Wednesday, July 31, 2024

Another Day. Another DB

The Minnesota Vikings keeping bringing in defensive backs.

Last Wednesday, Duke Shelley was brought back after a year sabbatical with the Los Angeles Rams

Last Thursday, Jacobi Francis was signed.

On Monday, Bobby McCain was signed.

Yesterday, Fabian Moreau was signed. 

Another day. Another defensive back. 

Duke Shelley, Jacobi Francis, and Fabian Moreau will boost the depth of the cornerback room. Defensive coordinator Brian Flores said that Bobby McCain was brought in to play safety. While McCain has played some nickel, he’s played safety for most of his ten years in the league. He was with the Miami Dolphins for two of the three years that Flores was head coach. That familiarity surely played a role in this reunion. It’s interesting that the day McCain joined the team was the day that safety Jay Ward took some reps at cornerback. Ward played corner, nickel, safety, wherever in college at LSU. He was basically the college version of Josh Metellus. Position versatility is becoming a requirement to play in a Flores defense. 

Shelley and Moreau could provide experienced and reliable cornerback depth but I’m not sure either is a threat to currently projected starters Byron Murphy Jr, Shaquil Griffin, and Akayleb Evans. Unless, the Vikings bring in someone like Stephon Gilmore I don’t see that changing. 

The Vikings current cornerbacks:

Byron Murphy Jr.
Shaquill Griffin
Akayleb Evans
Andrew Booth Jr.
Duke Shelley
Fabian Moreau
A.J. Green III
Jaylin Williams
Dwight McGlothern
Jacobi Francis

Of the now 10 cornerbacks on the Vikings roster, unrdrafted free agent Dwight McGlothern might be the player I’m most intrigued to see progress through training camp and preseason. I thought for sure he’d be selected in the fifth- or sixth-round of the 2024 NFL Draft. I was surprised that he wasn’t drafted and thrilled that the Vikings signed him. 

The Vikings current safeties:

Harrison Smith
Camryn Bynum
Josh Metellus
Theo Jackson
Lewis Cine
Bobby McCain
Najee Thompson

Najee Thompson is on the roster for his excellent play on special teams. 2022 first-round pick Lewis Cine is fighting for his roster life. Right now, he isn’t doing much fighting as he’s sidelined with an injury. The Vikings top four safeties could arguably start for any team in the league. Bobby McCain provides solid depth and experience in a Flores defense. 

For now, Jay Ward is a cornerback or a safety. Versatility is a very good thing. 

I wonder if today brings another defensive back addition. 




Tuesday, July 30, 2024

Vikings Defensive Back Scramble

Tragedy and injuries have forced the Minnesota Vikings to make defensive back adjustments on the fly. Training camp opened last Wednesday. In that time, Duke Shelley, Jacobi Francis, and Bobby McCain have been signed. Indications are that more additions may be in the team’s future.  

Rookie Khyree Jackson and second-year Mekhi Blackmon were expected to grab prominent cornerback roles this season. Tragically, Jackson is gone. Blackmon tore his ACL during 7 v7s in the first practice of training camp. At least, he can rehab from that. The Vikings lost two of their top four cornerbacks before training camp was a day old. 

It’s late July, the available cornerbacks aren’t a sparkling bunch. There are some big names like Stephon Gilmore and Patrick Peterson but both are on the down-side of their brilliant careers. Adoree’ Jackson, J.C. Jackson, and Xavien Howard are younger but come with questions of their own. I flip back and forth from Gilmore and the Jacksons as the most appealing of the bunch. Ahkello Witherspoon is another free agent that might be considered. 

Initially, I thought that signing an available cornerback as the only option in fortifying the position. Nope. The Vikings are apparently taking advantage of the versatility of some of their safeties. Camryn Bynum played cornerback at Cal. There might be instances in which the Vikings use those skills but I really don’t see a full-time, or even extended, move to cornerback. I watched all of Bynum’s games at Cal. He was a very good college cornerback. He played cornerback in college like a very good NFL safety. More likely, and more promising, the Vikings are giving second-year Jay Ward some run at cornerback. He showed ridiculous versatility at LSU. He played considerable snaps at safety, nickel, and outside corner. The addition yesterday of Bobby McCain is an indication that Ward playing some corner is more than just an experiment. Brian Flores said that McCain would play safety. The position on the roster least in need of an upgrade was probably safety. Further, McCain hasn’t played corner since about 2018. 

So, where does this defensive back scrambling leave the Vikings? Maybe, I’m finally recovering from the shock and disappointment of losing Blackmon for the season. While I’m not ruling out the need for a cornerback like Gilmore, or a Jackson, my confidence in the Vikings remaining cornerbacks is growing. No more injuries! Shaquill Griffin must stay on the field. A top trio of Byron Murphy Jr., Akayleb Evans, and Griffin can work. Hopefully, Andrew Booth Jr. plays to his talents. Duke Shelley provides reliable depth. Undrafted free agent Dwight McGlothern is intriguing. There was a time shortly after Khyree Jackson was added in the draft that I thought that the Vikings questionable cornerback group could be a team strength as soon as this season. I don’t see the group being a strength but it could be better than competent. That’s not a glowing evaluation but it’s an improvement over how I viewed the group on Friday. 

I trust Brian Flores, Daronte Jones, and Michael Hutchings to get the best out of the Vikings defensive backs. 


Monday, July 29, 2024

Available Cornerbacks

After tragedy and injuries, the Minnesota Vikings have a significant cornerback need. It isn’t so much a depth need. They need another cornerback that could potentially start. Mekhi Blackmon was expected to start, or play a major role, in his second season. He was lost on the first day of training camp with a torn ACL. That left the team with nine cornerbacks on the roster.

Byron Murphy Jr.
Shaquill Griffin
Akayleb Evans
Andrew Booth Jr.
Duke Shelley
A.J. Green III
Jaylin Williams
Dwight McGlothern
Jacobi Francis

On the second day of training camp, Shaquill Griffin left the field limping. Coming the day after the loss of Blackmon, it was a troublesome sight. Fortunately, Griffin will only be sidelined for a handful of practices. Still, it stresses the cornerback group in the short term. Perhaps extra snaps for the others will be a benefit in the long term.

Duke Shelley and Jacobi Francis were signed last week to provide some depth. After a year with the Los Angeles Rams, Shelley returns to Minnesota. He had several bright moments down the stretch of the 2022 season for the Vikings. It was enough bright moments on an otherwise dim defense for him to became something of a folk hero for many Vikings fans. Shelley is more likely to compete for a roster spot than Francis. Neither should challenge for a starting role. The Vikings need a corner to either start or be on the field when three corners are needed, which is basically a starting role. 

Here are some of the corners still available:

Stephon Gilmore
Xavien Howard
Adoree’ Jackson
J.C. Jackson
Patrick Peterson
Ahkello Witherspoon
Eli Apple

The availability of Stephon Gilmore is appealing. If only he were about six years younger. If he was six years younger, he wouldn’t be available in late July. He did start 16 and 17 games the past two seasons. So, his increasing age isn’t keeping him off the field. Patrick Peterson is another great corner that’s several years removed from his best years. Of the two, Gilmore is a much better fit for Brian Flores’ man-heavy defenses. Xavien Howard would be a decent addition if it wasn’t for his off-the-field issues. Of the above, I probably favor Gilmore or one of the Jacksons, Adoree’ or J.C. If the Vikings coaches could get J.C. Jackson playing like he did during his first stint with the New England Patriots, he’d easily be the pick. That was only three years ago. 

As mentioned yesterday, I prefer a trade for a talented corner that might just need a change of scenery. The Vikings don’t currently have the draft assets in the 2025 NFL Draft to make a big swing at solving their cornerback issues. They do have a young player that might be appealing to another team. Lewis Cine. The Vikings first-round pick in the 2022 NFL Draft hasn’t gotten close to the field. His progression was seriously derailed by a brutal broken leg early in his rookie season. While he was sidelined, the Vikings safety position evolved into a team strength. Suddenly, he had Harrison Smith, Camryn Bynum, Josh Metellus, and Theo Jackson all playing well ahead of him. As a rookie last season, Jay Ward emerged as a special teams regular. It was impossible for Cine to get any playing time or traction. Maybe, the Buffalo Bills might be interested in a still very young safety with first-round talent that just needs an opportunity. The Bills selected cornerback Kaiir Elam in the first round of the same draft that the Vikings selected Cine. Elam has had some bright moments but he can’t seem to get on and stay on the field. A swap of former first-round defensive backs? Curiously, Cine was held out of practice on Friday and Saturday. Who knows? Maybe?

The Vikings need a cornerback that can play a significant role this season. Gilmore? A Jackson? Elam? 





Sunday, July 28, 2024

Vikings Corners

After the forever loss of Khyree Jackson, season loss of Mekhi Blackmon, and short-term loss of Shaquill Griffin, the Minnesota Vikings corners have taken some hits. Currently, the team’s active corners look something like this.

Byron Murphy Jr.
Shaquill Griffin
Akayleb Evans
Andrew Booth Jr.
Duke Shelley
A.J. Green III
Jaylin Williams
Dwight McGlothern
Jacobi Francis

Duke Shelley and Jacobi Francis were added to the roster last week. Shelley was added before the loss of Mekhi Blackmon for the season. Francis was added soon after. 

During the 2000 season the Vikings top corner was arguably converted receiver Robert Tate. I’ve seen some bleak cornerback times in Minnesota. The Vikings current cornerback situation is nothing like those. It isn’t great but it is nowhere near some of those past tragic times. I still can’t quite work my way around the tragic loss of Khyree Jackson. Korey Stringer’s death in 2001 was brutal. I hoped to never experience something like that again. Now Jackson. Team’s lose players to injuries all the time. Jackson’s just gone. There’s no rehab from that. I sure wish there was. About three weeks later, Mekhi Blackmon is lost for the season with a torn ACL on the first day of training camp. Fortunately, there’s rehab from that. Still, he’s gone for the year. Two of the team’s top four corners are gone before Day 2 of training camp. On Day 2, Shaquill Griffin limped off the field with a minor “soft tissue” injury. He might be away from practice for as much as a week. Two days in and three of the team’s top four cornerbacks aren’t available. Griffin should be back next week. After all, Vikings cornerbacks can’t keep coming up injured. Even without Griffin, the 2024 corners are not as bad 2000. That doesn’t make it ok. That just means that it can be worse. 

I trust Brian Flores. 

If the Vikings add no one, they will make do with the cornerbacks that they have. And they will do better than just make do. Griffin will be back. Some combination of Byron Murphy Jr, Griffin, Akayleb Evans, and even Andrew Booth Jr. and Duke Shelley can get the job done. I believe that the wildcard of the group is undrafted rookie Dwight McGlothern. 

I expect the Vikings to add another starting caliber corner. Kevin O’Connell pretty much said as much. Signing a free agent like J.C. Jackson. Adoree’ Jackson, or Stephon Gilmore feels easy. If they go that route, I favor one of the Jacksons. Perhaps something more bold is in the works. It sounds like Lewis Cine has been in street clothes for the past two practices. I can’t help but wonder if he’s about to be traded. The first pick of the O’Connell-Kwesi Adofo-Mensah regime has been buried at the bottom of a loaded safety group. After the brutal leg injury early in his 2022 rookie season, Cine has faced an impossible depth chart climb. Harrison Smith is still playing. Cam Bynum is establishing himself as franchise fixture. Josh Metellus is a safety by name and do-everything by play. Theo Jackson has worked his way into a safety role. In a single season, Jay Ward has established a special teams presence and shown enough to have a future with the defense. Cine just can’t find a place or any traction in Minnesota. He deserves an opportunity and he’s not currently getting one. Perhaps a trade of Lewis Cine to the Buffalo Bills for Kaiir Elam could be a very good thing for all parties involved.

So, the Vikings corners after a lazy free agent signing:

Byron Murphy Jr.
Shaquill Griffin
J.C. Jackson/Adoree’ Jackson/Stephon Gilmore
Akayleb Evans
Andrew Booth Jr.
Duke Shelley
A.J. Green III
Jaylin Williams
Dwight McGlothern
Jacobi Francis

Or, the Vikings corners after a somewhat bold swap of former first-round picks:

Byron Murphy Jr.
Shaquill Griffin
Kaiir Elam
Akayleb Evans
Andrew Booth Jr.
Duke Shelley
A.J. Green III
Jaylin Williams
Dwight McGlothern
Jacobi Francis

What’s best for the Vikings this season? They don’t have the picks in 2025 to make a big swing at a cornerback addition. That’s one of the reasons I like a Cine for Elam trade. Both have struggled gaining traction with the team that drafted them in the first round. Maybe a change of scenery could be the key to both playing to the talent that got them drafted in the first round of the 2022 NFL Draft. Who knows? Cine skipping the past two practices feels like a trade is in the air. I actually feel like a trade for a starting caliber corner is more likely than simply signing one of the corners on the market. 




Saturday, July 27, 2024

Evolution Of The Minnesota Vikings Quarterback Coaches

Kevin O’Connell is entering his third season as the head coach of the Minnesota Vikings. Having an offensive-minded head coach can be a good thing. Especially one that is a former NFL quarterback. Today’s football revolves around the quarterback. It’s all about the quarterback. With that in mind, the continuity of O’Connell calling the plays and overseeing the development of the quarterbacks can be a very good thing. During the eight years that Mike Zimmer coached the Vikings, there was a frustrating revolving door of offensive coordinators. There was no continuity. I used to prefer defensive head coaches. Not anymore. The quarterback is overly important and the development of a young quarterback is crucial. There can be no revolving door of coaches. With all of that in mind, the evolution of the coaches surrounding the quarterbacks since O’Connell was hired in 2022 has been interesting. 

2022
Offensive Coordinator: Wes Phillips
Quarterbacks Coach: Chris O’Hara
Assistant Quarterbacks Coach: Jerrod Johnson
Tight Ends/Pass Game Coordinator: Brian Angelichio
Pass Game Specialist/Game Management Coordinator: Ryan Cordell
Assistant to the Head Coach/Special Projects: Grant Udinski

Kevin O’Connell brought Wes Phillips and Chris O’Hara with him from the Los Angeles Rams. In a sense, the Viking lucked into Jerrod Johnson for a single season because Vikings strength coach Marquis Johnson is his brother. After that single season, Jerrod Johnson moved to the Houston Texans to coach C.J. Stroud. Johnson will soon be an offensive coordinator and not long after that coaching his own team. He’s a coach on the rise. Anyway, the main coaches around the quarterbacks in O’Connell’s first season were the head coach, Phillips, O’Hara, and Johnson. 

2023
Offensive Coordinator: Wes Phillips
Quarterbacks Coach: Chris O’Hara
Assistant Quarterbacks Coach: Grant Udinski
Tight Ends/Pass Game Coordinator: Brian Angelichio
Pass Game Specialist/Game Management Coordinator: Ryan Cordell

After Kirk Cousins suffered an Achilles injury on the spongy Lambeau Field turf, the Vikings were forced to go through a merry-go-round of quarterbacks. They traded for Josh Dobbs and a Jaren Hall concussion forced the freshly acquired QB onto the field with only hours of team preparation. Much was made of O’Connell’s in-game handling of Dobbs. Little was made of the behind-the-scenes work of Grant Udinski. This is the coach that’s been on a fast climb up the Vikings QB coaching ladder.

2024
Offensive Coordinator: Wes Phillips
Quarterbacks Coach: Josh McCown
Assistant Offensive Coordinator/Assistant Quarterbacks Coach: Grant Udinski
Tight Ends/Pass Game Coordinator: Brian Angelichio
Pass Game Specialist/Game Management Coordinator: Ryan Cordell
Senior Offensive Assistant: Chris O’Hara

This offseason, the Vikings were looking at the draft for their quarterback of the future, maybe present. Getting Josh McCown to coach the quarterbacks was an incredible opportunity. A quarterback coaching base of O’Connell and McCown feels too good to be true for any young or veteran quarterback. The reason for this look into the Vikings quarterback coaches is Grant Udinski. Two years ago, he was mostly a go-fer for the head coach. Now, he’s the assistant offensive coordinator. I’ve never heard of a team having an assistant offensive coordinator. Udinski clearly earned a promotion to as far as O’Connell could promote him without bumping an incumbent. Chris O’Hara is the coach that dropped as Udinski rose. McCown’s hiring as quarterbacks coach moved O’Hara to the periphery of this coaching circle. 

Currently, the Vikings have an incredible coaching environment for a young, and old, quarterback. Sam Darnold and rookie J.J. McCarthy are the focus but Nick Mullens and Jaren Hall are benefitting. O’Connell isn’t going anywhere. I’m hoping that McCown is around for a couple of years. Like Jerrod Johnson, I feel like McCown could be a coach on a fast rise. Phillips has gotten some coordinator attention in recent hiring cycles. I’m not so sure that continues. Has Undinki’s rise put him on a list for some teams? Who knows? He’s been on a fast rise with the Vikings. For now, he still feels like something of a secret weapon. 



Friday, July 26, 2024

A Too Early Minnesota Vikings 53-man Roster Projection

The 2024 Minnesota Vikings stepped on a training camp practice field for the first time on Wednesday. The players have yet to take a rep in pads. So, here’s a too early shot at the team’s 53-man roster.

Offense (24)

Quarterback (3)
Sam Darnold
J.J. McCarthy
Jaren Hall

I go back and forth on this one. The safe route would be to keep Nick Mullens as the backup to Sam Darnold. The Vikings could probably safely stash Jaren Hall on the practice squad. After injuries forced an insane QB merry-go-round last season perhaps the safe route is the best route. If the Vikings could get a late-round 2025 draft pick for Mullens, I’m currently going the above three quarterbacks. 

Running Back (3)
Aaron Jones
Ty Chandler
Kene Nwangwu

Three is a little light but I’d rather use the roster spot elsewhere.

Fullback (1)
C.J. Ham

Receiver (5)
Justin Jefferson
Jordan Addison
Brandon Powell
Jalen Nailor
Trent Sherfield Sr.

It’s a top heavy group. Justin Jefferson and Jordan Addison are one of the best receiving duos in the league. The competition for WR3 will be one of the most intriguing in camp. Brandon Powell is probably penciled in for the role but I like Jalen Nailor to take it. He just has to avoid injuries. Trent Sherfield Sr. will have significant special teams roles. I’m curious to see what he can provide on offense. The Vikings are his fifth team in five years. When given offensive opportunities, he’s produced. After Jefferson and Addison, nothing is nailed down, There are roster opportunities for a variety of young receivers. 

Tight End (3)
Josh OIiver 
Johnny Mundt
Robert Tonyan

Until T.J. Hockenson returns from the knee injury, I’m going with three tight ends.

Offensive Line (9)
Christian Darrisaw
Blake Brandel
Garrett Bradbury
Ed Ingram
Brian O’Neill
David Quessenberry
Dalton Risner
Walter Rouse
Michael Jurgens

Nine might be light. With his ability to play center and guard, Dan Feeney is a tough cut. With the above players, seventh-round rookie Michael Jurgens would be the backup center. So, it’d be best if Garrett Bradbury can play 17+ games. 

Defense (26)

Defensive Line (5)
Harrison Phillips
Jerry Tillery
Jonathan Bullard
Jaquelin Roy
Levi Drake Rodriguez

Defensive line is probably the defense’s most suspect position group. Harrison Phillips is easily the most established and accomplished player. As a one-time first-round pick, Jerry Tillery is a wildcard. I like Jaquelin Roy as a breakout candidate. Seventh-round rookie Levi Drake Rodriguez is on the most intriguing players on the team. He’ll be fun to watch. It’s more likely that the Vikings keep six defensive linemen, with James Lynch and Jonah Williams as top candidates, but I’m going with five for this too early exercise. 

Outside Linebacker (6)
Jonathan Greenard
Andrew Van Ginkel
Dallas Turner
Patrick Jones II
Andre Carter II
Gabriel Murphy

With apologies to the safeties, I think that the outside linebackers will emerge as the strength of the Vikings defense. Six is a little heavy but I’m going with the thinking that Jonathan Greenard and Patrick Jones II, maybe others, might factor in with the defensive front in certain situations. 

Inside Linebacker (4)
Ivan Pace Jr.
Blake Cashman
Brian Asamoah
Kamu Grugier-Hill

This is a tough one. Ivan Pace Jr. and Blake Cashman are easy. They’ll be the heartbeat of the defense. I want to keep three linebackers to open up an extra roster spot for the secondary. When I do that, three doesn’t feel enough. Kamu Grugier-Hill is currently the top backup. His starting experience is comforting. Brian Asamoah has special teams roles. I want to see him make an impact on defense. So far, he hasn’t. Injuries have been a hurdle. If he can stay healthy through training camp perhaps he’ll finally get those defensive opportunities.

Cornerback (5)
Byron Murphy Jr.
Shaquill Griffin
Akayleb Evans
Andrew Booth Jr.
Dwight McGlothern

I still can’t believe Khyree Jackson isn’t part of this group. RIP31. On the first day of training camp, Mekhi Blackmon was lost for the season with a torn ACL. A questionable position group now has more questions. It’s probably a good thing that Duke Shelley was brought back. Right now, I have undrafted rookie as a dark horse candidate to make the team. I could see six corners on the roster. Perhaps at the expense of my heavy outside linebackers. 

Safety (6)
Harrison Smith
Camryn Bynum
Josh Metellus
Theo Jackson
Jay Ward
Najee Thompson

This group is loaded. Najee Thompson makes the team for his outstanding special teams play. Missing here is Lewis Cine. The 2022 first-round pick is competing for his roster life. 

Special Teams (3)

Kicker (1)
Will Reichard

Punter (1)
Seth Vernon

Long Snapper (1)
Andrew DePaola

I’m so glad these roster decisions aren’t mine to make. 





Thursday, July 25, 2024

Brutal Start

Yesterday was supposed to be a beautiful day at TCO Performance Center. After a transformative offseason, the Minnesota Vikings were kicking off training camp. Football was finally here. It was a beautiful day until cornerback Mekhi Blackmon limped off the field. After being treated by the trainers, he limped to the locker room. The fact that he limped to the locker room felt promising. It was a tease as it was reported later in the day that Blackmon had torn his ACL. He’s out for the season. 

After a very promising rookie season, much was expected of Mekhi Blackmon. He had a legitimate opportunity to be one of the two corners on the field in base defense. He was certainly going to be on the field with Byron Murphy Jr. and Shaquill Griffin in nickel. This is a huge loss of one of the Vikings most promising young defensive players. Injuries will always be part of football. They always will be. This is just a brutal start to a much-anticipated training camp and season. 

Now what? It’s next man up. In football, it’s always next man up. This is the second brutal blow to the Vikings cornerback group this summer. Rookie Khyree Jackson was tragically killed in a car accident last month. With that sort of loss, a little knee injury doesn’t seem so bad. Football barely paused for Jackson. It won’t stop for Blackmon. Even before the loss of Jackson and Blackmon, the Vikings cornerback group was questioned. The Vikings brought back 2022 fan folk hero Duke Shelley earlier this week. After losing Blackmon, they announced the signing of former third-year corner Jacobi Francis this morning. As a rookie, he spent the 2022 season on the practice squad of the Houston Texans. He was elevated to the active roster and appeared in five games. In 2023, he was again on the Texans practice squad but was released in October. Now, he has another football shot with a team in need of corners. 

The Vikings cornerback group currently looks like this:

Byron Murphy Jr.
Shaquill Griffin
Akayleb Evans
Andrew Booth Jr.
Duke Shelley
A.J. Green III
Jaylin Williams
Dwight McGlothern 
Jacobi Francis

The Vikings projected base starters remain the same as it’s been all offseaon.

Byron Murphy Jr.
Shaquill Griffin

It’s the nickel group where things now get a little squirrelly. After a promising rookie season in 2022, Akayleb Evans started 15 games last season. The concern for him is that he’s faded at the end of each of his two seasons. Concussions were the reason in 2022. Up until those late-season struggles, Evans showed solid potential each season. He could easily be the outside corner opposite Griffin in nickel. He’s done it. He just has to get better at it. Andrew Booth Jr. has the natural talent to be the best of this bunch. He must avoid the injuries that have peppered his two years in the league and play to his potential. If he can do that, this now reduced group could be much better than expected. Although, those expectations are not that high right now. If Shaquill Griffin can regain his form of a couple years ago. If Akayleb Evans can build on his best play of his two years in the league. If Andrew Booth Jr. can play to his immense talents. That’s a lot of “ifs” but the Vikings have some corners with the man-coverage ability that defensive coordinator Brian Flores favors.  For me, the wildcard of this group is undrafted rookie Dwight McGlothern. I was intrigued in him as a fifth- or sixth-round pick in the draft. I was stunned that he wasn’t drafted and thrilled that the Vikings signed him. In a draft with limited draft capital, the Vikings adding Khyree Jackson and McGlothern was a bonanza. 

Will the Vikings sign or somehow acquire another cornerback? Who knows? It’s late July. There aren’t a lot of top-notch corners walking around un-signed. The biggest names are a couple mid-30 future Hall of Famers in Patrick Peterson and Stephon Gilmore. Xavien Howard is tempting but his off-the-field baggage is probably too much. The more appealing due to age and potential upside are a couple Jacksons. Adoree’ Jackson and J.C. Jackson. Right now, I’m just hoping that the injury to Mekhi Blackmon is the beginning and the end to the injuries. I’m hoping that the Vikings trainers have a boring rest of their summer. I’m hoping that they have a boring season too. 



Wednesday, July 24, 2024

A Big Reporting Day

Minnesota Vikings veterans reported to training camp yesterday. It’s been a busy offseason. Reporting day was no different. The Vikings agreed to terms with left tackle Christian Darrisaw on a four-year contract extension. 

Some of the details:
4 years/$113 million
$77 million guaranteed
$43.7 million guaranteed at signing

The $28.25 million average over those four new contract years makes Darrisaw one of the highest paid offensive tackles in the league.

This extension means Darrisaw is now signed for the next six seasons. 

Originally drafted with the 23rd overall pick in the 2021 NFL Draft, Darrisaw is already one of the best left tackles in the league. He just turned 25. It only took three seasons for him to reach this level of play and earn this sparkling contract extension. He’s a current and future cornerstone of the Vikings offense and team. 

Offensive core players under contract for at least the next four seasons:
Justin Jefferson
Jordan Addison
T.J. Hockenson
Christian Darrisaw
Brian O’Neill (3 seasons)

Whenever rookie quarterback J.J. McCarthy is ready to take over the offense, he’ll be in a very good place. 

The Vikings posted pictures and videos of players arriving for training camp. One of those players was especially happy about the day ahead. 

Securing Christian Darrisaw’s future with the team wasn’t the only bit of business done on reporting day. The Vikings signed free agent cornerback Duke Shelley. After a year with the Los Angeles Rams, he returns to Minnesota. Shelley emerged as something of a folk hero among Vikings fans during the 2022 season. Down the stretch of that thrilling regular season, he was the team’s best cover corner. The defense, as a whole, was a sieve but he managed to be a much-needed bright spot. 

Today, the Minnesota step on the TCO Performance Center fields for the first day of training camp. 


Tuesday, July 23, 2024

Minnesota Vikings Intriguing Training Camp Competitions

The Minnesota Vikings rookies reported to TCO Performance Center on Sunday. The rest of the team reports today. The entire team will be on the field tomorrow. Here are some of the intriguing training camp competitions. 

1. Quarterback 
If there’s a question at quarterback, the position will always be under a microscope. Even if a team has no quarterback questions, the position is always under the microscope. Until he’s not, Sam Darnold is the Vikings quarterback. As the 10th pick in the 2024 NFL Draft, J.J. McCarthy is working his way to be the Vikings quarterback. There is no pressure for that to happen this year. If it does, great. If it doesn’t, great. Everyone wants the team’s quarterback of the future to be the quarterback of the present as soon as possible. In reality, there’s no rush. When McCarthy is ready, he’ll be the quarterback. Right now, the competition to be the third quarterback on the roster might be the more intriguing competition. Nick Mullens or Jaren Hall. After the quarterback merry-go-round that hit the Vikings last season, the safe route might be to have Mullens start the season as the backup. The more daring route would be to have Hall as #3 and trade Mullens to some QB-needy team.

2. Third Receiver
Justin Jefferson and Jordan Addison will be one of the best receiving duos in the league. It gets a bit murky after that. Who’s the WR3?

The Contenders:
Brandon Powell
Jalen Nailor
Trent Sherfield

At the moment, Brandon Powell is probably penciled in for the role. When given the opportunity, he made plays last season. If he can stay on the field, I think Jalen Nailor grabs the role. He was challenging K.J. Osborn for the role last season. Then, he suffered a hamstring injury early in training camp. That derailed all the progress that he’d made. Nailor must stay on the field. Trent Sherfield was an interesting offseason addition. His career has become that of a journeyman. The Vikings are his fifth team in the last five seasons. Despite the travels, he’s produced when given an opportunity. By far, his best season was his 2022 season in Miami. Beyond his ability as a pass-catcher, he’s a strong blocker and special teams player.  Even he’s not the third receiver on the field, Sherfield will have a role. 

3. Left and Right Guard
It’s a certainty that two of Ed Ingram, Blake Brandel, and Dalton Risner will be the starting guards. Ingram has been the team’s right guard since his 2022 rookie season. Despite some very rocky moments, his two years as a starter has been on an upwards trajectory. Throughout offseason workouts, Blake Brandel has been the left guard. It felt like Ingram and Brandel would the team’s guards. Then Risner was re-signed. After Ezra Cleveland was dealt at the trade deadline last season, Risner stepped into the lineup and was a solid presence the rest of the season. Fans and media were calling for his re-signing all offseason. He was finally re-signed on May 31. It was assumed that Brandel and Risner would compete for the left guard job. Apparently all three guards will be competing for the two guard jobs. 

4. Defensive Line
Defensive line will be one of the most curious competitions of training camp. It’s wide open. Harrison Phillips is the only established player of a mostly anonymous group. 

Harrison Phillips
Jaquelin Roy
Jonathan Bullard
Jerry Tillery
Jonah Williams
James Lynch
Levi Drake Rodriguez
Taki Taimani
Tyler Manoa
Jalen Redmond

Jaquelin Roy had some flashes as a fifth-round rookie last season. I really believe that he’s one the team’s top breakout candidates this year. Jonathan Bullard was a solid presence in the run game last season. I believe that he’ll have a role as long as Brian Flores is coordinating the Vikings defense. As a former first-round pick, Jerry Tillery is probably the wildcard of the group. He has the size and natural talent to be elite. That size and natural talent is what got him selected in the first round of the 2019 NFL Draft. Unfortunately, he hasn’t put it all together on an NFL field. Perhaps he will with the Vikings. Perhaps I’m being overly hopeful but I believe that seventh-round rookie Levi Drake Rodriguez is a player to watch. Even if he has only a designated pass rusher role as a rookie, I believe that he’ll make an impact. 

5, Outside Linebacker
No position has seen more change this offseason than the outside linebackers. The top three last year were Danielle Hunter, oft-injured Marcus Davenport, and D.J. Wonnum. All gone. Jonathan Greenard and Andrew Van Ginkel were added in free agency. Dallas Turner was selected in the first round. 

The overhauled outside linebacker group:
Jonathan Greenard
Andrew Van Ginkel
Dallas Turner
Patrick Jones II
Andre Carter II
Jihad Ward
Gabriel Murphy
Bo Richter
Owen Porter

Only Patrick Jones II and Andre Carter II were on the roster last season. Greenard, Van Ginkel, and Turner will better fit Flores’ position-less defense. This trio and the outside linebackers are the position group I’m most looking forward to seeing in action. After Greenard, Van Ginkel, and Turner, there will be a wide open competition for the remaining spots. I like the chances of undrafted free agent Gabriel Murphy. 

6. Cornerback
Sadly, this group was dealt a heart-breaking blow with the tragic car crash that took the life of fourth-round rookie Khyree Jackson. 

Byron Murphy Jr., Shaquill Griffin, and Mekhi Blackmon project as the top three corners. Murphy is the team’s most versatile corner. He’s competent on the outside but is at his best when he slides inside. Griffin was signed in the offseason for his ability to handle outside receivers by himself. Blackmon played well as a rookie last season. His future is bright. If not for late-season struggles in each of his two seasons, Akayleb Evans would probably be an assured starter and Griffin not signed. He’s shown the ability. He just has to sustain it through an entire season. 2022 second-round pick, Andrew Booth Jr. might be competing for a roster spot. He has the talent. He may even be the most physically gifted corner on the roster. Injuries have been a factor but he hasn’t turned that talent into consistent play on the field. Undrafted free agent Dwight McGlothern is a wildcard among the corners. 

RIP 31.



Monday, July 22, 2024

Minnesota Vikings Training Camp Roster

The Minnesota Vikings rookies reported to TCO Performance Center for training camp yesterday. A few of the veterans peppered the rookie arrivals. The rest of the players will report tomorrow. Training Camp 2024 is here. Vikings football is here. 

The Vikings training roster currently sits at 90 players. I still can’t remove Khyree Jackson. Maybe some day. 

There were a couple recently announced position changes. N’Keal Harry was moved from receiver to tight end. Najee Thompson was moved from corner to safety. The roster on the team website does not reflect those changes. Harry is fighting for a roster spot. Thompson is on the roster for his great special teams play. I don’t think it matters much what position he plays on defense. 


Minnesota Vikings Training Camp Roster

Offense (44)

Quarterbacks (4)
14 Sam Darnold
  9 J.J. McCarthy
12 Nick Mullens
16 Jaren Hall

Running Backs (5)
33 Aaron Jones
32 Ty Chandler
26 Kene Nwangwu
27 DeWayne McBride
37 Myles Gaskin

Fullback (1)
30 C.J. Ham

Receivers (11)
18 Justin Jefferson
  3 Jordan Addison
  4 Brandon Powell
83 Jalen Nailor
11 Trent Sherfield
  8 Trishton Jackson
81 Lucky Jackson
89 Thayer Thomas
19 Malik Knowles
82 Jeshaun Jones
40 Ty James

Tight Ends (8)
87 T.J. Hockenson
84 Josh Oliver
86 Johnny Mundt
85 Robert Tonyan 
34 Nick Muse
13 N’Keal Harry
41 Trey Knox
48 Sammis Reyes

Offensive Linemen (15)
71 Christian Darrisaw
64 Blake Brandel
56 Garrett Bradbury
67 Ed Ingram
75 Brian O’Neill
76 David Quessenberry 
66 Dalton Risner
78 Walter Rouse
65 Michael Jurgens
69 Dan Feeney
68 Henry Byrd
79 Tyrese Robinson
63 Jeremy Flax
72 Doug Nester
74 Spencer Rolland

Defense (42)

Defensive Linemen (10)
97 Harrison Phillips
93 Jaquelin Roy
90 Jonathan Bullard
99 Jerry Tillery
92 Jonah Williams
60 James Lynch
50 Levi Drake Rodriguez
94 Taki Taimani
95 Tyler Manoa
     Jalen Redmond

Outside Linebackers (9)
58 Jonathan Greenard
43 Andrew Van Ginkel
15 Dallas Turner
91 Patrick Jones II
55 Andre Carter II
52 Jihad Ward
59 Gabriel Murphy
98 Bo Richter
57 Owen Porter

Inside Linebackers (7)
  0 Ivan Pace Jr.
51 Blake Cashman
  2 Brian Asamoah
54 Kamu Grugier-Hill
39 Abraham Beauplan
48 Dallas Gant
45 K.J. Cloyd

Cornerbacks (9)
  7 Byron Murphy Jr.
  1 Shaq Griffin
  5 Mekhi Blackmon
21 Akayleb Evans
23 Andrew Booth Jr.
31 Khyree Jackson
28 A.J. Green III
38 Jaylin Williams
47 Dwight McGlothern

Safeties (7)
22 Harrison Smith
24 Camryn Bynum
44 Josh Metellus
25 Theo Jackson
  6 Lewis Cine
20 Jay Ward
36 Najee Thompson

Special Teams (5)

Kickers (2)
46 Will Reichard
96 John Parker Romo

Punter (2)
17 Ryan Wright
49 Seth Vernon

Long Snapper (1)
42 Andrew DePoala



Sunday, July 21, 2024

Minnesota Vikings Training Camp Is Here

Today is reporting day for the Minnesota Vikings. At least, it’s reporting day for the rookies. The rest of the team reports on Tuesday. Still, this day marks the start of the 2024 season. The offseason workouts were just warmups to this. Minnesota Vikings Training Camp is here.

The Vikings still have some procedural work to do. Their second first-round pick, outside linebacker Dallas Turner, is still unsigned. Their first first-round pick, quarterback J.J. McCarthy, signed his rookie contract on Friday. When that news broke, I figured that Turner’s signing would soon follow. So far, nope. It’ll get done. For all I know, the pen is hitting the paper now. I’m certain the deal will get done before he and the rest of the rookies are expected on the field.

Sadly, fourth-round corner Khyree Jackson won’t be on the field with his teammates. I can’t imagine how his tragic passing will impact the locker room. Talent-wise and personality-wise, he had become such a smiling part of the team in such a short time. The picture Turner posted of his locker with Khyree Jackson’s nameplate above his was a tearjerker. Turner and Jackson were teammates at Alabama from 2021-22. Their reunion in Minnesota was special, and way too short. RIP 31.

TCO Performance Center has been the Vikings training camp home since 2018. This is the seventh training camp held there. Seven! You’d think that would be enough time to no longer think about Mankato as the Vikings summer home. Well, I guess that it can be tough to move on from nearly a half century of sweat, fun, and Gage Hall hijinks on the campus of Minnesota State University-Mankato. Their stay at the small college campus goes beyond my time with the team. 

Minnesota Vikings Training Camp Homes:

1961-1965: Bemidji State
1965-2017: Minnesota State University-Mankato
2018-present: TCO Performance Center, Eagan

I always liked the NFL tradition of team’s traveling to a small college campus for some degree of isolation. As other teams started constructing elaborate, state-of-the-art facilities to hold all football activities, I liked that the Vikings still traveled and kept alive that football tradition. Perhaps that’s why it’s still so hard for me to accept that the Vikings have a year-round home. In 2019, I saw the then one-year old facility from the Vikings Museum. I tried to get closer but security kept me from it. Even from that distance, it looked spectacular. TCO Performance Center is beautiful and hand’s down the best facility in the league. With plenty of housing and medical facilities (hopefully never needed) nearby it’s perfect for training camp. Still, I’ll always remember Mankato fondly. 

Minnesota Vikings Training Camp is HERE! Get Turner signed! SKOL!



Saturday, July 20, 2024

Who’s Next For The Minnesota Vikings Ring Of Honor?

Congratulations to Bobby Bryant on being named the 28th member of the Minnesota Vikings Ring of Honor. 

Bobby Bryant had a long Ring of Honor wait. He wrapped up his great 13-year playing career after the 1980 season. His long wait has finally been rewarded. It’s a much-deserved honor. As Fran Tarkenton said in the video conference revealing the honor, Bryant was one of the unsung heroes of the Vikings Super Bowl teams. He wasn’t one of the headliners of the great Vikings defenses from the late 1960s and through much of the 1970s. Some younger fans might not even know much about him. He was #20 in all the old films. The skinny, mustachioed fella. From 1969-73 in particular, the Vikings defenses were some of the best the league has ever seen. Everyone knew and knows the Purple People Eaters, the defensive line that included Alan Page, Carl Eller, Jim Marshall, and Gary Larsen. That front line got most of the attention, but not all of it. A little was spared for all-time interception leader and Pro Football Hall of Fame safety Paul Krause. The punishing linebacker trio of Roy Winston, Lonnie Warwick, and Wally Hilgenberg and hard-hitting safety Karl Kassulke rounded out the great defense when Bryant entered the starting lineup at right cornerback in 1969. Originally selected in the seventh round of the 1967 NFL Draft, he endured a slow start to his NFL career. After a knee injury during his rookie preseason, the Vikings placed him on the team’s taxi squad (something similar to today’s practice squad). To stay football-ready, Bryant spent his rookie season with the Des Moines Warriors of the minor Professional Football League of America. He made the team and appeared in all 14 games in 1968. With two interceptions, he showed a glimpse of the big-play ability that would highlight his career. In 1969, he claimed the starting position that he’d hold for the next 12 years. That season, the defense and a rugged offense led by scrappy quarterback Joe Kapp drove the Vikings to their first Super Bowl. Bryant was a defensive mainstay until his retirement after the 1980 season. His career is highlighted by 51 interceptions. That ranks second in team history to Krause’s 53. His four career interception return TDs is tied with Harrison Smith for the franchise record. He was named to the Pro Bowl after the 1975 and 1976 seasons. If postseason accolades included playoff performances, Bryant would have had handfuls of Pro Bowls and All-Pros. He was a big play machine in the playoffs. In the 1973 NFC Championship against the Dallas Cowboys, Bryant intercepted Roger Staubach at the two-yard line to keep the Cowboys out of the end zone. His fourth quarter, 63-yard pick-six iced the 27-10 win. In the 1976 NFC Championship against the Los Angeles Rams, he turned what should’ve been an early 3-0 Rams lead into a 7-0 Vikings lead. After a goal-line stand forced the Rams to attempt a short field goal, Nate Allen blocked the field goal attempt and Bryant scooped up the bounding ball and returned it 90 yards for a touchdown. I can still see that play as if it happened today. The Rams never seemed to recover from that 10-point swing. Bryant added two interceptions in the game. His three big plays were instrumental in the 24-13 Vikings win. There were loads of stars on those great Vikings teams. It was easy to overlook the skinny cornerback. There was no overlooking his out-sized number of big plays. Those big plays and his steady play will put him in a spiffy purple jacket. He’s the first cornerback to receive the team’s top career honor. It’s very much deserved. 

The Minnesota Vikings Ring of Honor

Fran Tarkenton, QB (1998)
Alan Page, DT (1998)
Jim Finks, GM (1998)
Bud Grant, Coach (1998)
Paul Krause, S (1998)
Fred Zamberletti, Trainer (1998)
Jim Marshall, DE (1999)
Ron Yary, OT (2001)
Korey Stringer, OT (2001)
Mick Tingelhoff, C (2001)
Carl Eller, DE (2002)
Cris Carter, WR (2003)
Bill Brown, RB (2004)
Jerry Burns, Coach (2005)
Randalll McDaniel, G (2006)
Chuck Foreman, RB (2007)
John Randle, DT (2008)
Scott Studwell, LB (2009)
Chris Doleman, DE (2011)
Matt Blair, LB (2012)
Joey Browner, S (2013)
Randy Moss, WR (2017)
Ahmad Rashad, WR (2017)
Dennis Green, Coach (2018)
Steve Jordan, TE (2019)
Kevin Williams, DT (2021)
Jared Allen, DE (2022)
Bobby Bryant, CB (2023)

There’s a somewhat questionable process to honors such as the Pro Football Hall of Fame and this Ring of Honor. Once the initial congratulations fade, the inevitable question is asked. “Who’s next?” Bobby Bryant will have his day. He’ll be presented to the US Bank crowd. Speeches, great words, handshakes, hugs, purple jacket, all of it. Fans, media, everyone have already moved on to that inevitable question. “Who’s next?”

We all have our favorites and there are so many great Vikings players deserving of being next. One thing that we must keep in mind is that just because a particular player didn’t get tapped for the honor this year, next year, or the year after, it doesn’t mean that they aren’t deserving. All 28 members of the Vikings Ring of Honor are deserving. There are dozens of former Vikings that should/will join them. Each decade brings more. It doesn’t feel possible to induct all of them. I suppose that keeps it a very selective and prestigious honor. Due to my passion for football’s past, I always start with those that have been waiting the longest when considering honors like this. Until the Vikings make it to their next Super Bowl, the franchise’s “glory days” are the years from 1969-76. This is why I feel that Bryant was a great pick to be this year’s “next.” There are a few more players from that era that are still waiting. 

Grady Alderman
Ed White
Gene Washington
John Gilliam
Jeff Siemon
Sammy White

Grady Alderman was the Vikings left tackle from 1961-73. While left tackle wasn’t the distinctive position in the 1960s that it is today, Alderman’s steady presence on the left side put the great Ron Yary on the right side when he took the field in 1969. Alderman was a Pro Bowl regular during the 1960s, earning the honor from 1963-67 and 1969. He was 2nd-team All-Pro in 1965 and 1969. He and Jim Marshall are the only players that were lineup constants every year of the franchise’s first decade. 

As a Cal grad and one-time Cal offensive line coach, Ed White is a personal favorite. He was a defensive lineman in college so his transition to the NFL was significant. From 1970-73, he played next to Alderman. From 1975-77, he and Yary formed a tremendous right-side for the Vikings. Unfortunately, White was traded to the San Diego Chargers after the 1977 season. He was still in his prime as his eight strong years there were enough to convince Dan Fouts that he should get Hall of Fame consideration. If not for that trade, White might already be in the Vikings Ring of Honor. 

Gene Washington and John Gilliam are underrated members of the Vikings great receiver tradition. Washington’s career is something of a puzzle. Just as he was ascending, Pro Bowls in 1969 and 1970, he started to fade. I know that injuries played a big role but it felt like there was more to it. During his four years in Minnesota, Gilliam may have been the league’s best deep threat. From 1972-74, he averaged a ridiculous 21.9 yards/catch. He also played a significant role in my evolution as a Vikings and football fan. His departure after the 1975 season was shocking. As a naive kid, I didn’t think that a player’s time with a team was a temporary thing. 

I’ve always been fond of receivers. It’s the position I played. It’s the position that easily draws my attention. John Gilliam was my introduction. Sammy White and Ahmad Rashad were my weekly tutorial. White was an immediate favorite as he was outstanding as a rookie. As a big-play threat, he reminded me of Gilliam. White’s only Pro Bowls came during his first two seasons. Rashad eventually got most of the receiving attention but White’s first six years were strong.  

If anyone can handle the torture, watch/re-watch Super Bowl XI. Through the pain of that game, you’ll watch Jeff Siemon make what feels like every tackle. With four Pro Bowls, he was hardly an unknown. It just feels like his career has been somewhat forgotten over the years. With Scott Studwell and Eric Kendricks, he’s one of the best middle linebackers in franchise history. With those four Pro Bowls, Siemon is the most decorated. 

Those are six players from the Vikings “glory days” that I believe are deserving of Ring of Honor consideration. 

If I were to pick a top 10 to answer the “who’s next” question, it might look something like this.

Grady Alderman
Ed White
Tommy Kramer
Anthony Carter
Gary Zimmerman
Keith Millard
Carl Lee
Antoine Winfield
Steve Hutchinson
Chad Greenway

While Grady Alderman is my #1, due mostly to his long wait, the order is more chronological than a ranking. 

Gary Zimmerman has always been a curious one for me. He’s a Hall of Famer and the best left tackle in Vikings franchise history. A contentious contract dispute resulted in a trade to the Denver Broncos after the 1992 season. Even though his best years were in Minnesota, he’s considered by many to be more Bronco than Viking. I believe that he still holds some animosity towards the Vikings. Nothing else explains why he isn’t already in the Vikings Ring of Honor. I might have to go back and listen to his Hall of Fame speech to see if there’s any hint of lingering issues with the Vikings. His play on the field for seven years in Minnesota was gold and purple jacket worthy. He never looked stressed in his play. Everything looked easy for him. Zimmerman next to Randall McDaniel was always a beautiful, comfortable site. 

Alderman and Keith Millard might be my #1 and #2. Perhaps it’s because an injury ruined what was sure to be a career destined for Canton, Millard’s shortened career has always made me sick. The Vikings have a tremendous defensive tackle tradition. Alan Page and John Randle are Hall of Famers. I believe that Kevin Williams will one day join them. Millard’s play during the 1988 and 1989 seasons rivals even that of Page’s 1971 NFL MVP season. To put Millard’s amazing play in 1988 and 1989 in today’s terms. He was every bit the offense-wrecker that Aaron Donald has been. Those two seasons were the obvious high points of Millard’s abbreviated career but he collected 51 sacks over his first five seasons. He was more than just those two great seasons. Unfortunately, a knee injury in 1990 wiped out that season and the next. He was never the same player after that. At only 28, he still had so much career still in front of him. 

As soon as Adrian Peterson officially retires, if he ever does, he probably zips to the front of the Ring of Honor line. 

Just to bring it back to the present, Congratulations Bobby Bryant. 




Friday, July 19, 2024

NFL Draft Pick Signing Tracker

Since the introduction of the 2011 CBA, signing draft picks have been a mere formality. The contracts are pretty much set. Only a few details are negotiable. Pre-CBA, it was often a struggle to get the picks, especially the top picks, signed. Post-CBA, it’s been a breeze. Rookie holdouts are rare. Prolonged rookie holdouts are something from another time. With a few teams already on the field for training camp and nearly every team a week from joining them, there’s been a flurry this week to take care of the few un-signed draft picks. The highlight signings of recent days have been the Chicago Bears finally getting contracts done for top pick Caleb Williams and ninth pick Rome Odunze. Those two signings got most of the signing attention. Less attention was given to the signings of third round picks Malachi Corley and Trey Benson. On the list of unsigned draft picks, Corley and Benson were something of an oddity. Entering this week, there were seven unsigned draft picks. Five of those were first-round picks. The remaining two were the first two picks of the third round. It was as if one was waiting for the other to sign. Sure enough. Minutes after Corley’s signing was announced, Benson’s signing followed. 

So, who’s unsigned? Three picks. 

10. Minnesota Vikings: J.J. McCarthy, QB, Michigan
17. Minnesota Vikings: Dallas Turner, Edge, Alabama
18. Cincinnati Bengals: Amarius Mims, OT, Georgia

Great. As a fan of the Minnesota Vikings and completion, this is a frustrating situation. It shouldn’t be frustrating as I’m certain that J.J. McCarthy and Dallas Turner will be signed in advance of training camp. I’m just impatient. At this point, signing draft picks feels like an annoying hurdle to clear days before the start of training camp. McCarthy and Turner are set to report to TCO Performance Center on Sunday. They must be there. On time. Get it done. 

First Round

1. Chicago Bears: Caleb Williams, QB, USC - Signed
2. Washington Commanders: Jayden Daniels, QB, LSU - Signed
3. New England Patriots: Drake Maye, QB, North Carolina - Signed
4. Arizona Cardinals: Marvin Harrison Jr., WR, Ohio State - Signed
5. Los Angeles Chargers: Joe Alt, OT, Notre Dame - Signed
6. New York Giants: Malik Nabers, WR, LSU - Signed
7. Tennessee Titans: JC Latham, OT, Alabama - Signed
8. Atlanta Falcons: Michael Penix Jr., QB, Washington - Signed
9. Chicago Bears: Rome Odunze, WR, Washington - Signed
10. Minnesota Vikings: J.J. McCarthy, QB, Michigan
11. New York Jets: Olumuyiwa Fashanu, OT, Penn State - Signed
12. Denver Broncos: Bo Nix, QB, Oregon - Signed
13. Las Vegas Raiders: Brock Bowers, TE, Georgia - Signed
14. New Orleans Saints: Taliese Fuaga, OT, Oregon State -Signed
15. Indianapolis Colts: Laiatu Latu, Edge, UCLA -Signed
16. Seattle Seahawks: Byron Murphy II, DT, Texas - Signed
17. Minnesota Vikings: Dallas Turner, Edge, Alabama
18. Cincinnati Bengals: Amarius Mims, OT, Georgia
19. Los Angeles Rams: Jared Verse, Edge, Florida State - Signed
20. Pittsburgh Steelers: Troy Fautanu, OT, Washington - Signed
21. Miami Dolphins: Chop Robinson, Edge, Penn State - Signed
22. Philadelphia Eagles: Quinyon Mitchell, CB, Toledo - Signed
23. Jacksonville Jaguars: Brian Thomas Jr., WR, LSU - Signed
24. Detroit Lions: Terrion Arnold, CB, Alabama - Signed
25. Green Bay Packers: Jordan Morgan, OT, Arizona - Signed
26. Tampa Bay Buccaneers: Graham Barton, OL, Duke - Signed
27. Arizona Cardinals: Darius Robinson, Edge, Missouri - Signed
28. Kansas City Chiefs: Xavier Worthy, WR, Texas - Signed
29. Dallas Cowboys: Tyler Guyton, OT, Oklahoma - Signed
30. Baltimore Ravens: Nate Wiggins, CB, Clemson - Signed
31. San Francisco 49ers: Ricky Pearsall, WR, Florida - Signed
32. Carolina Panthers: Xavier Legette, WR, South Carolina - Signed

***

It’s been over two months since the draft. Only three of the 32 first-round picks remain unsigned. Two of those were selected by the Minnesota Vikings. Get that work done. 


Thursday, July 18, 2024

VIkings Players Drafted

The United Football League held its 2024 College Draft on Wednesday. The Memphis Showboats held the No.1 overall pick. The defending champion Birmingham Stallions had the final pick in each round. In order to be a draft-eligible prospect in this draft, players must have been eligible and gone unselected in the 2024 NFL Draft. Players must also be three years removed from high school or waived their college eligibility. So, the eight UFL teams loaded up on the undrafted free agents already signed by NFL teams.

The Memphis Showboats selected Kansas quarterback Jason Bean with the first pick. The Birmingham Stallions selected Marshall offensive tackle Ethan Driskell with the 80th, and final, pick of the draft. Bean is currently with the Indianapolis Colts. Driskell is with the Kansas City Chiefs. 

Six of the 80 players selected in the UFL College Draft are undrafted free agents on the roster of the Minnesota Vikings.

Dwight McGlothern, CB, Arkansas (Michigan Panthers, 2nd round, 14th pick)
Gabriel Murphy, Edge, UCLA (San Antonio Brahmas, 2nd round, 15th pick)
Bo Richter, LB, Air Force (Arlington Renegades, 6th round, 43rd pick)
Taki Taimani, DT, Oregon (Arlington Renegades, 7th round, 51st pick)
Dallas Gant, LB, Toledo (D.C. Defenders, 7th round, 52nd pick)
Spencer Rolland, OT, (Arlington Renegades, 8th round, 59th pick)

The Arlington Renegades appear to have a fondness for Vikings players. Who can blame them? 

The selections won’t mean much until NFL teams trim their rosters to 53 players. The players that don’t make that cut will then have the option of signing to a NFL practice squad or playing for the UFL team that drafted them. All draftees that sign a UFL contract will have an “NFL Out” clause during the NFL season. So, NFL teams can pluck those players from UFL rosters. 

It’s always nice to be wanted so congratulations to the 80 players selected in the 2024 UFL College Draft. To the six Vikings players selected by UFL teams, best of luck at Vikings training camp. 


Wednesday, July 17, 2024

Welcome To The Minnesota Vikings Ring Of Honor, Bobby Bryant

The Minnesota Vikings surprised former cornerback Bobby Bryant with the news that he’ll be the 28th member of the team’s Ring of Honor. It wasn’t quite the elaborate scheme used to surprise Randy Moss, Ahmad Rashad, Steve Jordan, Kevin Williams, and Jared Allen. The Vikings used some ruse to bring those five franchise greats to the team facility. Instead, Bryant was surprised with the great news during a recent video conference with former teammates and Pro Football Hall of Famers Alan Page and Fran Tarkenton and team owners Zygi and Mark Wilf. 

Bobby Bryant had a long Ring of Honor wait. He wrapped up his great, 13-year playing career after the 1980 season. The long wait was rewarded with the much-deserved honor. He wasn’t one of the headliners of the great Vikings defenses from the late 1960s and through much of the 1970s. Some of the best defenses the league has ever seen was fronted by the Purple People Eaters, a defensive line that included Alan Page, Carl Eller, Jim Marshall, and Gary Larsen. Page and Eller are in the Pro Football Hall of Fame.  Marshall has a strong argument that he should join them. If the front line wasn’t getting the attention, it was often all-time interception leader and Pro Football Hall of Fame safety Paul Krause. Bryant was selected by the Vikings out of South Carolina in the seventh round of the 1967 NFL Draft. After a knee injury during the preseason, the Vikings placed him on the team’s practice squad. Bryant spent his rookie season with the Des Moines Warriors of the minor Professional Football League of America. It was a slow start to his great football career. He made the team in 1968. He was the starting right cornerback in 1969. That season, the defense and a rugged offense led by scrappy quarterback Joe Kapp drove the Vikings to their first Super Bowl. Bryant was a defensive mainstay until his retirement after the 1980 season. His career is highlighted by 51 interceptions. That ranks second in team history to Krause’s 53. His four career interception return TDs is tied with Harrison Smith for the franchise record. He was named to the Pro Bowl after the 1975 and 1976 seasons. If postseason accolades included playoff performances, Bryant would have had handfuls of Pro Bowls and All-Pros. He was a big play machine in the playoffs. In the 1973 NFC Championship against the Dallas Cowboys, Bryant intercepted Roger Staubach at the two-yard line to keep the Cowboys out of the end zone. His fourth quarter, 63-yard pick-six iced the 27-10 win. In the 1976 NFC Championship against the Los Angeles Rams, he turned what should’ve been an early 3-0 Rams lead into a 7-0 Vikings lead. After a goal-line stand forced the Rams to attempt a short field goal, Nate Allen blocked the kick and Bryant scooped up the bounding ball and returned it 90 yards for a touchdown. The Rams never seemed to recover from that 10-point swing. Bryant added two interceptions in the game. His three big plays were instrumental in the 24-13 Vikings win. During the video conference, Fran Tarkenton said that Bryant was an unsung hero of those great Vikings teams. It’s true. There were loads of stars on those teams. It was easy to overlook the skinny cornerback. There was no overlooking his out-sized number of big plays. Those big plays and his steady play will put him in a spiffy purple jacket. He’s the first cornerback to receive the team’s top career honor. It’s very much deserved. 

Bobby Bryant will be the 28th member of the Minnesota Vikings Ring of Honor.

Minnesota Vikings Ring of Honor
Fran Tarkenton, QB
Alan Page, DT
Jim Finks, GM
Bud Grant, Coach
Paul Krause, S
Fred Zamberletti, Trainer
Jim Marshall, DE
Ron Yary, OT
Korey Stringer, OT
Mick Tingelhoff, C
Carl Eller, DE
Cris Carter, WR
Bill Brown, RB
Jerry Burns, Coach
Randalll McDaniel, G
Chuck Foreman, RB
John Randle, DT
Scott Studwell, LB
Chris Doleman, DE
Matt Blair, LB
Joey Browner, S
Ahmad Rashad, WR
Randy Moss, WR
Dennis Green, Coach
Steve Jordan, TE
Kevin Williams, DT
Jared Allen, DE


Tuesday, July 16, 2024

It’s Happening

Finally. NFL Training Camps are on the horizon. The Baltimore Ravens rookies are already working. They reported on Saturday. The rookies for the Chicago Bears, Buffalo Bills, Kansas City Chiefs, Los Angeles Chargers, Miami Dolphins, New Orleans Saints, New York Giants, and San Francisco 49ers report today. Even if only rookies are working, as of today, over a quarter of the league’s teams have started training camp. Of course, the only team that really matters is the Minnesota Vikings. Their rookies will report to TCO Performance Center for training camp on July 21. The rest of the team reports on July 23. The Vikings football fun is so close. Here are the report dates for all 32 teams.

Training Camp Report Dates

Minnesota Vikings

Rookies: July 21

Veterans: July 23

Arizona Cardinals

Rookies: July 23

Veterans: July 23

Atlanta Falcons

Rookies: July 24

Veterans: July 24

Baltimore Ravens

Rookies: July 13

Veterans: July 20

Buffalo Bills

Rookies: July 16

Veterans: July 23

Carolina Panthers

Rookies: July 19

Veterans: July 23

Chicago Bears

Rookies: July 16

Veterans: July 19

Cincinnati Bengals

Rookies: July 20

Veterans: July 23

Cleveland Browns

Rookies: July 22

Veterans: July 23

Dallas Cowboys

Rookies: July 24

Veterans: July 24

Denver Broncos

Rookies: July 17

Veterans: July 23

Detroit Lions

Rookies: July 20

Veterans: July 23

Green Bay Packers

Rookies: July 17

Veterans: July 21

Houston Texans

Rookies: July 17

Veterans: July 17

Indianapolis Colts

Rookies: July 24

Veterans: July 24

Jacksonville Jaguars

Rookies: July 19

Veterans: July 23

Kansas City Chiefs

Rookies: July 16

Veterans: July 20

Las Vegas Raiders

Rookies: July 21

Veterans: July 23

Los Angeles Chargers

Rookies: July 16

Veterans: July 23

Los Angeles Rams

Rookies: July 23

Veterans: July 23

Miami Dolphins

Rookies: July 16

Veterans: July 23

New England Patriots

Rookies: July 19

Veterans: July 23

New Orleans Saints

Rookies: July 16

Veterans: July 23

New York Giants

Rookies: July 16

Veterans: July 23

New York Jets

Rookies: July 18

Veterans: July 23

Philadelphia Eagles

Rookies: July 23

Veterans: July 23

Pittsburgh Steelers

Rookies: July 24

Veterans: July 24

San Francisco 49ers

Rookies: July 16

Veterans: July 23

Seattle Seahawks

Rookies: July 17

Veterans: July 23

Tampa Bay Buccaneers

Rookies: July 22

Veterans: July 23

Tennessee Titans

Rookies: July 23

Veterans: July 23

Washington Commanders

Rookies: July 18

Veterans: July 23