
#64 G · New York Giants
Height
6'3"
Weight
312 lbs
Age
32
College
James Madison
Draft
Undrafted
Experience
8 yrs
G Rank
#40 / 172
Grade Aaron Stinnie
Your grade joins the crowd-sourced Fan Verdict.
On the field, Aaron Stinnie grades out as a middling G for New York Giants (C+ Performance). That places him 40th of 172 graded gs. The money matches the play — the Contract Value Index lands at C+, fairly priced. The public read is negative (D+ Sentiment), drawn from current news and social signal rather than the box score.
Length
1 year
Total Value
$1.3M
Guaranteed
$475K
AAV
$1.3M/yr
New York Giants got a C+ Contract Value Index out of the Aaron Stinnie signing because the guaranteed money matches the production tier. At 32 years old with eight seasons of NFL experience, Stinnie operates squarely as an established veteran depth piece, and his 2025 season output—1 tackle across 17 games—underscores that he's a reserve guard whose contributions are measured in availability rather than impact plays. His $1.3M annual value slots him precisely where a career backup should sit: below the starting guard market but above minimum-salary roster filler, making the contract structure rational rather than generous. The Giants' recent addition of multiple wide receivers and offensive linemen signals an organizational focus on supplementing the rotation with higher-impact talent, which further validates Stinnie's positioning as a reliable depth anchor rather than a building block. With minimal media attention, a D+ sentiment grade reflecting his nonexistent public profile, and a single-year term, there's no cap trap here—just a straightforward placeholder deal for a professional who operates in the margins where expectations align with salary. Stinnie's value is precisely what it looks like: a one-year insurance policy on the depth chart, neither overpriced nor a steal, simply an unremarkable piece fitting an unremarkable role.
Other same-position deals the Contract Value Index also places in the C band — a quick read on where Aaron's contract sits relative to comparable money.
Aaron Stinnie delivers production that earns a C+ performance grade against G comps. As an established veteran eight seasons into his NFL career, Stinnie occupies the solid depth tier—a reliable reserve whose performance falls squarely in the acceptable-but-unspectacular range for interior line backup work. The 2025 season saw him appear in all 17 games, demonstrating the durability expected of a professional lineman, though his lone tackle reflects the limited defensive responsibility that comes with a reserve guard role focused primarily on pass protection and run-blocking assignments in situational play. What remains clear is that Stinnie's modest $1.3M salary aligns perfectly with his output: he's a warm body on the depth chart who stays ready without generating highlight moments or standout technical plays that elevate him into mainstream conversation. At 32 years old and eight seasons in, he operates exactly as the mediaFraming suggests—a quiet, professional depth piece whose role hinges entirely on injury circumstances or roster reshuffling ahead of the regular season. The Giants' recent flurry of offensive personnel moves, emphasizing skill positions and pass catchers, signals that internal focus has shifted elsewhere, cementing Stinnie's status as background infrastructure rather than a cornerstone of the rebuild.
Aaron Stinnie ranks 40th of 172 graded gs by performance. That slots Aaron between Chuma Edoga (C+) just ahead and Cole Strange (C+) just behind.
Graded higher
Chuma EdogaJacksonville JaguarsC+Ben BredesonTampa Bay BuccaneersC+Ben PowersDenver BroncosC+Graded lower
Cole StrangeLos Angeles ChargersAaron Stinnie's public perception is exactly what a D+ sentiment grade implies — not toxic, not celebrated, just largely nonexistent. After eight NFL seasons, he occupies that familiar shadow zone of the league's offensive line depth chart, where mainstream coverage simply doesn't reach unless an injury report forces his name into circulation. His $1.3M contract and role as a reserve guard align precisely with his media footprint: competent, quiet, and unremarkable, with the 2025 season's minimal statistical output doing nothing to shift that narrative in either direction. The Giants' recent offseason activity — highlighted by signings like DJ Reader and Shelby Harris — reinforces that the front office is focused on rebuilding depth at other positions, which only further marginalizes Stinnie in the broader team conversation. That organizational noise redirects whatever limited fan attention exists toward the new arrivals rather than a backup lineman who has defined his career through anonymous professionalism. With a performance grade of F and no meaningful media buzz to counteract it, Stinnie's narrative sits firmly in the background — not a lightning rod, not a storyline, just a depth piece whose fate in New York depends entirely on circumstances outside his control.
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Aaron Stinnie is a veteran in his 8th NFL season listed at G for the New York Giants. FanVerdicts covers every NFL player, team, GM, and transaction — and puts your verdict on all of it. Sign in to cast your Fan Verdict on Aaron Stinnie, see where the crowd lands, and argue the call. FanVerdicts also brings its own read — performance, sentiment, and Contract Value Index — as one honest input alongside the crowd's. Where FanVerdicts has weighed in so far: Contract Value Index C+, Performance C+, Sentiment D+.
The crowd's Fan Verdict moves in real time as fans vote on this profile. FanVerdicts' own read updates as new data lands — performance recalculates when NFL game stats post, sentiment shifts with media coverage and fan discussion, and the Contract Value Index recomputes when contract terms change. Contract details below show the structure (years, total value, average annual value, guarantees) behind the Contract Value Index read.
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