Despite Dexter Lawrence‘s trade request, most NFL teams are not expecting him to leave New York, per SNY’s Connor Hughes.
That is not for a lack of suitors. Clubs inquired about the star defensive tackle at the 2025 trade deadline, per Dianna Russini of The Athletic, and interest is expected to increase. But the Giants resisted those overtures and will likely set a high price – potentially prohibitively so – in any upcoming talks.
Assessments around the league vary. The obvious trade comparable is Quinnen Williams, whom the Jets sent to Dallas last October for a first-round pick, a second-round pick, and Mazi Smith. Some even believe that Lawrence is a better player and potentially worth even more, according to Ryan Dunleavy of the New York Post.
The key difference is between the two is that Williams was not seeking a new contract. Lawrence would need a new deal with a $35MM per year price tag floated by Hughes. That, along with a down year in 2025, could drop his trade value closer to the following proposals Hughes has heard from other teams: a late 2026 first-round pick, a 2027 first-round pick, or second- and fifth-round picks.
If those are the best offers the Giants can get, it is unlikely they end up moving Lawrence. New head coach John Harbaugh prioritized strong defensive line play in Baltimore, and his current roster is awfully thin at the position. Sure, the draft picks acquired and cap space freed up via a Lawrence trade could help the Giants find replacements, but Harbaugh intends to turn the team around right away. Moving Lawrence would run contrary to that goal.
Lawrence can still try to force his way out of New York. The 28-year-old has grown frustrated with the Giants’ repeated losing seasons, per Dunleavy, as well as a hard-line roster approach that resulted in teammates and friends like Leonard Williams, Julian Love, and Saquon Barkley not only leaving New York, but finding success and Super Bowls elsewhere. A willingness to accept an annual salary between $26MM and $30MM could help facilitate an exit. That more reasonable sum – as opposed to a market-resetting $35MM AAV – would still make him the second-highest paid DT in the league, but as a price point that could encourage teams to move a first-round-plus package.

Someone needs to tell Lawerence that if he wants to be paid like the top or second highest paid DT in the league, he needs to play like it and not like his 25 season where he looked like he was mailing it in in many games…..