Giants GM Joe Schoen will scout Ohio State-Notre Dame on Saturday night

New York Giants GM Joe Schoen will make his first scouting trip of the year on Saturday night for a game between Ohio State and Notre Dame.

New York Giants general manager Joe Schoen will waste no time hitting the road this year. With the college football season now underway, he’ll pay a visit to Ohio Stadium in Columbus this weekend.

Schoen revealed that his first scouting stop will take place this Saturday night when he attends a game between the Ohio State Buckeyes and Notre Dame Fighting Irish.

The game between No. 2 OSU and No. 5 Notre Dame is already being billed as, potentially, one of the best games of the entire year.

In fact, The Athletic named it the No. 1 game “scouts can’t wait to see this weekend.”

This is the most-anticipated game of the weekend, for both fans and evaluators. Ohio State third-year sophomore QB C.J Stroud (6-3, 220) showed gradual maturation last season, and his development in 2022 should provide important context for his ceiling projection. His ability to layer throws and stay on time as a passer is very impressive for his age, but I’m looking to see more mobility from him this season, especially if he has to run away from Notre Dame fourth-year edge Isaiah Foskey (6-5, 260). Attempting to keep Foskey at bay will be third-year junior LT Paris Johnson Jr. (6-6, 315), who is making the move from guard to his more natural left tackle spot. It looks like a lean year for tackle prospects, but Johnson has the talent to emerge as an early first-rounder.

Notre Dame must replace starters at quarterback, running back and wide receiver from last season. But the Irish return experience on the offensive line, and third-year junior TE Michael Mayer (6-5, 251) is arguably the best player in the country at his position. The Buckeyes, meanwhile, will be better on defense in 2022 — if only because they can’t be any worse. NFL scouts are very high on fifth-year senior CB Cameron Brown (6-0, 194) and S Josh Proctor (6-2, 194), as long as both stay healthy.

The Giants don’t really have a glaring need for offensive tackles or edge rushers, but you better believe they’ll be keeping an eye on quarterbacks, tight ends and cornerbacks.

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