Basically, the upside for both of them is much better than what the Giants had at that spot before.
Price was acquired from the Cincinnati Bengals on Monday for defensive lineman B.J. Hill. And Bredeson came from the Baltimore Ravens on Tuesday in exchange for a fourth-round draft pick. The Giants also got a fifth-round pick next year and a seventh-round pick in 2023 in the deal. And they replace three middling veterans who weren’t getting the job done this summer – Kenny Wiggins, Jonotthan Harrison and Chad Slade, all of whom were cut – another veteran (Ted Larsen) who was placed on injured reserve, and a few other young guys who were never going to be more than bottom-of-the-roster players.
The Giants got better along the line, even if Price and Bredeson don’t immediately impact the starting five.
Maybe that’s not a reason to stand and applaud, or to praise GM Dave Gettleman who has been famously trying to fix his mess of a line since the day he arrived nearly four years ago. It’s embarrassing that it’s taken this long, that in Year 4 he’s swinging cut-down day trades to improve the depth. This line should be much more settled than it is by now.
But at the start of the summer the depth did seem to be settled, at least. He had three solid veterans backing up his young line, with the additions of center Joe Looney and guard Zach Fulton and the return of tackle Nate Solder. When Looney and Fulton retired early in training camp, though, it sent the Giants scrambling. And as the preseason began it was clear that pulling journeymen off the scrap heap in the middle of summer just wasn’t going to do.