The New York Giants 2019 NFL Draft class has been widely debated with a focus on the No. 6 overall pick Daniel Jones, but the franchise also made nine other selections in this class. According to the analysts at Pro Football Focus, the Giants landed two of the draft's biggest steals -- best value picks -- in the entire event.

PFF's Mike Renner recently published a breakdown of their biggest draft steals in the entire class and Giants cornerback Deandre Baker (No. 30 overall) and cornerback Julian Love (No. 108 overall) made the list as two of the top steals in the class.

The Giants traded a fourth, fifth, and second-round draft pick to move back into the first round to select Baker at No. 30 overall. What the Giants are hoping to get is an immediate starter at cornerback who they can play on an island in man coverage. According to PFF, the Giants drafted their 16th-best prospect at any position in the entire draft class and the value of landing an elite coverage cornerback makes this pick a steal.

"Baker is the most scheme-diverse of the top cornerbacks on our draft board, and he fits well in New York from that perspective," Renner said. "He addresses a massive need for the Giants at the second-most valuable position on the football field. Sometimes it doesn’t have to be more complicated than that."

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When the Giants were on the clock with their first pick on Day 3 of the draft -- at No. 108 overall -- there was a lot of talent that fell to them. Most fans expected the team to use the draft pick on an offensive lineman, a safety, or a linebacker, but the Giants bypassed drafting for need to instead select the best player overall on their big board. PFF rewarded the Giants for drafting for value by naming Love one of the biggest steals in this class.

"Love has better ball production than any other cornerback in the draft over the past couple seasons," Renner said. "His 38 forced incompletions over that span were the second-most in college football. He’s also racked up 21 coverage stops and missed only four tackles on 77 attempts in coverage. His 4.54 40-yard dash dropped him down boards, but he can overcome that lack of elite speed with his physicality."

The Giants may have not addresses every roster need in one class, but they made a major stride forward in revamping a defensive unit that needed it. Prior to the draft, the Giants had one of the weakest cornerback units in the NFL. Leaving the draft, it is a unit bursting with talent and youth. In 2018, the Giants were forced to use cornerback B.W. Webb on nearly 100 percent of the defensive snaps and UDFA cornerback Grant Haley on two-thirds of the defensive snaps down the stretch run of the 2018 regular season. Giants defensive coordinator James Bettcher was unable to maximize his defensive scheme with a wide array of blitz packages because he did not trust Webb or Haley on an island in pass (man) coverage. That will change during the 2019 regular season and moving forward.