Francis ‘Sisi’ Mauigoa is important to the future of the New York Giants. That should go without saying.
The 21-year-old guard was the 10th pick in the 2026 NFL Draft. With Evan Neal (No. 7 in 2022) and Deonte Banks (No. 24 in 2023), Giants fans have seen how much damage missing on a first-round pick can cause.
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No one wants to see Mauigoa join the list of first-round failures.
Why, though, does Mauigoa surface here as No. 9 in our countdown of the 10 most important Giants of 2026?
Let’s talk about it.
Mauigoa enters training camp expected to be the only new starter on a veteran offensive line that performed well in 2025, particularly in pass protection.
Mauigoa represents the kind of offensive lineman John Harbaugh wants for a team expected to prioritize running the football. At his introductory press conference, Harbaugh said he wanted “a team that is physical and tough. That’s capable of overwhelming their opponent from beginning to end and especially at the end.”
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Drafting Mauigoa was a step toward building that on offense. He is more of a mauler than anyone else on the team’s offensive line.
He is what Big Blue View’s Chris Pflum called a “people mover” after the Giants drafted him with the pick they received by sending Dexter Lawrence to the Cincinnati Bengals.
The 6-foot-5, 330-pound Mauigoa is a powerful player with very good mobility for a guard. The addition of Mauigoa will help to not only upgrade the Giants’ pass protection as well as add a people-mover to their running game.
If the Giants’ offensive line is to become the powerful run-blocking unit Harbaugh wants, Mauigoa will be a central figure.
Giants offensive line coach Mike Bloomgren is excited about what Mauigoa can bring to the Giants.
“Completely in love with football. And I think not just playing football, but the ability to prepare the right way and the desire to prepare the right way. So really pleased,” Bloomgren said. “I think he comes in with a great baseline of knowledge. I think you look back at him being coached by Alex Mirabal [Miami offensive line coach] and nobody in college football is teaching it better and getting a better product out there than Alex. And so that’s really nice.
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“You’re able to see the college film, see how it will translate to our system, and it just made Sisi a real good easy proposition if we could get him.”