New York Giants wide receiver Corey Coleman tore his ACL during Thursday’s training camp practice, the team announced Friday morning.

Coleman’s season-ending injury came on the same day that the Giants’ No. 1 wide receiver, Sterling Shepard, fractured his thumb.

The injuries to two of the top three wide receivers on the Giants’ depth chart creates plenty of question marks at one of the youngest positions on the roster.

Coleman, a former first-round draft pick, was the early favorite to be the Giants’ No. 3 wide receiver.

Coleman has 61 catches for 789 yards and five touchdowns since he was the No. 15 pick in the 2016 NFL Draft by the Browns. He was the first of four first-round receivers in that draft class.

But after he was caught asking for a trade by HBO’s “Hard Knocks” during training camp last year, the Browns shipped Coleman to the Bills for a seventh-round draft pick in 2020. The Bills cut Coleman — and so did the Patriots — before he joined the Giants practice squad in October and earned a shot as a kickoff returner.

The Giants re-signed Coleman as a restricted free agent — the Bills are on the hook for his guaranteed money, according to The Athletic — and this was a prove-it type of year before entering the open market.

The 5-foot-11, 185-pounder won the Biletnikoff Award as college football’s top receiver in 2015 when he posted 74 catches for 1,363 yards and 20 touchdowns, on the heels of 64 for 1,119 and five, respectively, the previous the season.

In the short-term, the injuries to Coleman and Shepard clear the path for rookies Darius Slayton and Reggie White Jr. to take on increased practice reps, while veterans Russell Shepard, Cody Latimer and Alonzo Russell move up the depth chart.

If the Giants want to look outside the organization for wide receiver depth, it’s slim pickings.

Former Dallas Cowboys wide receiver Allen Hurns signed a one-year contract with the Miami Dolphins on Friday. That would leave Pierre Garcon and Michael Crabtree as the best available free agents, and neither one is a game-changer at this point in their careers.

(NJ Advance Media’s Ryan Dunleavy contributed to this report.)

Matt Lombardo may be reached at MLombardo@njadvancemedia.com. Follow him on Twitter @MattLombardoNFL