The Giants still have another week to go of OTAs, but with their mandatory minicamp in the books, here's a look at some players who had solid camps.

TE C.J. Conrad

Remember this name, folks. If he's healthy and can show he's as good a blocker as he looked to be on tape, don't be stunned if this two-way tight end--he's a pretty reliable receiver--is on the 53-man roster at the end of camp ahead of Scott Simonson an Garrett Dickerson.

OLB Lorenzo Carter

After running around last year without much of a plan, this year Carter looks more focused, more dialed in and more in tune to what he has to do to achieve his goal of disrupting the passer. Carter also aspires to become a leader on the defense, the "alpha" among established alphas like fellow linebacker Alec Ogletree.

LB Tae Davis

Davis is currently sitting ahead of incumbent B.J. Goodson in the nickel package given his ability to cover. Davis did a nice job with coverage in fact, during the three-day camp and has quietly been stirring more and more interest in his skill set. Wil it all be enough to unseat Goodson as the starter?

QB Daniel Jones

Jones put to rest any concerns about his arm strength and accuracy issues by making some pinpoint throws down the field. Although he still holds on to the ball too long at times, he's definitely been on a fast track to becoming a starter and has clearly had the most impressive spring of the Giants drafted quarterbacks in the last decade.

QB Eli Manning

Despite what you might have hear/read on Twitter about Manning's "stats" in this camp, let's just say they didn't tell the entire story. First, manning's arm strength is fine--he threw the short and long balls very well and other than for maybe a small handful of passes that weren't as sharp, he threw very well in this camp.

As for those "stats" being reported, it's worth noting that the defense did a really good job getting after the quarterback in this camp and that Manning, who seems to be the uncontested king of the dropped balls, had a few drops by his receivers on passes that were right on the money.

RB Paul Perkins

Perkins was sort of the forgotten man on this roster after he spent all of last year on the non-football injury list. But with the competition wide open for a backup to Saquon Barkley, Perkins' strong showing this spring as both a runner and a receiver has his name right up there in the competition with Rod Smith and Wayne Gallman.

S Jabrill Peppers

Time will tell if Peppers will be as productive as Landon Collins was in this defense, but one thing is for sure. Peppers ha a certain "it" factor that was clearly missing from the defense when he had to sit out Wednesday's practice after having a tooth extraction.

WR Darius Slayton

Slayton initially created some concern during his rookie minicamp showing when he couldn't hang on to ball that were clearly catchable. Since then, he's been more sure-handed and has put his speed on display, showing that maybe he can become the deep threat the Giants are missing ever since moving on from Odell Beckham Jr.

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