The Giants are one of the NFL’s signature franchises, with a history filled with memorable moments and great players. Here is The Post’s All-Time New York Giants team:

Offense

Quarterback: Eli Manning

Charlie Conerly and Phil Simms deserve consideration and so does Y.A. Tittle, but he only played four years for the Giants. Manning is a two-time Super Bowl MVP, will hold every franchise passing record and is the model of professionalism. Oh, and he never misses a game.

Running back: Tiki Barber

Surpassed 1,000 rushing yards six times and his last five seasons were Hall of Fame-worthy. He evolved from a third-down back into an every-down killer, equally adept at catching the ball, running past a defender or through him.

Running back: Frank Gifford

True Golden Boy with matinee-idol looks and toughness to match. Incredibly versatile talent — named to the Pro Bowl as a defensive back and then multiple times as a running back and flanker. He also threw 14 touchdown passes. Enshrined in Hall of Fame in 1977.

Wide Receiver: Odell Beckham Jr.

What, Odell as a franchise all-timer after only three seasons? Well, yes. No one has been more prolific in such a brief sample and there is no doubt he is the most talented player to ever play the position for the Giants.

Wide Receiver: Amani Toomer

Played his entire 13-year career with the Giants and is the franchise leader with 668 receptions, 9,497 receiving yards and 54 TD catches. Remarkably consistent and no one ever perfected the toe-the-sideline grab better than him.

Tight end: Mark Bavaro

He did not embrace the “Rambo’’ persona attached to him but it fit him perfectly. No words needed to describe his style. Simply Google “Bavaro carries 49ers,’’ watch the video and that is all you need to know.

Offensive tackle: Rosie Brown

Might be the greatest draft pick in NFL history. Taken in the 27th round, Brown made nine Pro Bowls and all-NFL eight times. Best lineman in Giants history, enshrined in Hall of Fame in 1975.

Offensive tackle: Jumbo Elliott

Long Island product was a classic left tackle. His work against fearsome Bruce Smith in the Super Bowl was one of the greatest under-the-radar performances ever. Caught game-tying TD in “Monday Night Miracle’’ game.

Center: Mel Hein

Played 15 seasons for the Giants, named all-NFL eight consecutive years, league MVP in 1938. Never missed a game in 15-year career, made $150 per game at the start of his career. Enshrined in Hall of Fame in 1963.

Guard: Chris Snee

Second-round pick in 2004 and initially worried he would be viewed as receiving preferential treatment, as the son-in-law of the coach, Tom Coughlin. Those concerns were quickly dashed. Hard-nosed grinder who started for two Super Bowl winning teams.

Guard: Jack Stroud

Three-time All-Pro spent his entire 13-year career with the Giants and was part of a team that played in six conference title games. He might have been the strongest player on the team, as he believed in lifting weights long before it was an accepted training method.

Defense

Defensive end: Andy Robustelli

Played in an incredible eight NFL Championship games and selected to seven Pro Bowls. Incredibly durable — missed one game in his 14-year career. Enshrined in Hall of Fame in 1971.

Defensive end: Michael Strahan

He holds the franchise record with 141.5 sacks (fifth-most in NFL history) and 216 games played in a 15-year career, culminated in him hoisting the Lombardi Trophy. Gap-toothed, big personality star was NFL Defensive Player of the Year in 2001 (when he had NFL-record 22.5 sacks). Enshrined in Hall of Fame in 2014.

Defensive tackle: Rosey Grier

Massive man (285 pounds when players were not as big as they are now) was a three-time All-Pro and anchor of a stellar defense. Went on to fame in Los Angeles as part of Rams “Fearsome Foursome’’ defensive line.

Linebacker: Lawrence Taylor

Generational player who changed the way offenses directed their blocking schemes. NFL MVP in 1986, when he had 20.5 sacks. Man oh man, was it fortunate the Saints picked George Rogers No. 1 in 1981. Enshrined in Hall of Fame in 1999.

Linebacker: Sam Huff

He was the first NFL player to ever adorn the cover of Time Magazine and was the subject of a CBS TV special entitled “The Violent World of Sam Huff.’’ He never forgave Allie Sherman for trading him to the Redskins. Enshrined in Hall of Fame in 1982.

Linebacker: Harry Carson

He played entire 13-year career in blue, made seven consecutive Pro Bowls and nine altogether as he shepherded the Giants from dark days to glory days. Tackling machine, proud, dignified team leader. Enshrined in Hall of Fame in 2006.

Linebacker: Jessie Armstead

How about an eighth-round pick becoming a five-time Pro Bowler? Ball-seeking and ferocious, he tackled anything that moved and his excellence in 2000 helped propel the Giants to the Super Bowl.

Cornerback: Erich Barnes. Made four Pro Bowls in his four seasons with the Giants and had 18 interceptions, seven fumble recoveries and four TD returns in 56 games. Intimidating tackler, too.

Cornerback: Dick Lynch

In 1963, he led the NFL with nine interceptions, scored seven career touchdowns on returns and played in four NFL title games. Younger Giants fans grew to know and love him as a colorful radio analyst.

Safety: Jimmy Patton

Product of Ole Miss was a five-time first-team All-Pro, five-time Pro Bowler and had 52 career interceptions, second-all time in franchise history. Spider Lockhart also deserves consideration here.

Safety: Emlen Tunnell

First African-American player signed by the Giants turned out to be one of their all-time best players. He holds the franchise record with 74 interceptions and 261 punt returns. Earned nickname “offense on defense.’’ Enshrined in Hall of Fame in 1967.

Kicker: Pete Gogolak

The highest-scoring player in franchise history and was the first prominent player to leave the AFL for the NFL. He was also pro football’s first soccer-style kicker. Lawrence Tynes deserved mention, as his game-winning field goal in artic, frigid Green Bay is a moment frozen in time.

Punter: Sean Landeta

He possesses a ridiculously strong leg and in 1990 led the NFL with 24 punts inside the 20-yard line. A special-teams weapon for two Super Bowl-winning teams and named to the 1980’s All-Decade Team.

Coach: Bill Parcells

He took over a terrible team in a terrible downward spiral (one winning season in 10 years) and by 1986 won the first Super Bowl in franchise history. Repeated that feat in 1990 season. Went 77-49-1 with the Giants. Enshrined in Hall of Fame in 2013.