The idea that the New York Giants are staring down a brutal, season-killing schedule in 2026 doesn’t really hold up. If anything, this latest strength-of-schedule drop gives New York Giants fans a reason to lean a little more optimistic than expected.
Warren Sharp’s model based on Vegas win totals rathert than last year’s records slots the Giants at 24th overall in strength of schedule. Translation: slightly tougher than average, but nowhere near the gauntlet tier that buries seasons before they start.
That alone shifts the conversation.
Last year, one of the easiest ways to write off the Giants was by pointing to everything stacked against them — roster questions, division strength, and the usual NFC East grind. But heading into 2026, the numbers suggest something different: this is a schedule that’s manageable if the team is even remotely competent.
And that’s the key.
Sharp’s data makes one thing clear — teams with middle-of-the-pack schedules don’t get excuses. You’re not the Arizona Cardinals dealing with the league’s hardest slate. You’re not the Detroit Lions getting a clear runway either. You’re right in that gray area where execution matters more than circumstance.
For the Giants, that’s actually a good thing.
A 7.5 projected win total paired with a 24th-ranked schedule puts them squarely in “prove it” territory. Not rebuilding, not contending — hovering right on that line where a couple of breaks, a couple of late-game drives, or a defense that finally closes games can swing everything.
And history backs that up. Sharp’s model consistently shows that teams with easier-than-average or even slightly below-average schedules tend to outperform expectations far more often than those fighting uphill. The Giants aren’t being asked to survive chaos — they’re being asked to take advantage of opportunity.
If this team is going to take a step forward, it won’t be because of the schedule. It’ll be because they earned it.
And honestly, that’s exactly where you want to be if you’re trying to figure out what this version of the Giants really is.
Because by the time December rolls around, there won’t be much debate left — just answers.












