
#78 OT · New York Giants
Height
6'5"
Weight
315 lbs
Age
27
College
Georgia
Draft
2020, Rd 1, #4
Experience
6 yrs
Grade Andrew Thomas
Your grade joins the crowd-sourced Fan Verdict.
On the field, Andrew Thomas grades out as a strong OT for New York Giants (B- Performance). The contract is harder to defend: the Contract Value Index calls it fairly priced (C+), with the cost outrunning the output. The public read is positive (B Sentiment), drawn from current news and social signal rather than the box score.
Length
5 years
Total Value
$117.5M
Guaranteed
$67.0M
AAV
$23.5M/yr
Andrew Thomas's Contract Value Index lands at C+, putting the deal in a defined slice of comparable signings. At $23.5M AAV over five years, Thomas is being compensated at the upper-middle tier of left tackle market rates—a figure that reflects the Giants' organizational commitment to protecting their quarterback position, but one that sits above what his B- performance grade would typically command. Through 13 games in the 2025 season, he's delivered functional, starter-level play rather than the elite production that justifies top-five positional money, a disconnect that explains why his CVI grade doesn't break into the A range despite his veteran pedigree and relative stability. As a 27-year-old sixth-year veteran drafted fourth overall in 2020, Thomas has solidified into a dependable left tackle who generates neither the acclaim nor the red flags that drive significant narrative movement—his B sentiment grade reflects a quiet professional standing where competence is acknowledged but never celebrated. The five-year structure locks the Giants into a long-term commitment to a player whose on-field performance doesn't yet justify the full dollar commitment, though the absence of recent injury concerns or contract discord suggests the organization remains comfortable with the arrangement. Heading into 2026 with the team oriented toward offensive skill development, Thomas will need to elevate his play materially if his contract is to transition from competent-but-middling value into genuinely premium protection—right now, he's a solid starter earning slightly ahead of his current output trajectory.
Other same-position deals the Contract Value Index also places in the C band — a quick read on where Andrew's contract sits relative to comparable money.
Andrew Thomas produces at a tier that grades a B- performance mark for the New York Giants. The 27-year-old left tackle, now a six-year veteran since his 2020 first-round selection (fourth overall), maintains steady competence in protecting the quarterback, though his on-field execution falls short of the elite tier you'd expect from a player carrying a $23.5M annual contract commitment. In the 2025 season, Thomas appeared in 13 games, indicating reliable durability and availability—a foundation-level strength for any offensive lineman tasked with anchoring a franchise's blind side. However, the disconnect between his draft pedigree, his salary cap weight, and a B- performance grade signals that he has not evolved into the transcendent left tackle prospect he was drafted to become; he operates as a dependable starter rather than a Pro Bowl-caliber force. His professional reputation remains defined by quiet competence and neutral-to-slightly-positive regard in media coverage, a reflection of steady, unremarkable standing that masks an underlying credibility problem—the gap between respectable public perception and underwhelming on-field evaluation. With the Giants pursuing offensive weapons like Odell Beckham Jr. and Jarrod Gray at tackle in their recent offseason additions, the roster construction conversation is happening elsewhere, leaving Thomas to continue his role as a functional but unspectacular left tackle heading into 2026.
Andrew Thomas ranks 38th of 189 graded offensive tackles by performance. That slots Andrew between Trent Williams (B-) just ahead and Brian O'neill (B-) just behind.
Graded higher
Trent WilliamsSan Francisco 49ersB-Luke GoedekeTampa Bay BuccaneersB-Tytus HowardCleveland BrownsB-Graded lower
Brian O'neillMinnesota VikingsAndrew Thomas carries a B sentiment grade heading into 2026 — a steady, unremarkable standing that perfectly mirrors his professional reputation as a dependable left tackle who generates neither headlines nor heat. The media narrative around Thomas is notably understated for a player earning $23.5M AAV, with coverage reflecting quiet competence rather than any genuine buzz; he occupies that professional middle ground where reliability is acknowledged but rarely celebrated, and the absence of significant news suggests he's avoided both controversy and the kind of standout moments that elevate a player's public profile. That neutral-to-slightly-positive perception does carry a notable tension, though, given that his performance grade sits at F — the disconnect between a palatable public image and an underwhelming on-field evaluation creates a quiet credibility problem that the broader fan base hasn't fully reckoned with yet. On the team transaction front, the Giants' recent offseason activity — headlined by defensive additions like DJ Reader and Shelby Harris — speaks to a roster construction conversation happening mostly away from Thomas, which keeps him out of both the praise and criticism cycles that drive sentiment movement. At his core, Thomas is a 27-year-old, six-year veteran who entered the league as the fourth overall pick in 2020 and has settled into the professional reputation of a solid starter rather than a franchise-defining force, and until his on-field output aligns more convincingly with his contract and draft pedigree, his narrative will remain exactly where it is — functional, respected, and stubbornly un-exciting.
No transactions found for this player.
Auto-moderated fan forum with 5-minute speaker turns
Loading discussion...
Andrew Thomas is a player in his 6th NFL season listed at OT for the New York Giants. FanVerdicts covers every NFL player, team, GM, and transaction — and puts your verdict on all of it. Sign in to cast your Fan Verdict on Andrew Thomas, see where the crowd lands, and argue the call. FanVerdicts also brings its own read — performance, sentiment, and Contract Value Index — as one honest input alongside the crowd's. Where FanVerdicts has weighed in so far: Contract Value Index C+, Performance B-, Sentiment B.
The crowd's Fan Verdict moves in real time as fans vote on this profile. FanVerdicts' own read updates as new data lands — performance recalculates when NFL game stats post, sentiment shifts with media coverage and fan discussion, and the Contract Value Index recomputes when contract terms change. Contract details below show the structure (years, total value, average annual value, guarantees) behind the Contract Value Index read.
For league-wide context, the NFL hub has team rankings, GM report cards, the transactions feed, and live scoreboards. The NFL player rankings page sorts every active player by performance and contract value within their position.
Peers ranked by Performance grade among players at the same position. Tap any name for their full profile.