Giants suddenly have quality and volume along offensive line

The New York Giants entered the offseason in desperate need of offensive linemen and now have both quality and depth.

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New York Giants general manager Joe Schoen knew coming in the door this past winter that he had a lot of work ahead of him when it came to the offensive line.

Several months and nearly a dozen personnel moves later, Schoen has addressed the Giants’ most glaring issue with both quantity and quality. The team now has loads of options along the offensive line and it should be markedly improved in 2022.

The process began with just one spot on the line chiseled in stone — left tackle — where former first round pick Andrew Thomas has developed into an asset. The other four spots were wide open after the team shed themselves of some underachieving players, while others remain on the outside looking in as they rehab from injuries.

The Giants’ depth chart was scant: Shane Lemieux, Nick Gates, Matt Peart, Ben Bredeson, Wes Martin, Korey Cunningham and Devery Hamilton.

Lemieux, Gates and Peart are all still in the throes of coming back from serious injuries. The others were brought in as replacements on the fly.

Schoen went out shopping in the low rent district and managed to pull in veteran free agents Mark Glowinski, Max Garcia, Jamil Douglas, Matt Gono and Jon Feliciano. Then, he signed the massive Roy Mbaeteka out of the NFL’s international program.

Right there he could have stopped. They could make a serviceable line out of those players but Schoen still had the draft head of him.

In the draft, Schoen got an early Christmas present when Alabama tackle Evan Neal fell into his lap at No. 7 overall on Thursday night. Neal will start Day 1 at right tackle and gives the Giants an enviable pair of bookends along with Thomas.

Later in the draft, Schoen added two North Carolina linemen in Joshua Ezeudu and Marcus McKethan. Ezeudu is noted for his versatility at both guard and tackle and McKethan is a 6-foot-7, 340-pound guard who just overwhelms defenders with his size and strength.

Now comes the hard part. Getting a starting five out of all of this volume. We know Thomas and Neal will be the tackles but who will be the other seven (or eight) who will fill out the roster.

“We’ll see once we get pads on and things like that,” head coach Brian Daboll said after the draft. “I know the guys are hard working. They are smart. They show some toughness when you watch them on tape. The people that we’ve had in the building are dependable. It’s been good to go into meetings with (offensive line coaches) Bobby (Johnson) and Tony (Sparano) and those guys. They are eager.

“Again, let’s not make it more than it is. Your job is to protect the inside part of the pocket and the width of the pocket and get moving in the running game, but that position you need five guys operating as one unit. And that is what will be really important.

“You’ll see. I know I will get a lot of questions on it once we get out in OTAs, and I’ll tell you right now, there are going to be a lot of guys mixing and matching. You can write the lineup down each day, but it’s going to change from day to day.”

With Gates’ future still uncertain, the Giants will use Feliciano at center. Glowinski was inked to a three-year deal so we expect him to be one of the starting guards. The other guard position is wide open. You can expect Lemieux, if healthy, to get a shot as well as Garcia and Douglas. You can add Ezeudu to that mix as well.

It is a refreshing change for the Giants now that their weakest unit has been turned into a major strength.

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Roy Mbaeteka impressed Giants with his football IQ

Nigerian OL Roy Mbaeteka impressed the New York Giants with his understanding of schemes and blocking assignments.

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Earlier this offseason, the New York Giants made news when they signed 6-foot-9, 320 pound offensive line prospect Roy Mbaeteka, a product of the NFL’s International Pathway program out of Nigeria.

Mbaeteka was discovered and mentored by Giants Ring of Honoree Osi Umneyiora, another player with African roots.

“Roy was telling me that up until the point his feet touched the ground in America, he still didn’t believe this was going to happen,” Umenyiora, 40, who lived in Nigeria from ages 7-to-14, told the New York Daily News. “They’ve dealt with so much disappointment over the course of their lives. They’re thinking something’s gonna happen to the plane. It’s a crazy experience.”

Mbaeteka is a project in every sense of the word and is a long-shot to see the field anytime soon but is developing quickly. This winter, he trained at the esteemed AMDG Sports Performance Facility in Chandler, Arizona run by former NFL star lineman LeCharles Bentley. Mbaeteka came in with limited knowledge and experience.

“He did not know what shotgun formation was when he first got here,” Bentley said.

But since then, Mbaeteka has been making strides in his crash courses to learn the game. He impressed the Giants enough during his April 7 meeting for them to sign him.

“The Giants took him to the board, asked him to draw up what he knew, and he knew the schemes,” Umenyiora said. “He knew who he was supposed to block, all the information.”

Mbaeteka is just the latest international player to get signed by an NFL team. Charles lauded the Giants for “turning over all the rocks to see what’s out there” and the NFL for “expanding the footprint of what’s possible discovering talent around the globe.”

Mbaeteka will likely spend this season on the Giants’ practice squad as he’s still got a lot to learn, but he’s coming along fast. With the Giants rebuilding their offensive line, all options are on the table. Mbaeteka could be one of those diamonds in the rough that teams get lucky with on occasion.

“The playbook, Roy is gonna kill that, because Roy can learn fast, he can learn quick. Just show him, he’s gonna do it,” said former Cleveland Cavaliers draft pick Ejike Ugboaja, who also hails from Nigeria.

The Giants are hopeful he will.

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Giants likely to carry, develop OT Roy Mbaeteka on practice squad

The New York Giants gave OT Roy Mbaeteka a three-year deal with a very specific amount of guaranteed money.

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Last week, the New York Giants signed offensive tackle Roy Mbaeteka, a product of the NFL’s International Player Program out of Nigeria. He was discovered and developed by former Giants great Osi Umenyiora, who spent some of his childhood in Nigeria and is seeking out prospects across the continent.

“It’s like a mentorship,” the 6-foot-9, 320 pound Mbaeteka said of his relationship with Umenyiora. “I really respect him. He gave me a shot. He took a shot at a stranger, someone he’s never met before, and here I am. It’s all because of him.”

Moat wondered what the Giants’ plans are with Mbaeteka and now that is becoming clearer. They will further develop him and likely keep him as member of their practice squad.

The Giants are in the midst of redesigning their offensive line and no stone is being left unturned. They have added five veterans via free agency — Mark Glowinski, Jon Feliciano, Matt Gono, Max Garcia and Jamil Douglas — to help fill the many gaps and are likely to add to that mix in the upcoming NFL draft.

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