WR Darius Slayton: 5th round (171st overall)

27 receptions for 394 yards and 5 touchdowns, 9 kickoff returns for 189 yards (21.0-yard avg.), 76.6% offensive snap count, 5.4% special teams snap count.

After missing the first two games of the season with a hamstring injury, Slayton has seen his playing time increase as the season has progressed. The rookie wide receiver has been on the field for at least 84% of the team's offensive snaps in each of the last five weeks, including playing at least 93% of offensive snaps in four of the last five games, which has led to some solid production.

Slayton is coming off his second two-touchdown game. The 22-year-old caught 10 passes against the Jets in Week 10, resulting in 121 receiving yards and the two scores. Slayton has been targeted 33 times over the last five weeks, totaling 18 receptions for 237 yards and four touchdowns. He is the first Giants receiver with a pair of two-touchdown reception games in a season since Odell Beckham Jr. in 2016, and the first Giants rookie to do it since Beckham in 2014. His five touchdown receptions are tied for the league lead among all rookies.

Slayton also served as the team's primary kick returner for two games last month, returning nine kickoffs for 189 yards (21.0-yard avg.).

"I think since he's been back from his hamstring injury, every time he gets on the field, his reps continue to get more and more and more, and he's getting more confident," wide receivers coach Tyke Tolbert told reporters last month. "He was extremely confident at the end of last spring when we ended for the summer and when we came back he pulled his hamstring so early and it was tough to get back. But since he's been back, his confidence has continued to grow. So, as his confidence continues to grow, he's making more plays, and when you make more plays, you have a tendency to feel—well, I like having playmakers on the field, so it's hard to get him off the field when he's making plays and getting separation."

CB Corey Ballentine: 6th round (180th overall)

6 tackles (5 solo), 1 quarterback hit, 1 pass defended, 10 kickoff returns for 256 yards (25.6-yard avg.), 19.4% defensive snap count, 55.0% special teams snap count

Ballentine has played in eight games, and for the first half of the season, it was primarily on special teams. The sixth-round pick has returned 10 kickoffs for 256 yards, averaging 25.6 yards per return. But over the last two weeks, Ballentine has seen a lot more playing time on defense, serving as the team's slot corner. He played on 77% of the team's defensive snaps in Week 9 and 68% in Week 10. Ballentine has registered six tackles, one quarterback hit and one pass defended.

"I think Corey's a guy that's fast, he's got speed," defensive coordinator James Bettcher said last week on why Ballentine has started to see playing time in the slot. "The thing I really like about Corey since he has gotten here is you walk around the meeting room and you look at his notepad and this guy is taking meticulous notes. He's trying to be really locked in. Something that some young players take a while to figure out is the classroom aspect of playing the game in the NFL. I think it was just time for him to get an opportunity. Trying to find a way and where to put him on the field, and that was the position that we felt moved the least amount of people to get him on the field. He deserved an opportunity."

OT George Asafo-Adjei: 7th round (232nd overall)

Asafo-Adjei suffered a concussion at the start of training camp and was placed on season-ending injured reserve at the beginning of September.

DT Chris Slayton: 7th round (245th overall)