moment to be in the same room as him, and it was just a great meeting."

Delane became the 14th unanimous All-American in LSU history after transferring to the school in January of 2025. He spent his first three seasons at Virginia Tech.

"Delane is one of the most consistent players in this draft class," Jeremiah wrote in his scouting report. "He makes everything look easy in coverage as a corner who is extremely loose and fluid in his change of direction. He is adept at press coverage, possessing the ability to re-route and mirror all over the field. In zone, he plays with instincts and awareness. He goes long stretches without getting challenged because of his tight coverage. When he is attacked, he can locate and make plays on the ball. He always looks to get involved in run defense, closing space in a hurry and operating as a physical, reliable tackler. Overall, Delane has the tools to match up with every style of receiver. He can run with the vertical weapons and play physical with the bigger ones."

Delane, in his words, likes to bring the fight to his opponent.

"I like to show up in the run game," Delane said. "As a corner, sometimes that goes unnoticed, but I take that personal."

Delane's physicality can be traced back to his days as a high school safety.

"If I had the choice, I'd play middle linebacker in college," the 6-foot, 190-pounder said. "I just love physicality. I love tackling. I love being in the box. … A lot of corners might be scared to tackle, but I love that."

Jermod McCoy has 'no limits'; plans to work out at pro day after missing 2025 with torn ACL

Tennessee Jermod McCoy is the No. 13 overall prospect in Jeremiah's top 50, despite missing last season with a torn ACL. McCoy suffered the injury while training and landed wrong after jumping for a ball.

"I can do everything," McCoy said Thursday. "No limits."

Rather than the combine, McCoy will showcase his rehab progress at the Volunteers' pro day.

"I feel like I'm going to have a great pro day," said McCoy, who was a second-team All-America selection and semifinalist for the Thorpe Award in his 2024 sophomore season. "When they all come out there, [I want them to] see that I'm the same person that I was before the injury."

NFL Media analyst Daniel Jeremiah released his second ranking of the top 50 prospects in the 2026 NFL Draft.

Screenshot 2025-08-01 at 3.36.49 PM

Subscribe to Giants Text Alerts to stay up to date on breaking news, ticket offers, gameday entertainment, and more!

Advertising