Minnesota Vikings Free Agent Additions
James Pierre, CB
Kyler Murray, QB
Johnny Hekker, P
Ryan Van Demark, OT
Eric Johnson II, DL
Jauan Jennings, WR
Isaiahh Loudermilk, DL
The Vikings added seven outside free agents for less than the amount they were scheduled to pay Jonathan Allen and Javon Hargrave. While Johnny Hekker, Eric Johnson II, and Isaiahh Lowdermilk will be competing for roster spots, Kyler Murray, James Pierre, Ryan Van Demark, and Jauan Jennings will play critical roles for the Vikings this season. Murray and J.J. McCarthy will compete for the starting quarterback job. With Pierre joining Byron Murphy Jr. and Isaiah Rodgers, Brian Flores will finally be able to put a talented trio of corners on the field together. Flores clearly likes the versatility of safeties. Was he forced to lean on the safeties because he couldn’t trust the corners beyond his top two? Who knows? We may find out this season. Last year, the Vikings finally put together a talented starting offensive line. Unfortunately, the starting five played fewer than 100 snaps together. That’s about one game of snaps. Offensive line injuries, and the resulting inconsistencies, wrecked the Vikings offense. It also led to injuries to quarterbacks McCarthy and Carson Wentz. The offensive line was a mess and the offense was a mess. To clean that mess, the Vikings targeted Buffalo Bills restricted free agent Van Demark to improve the offensive line depth. The cap to this productive, cost-efficient offseason was Jennings. In Justin Jefferson and Jordan Addison, the Vikings have the best receiving duo in the league. When Jalen Nailor departed for the Las Vegas Raiders for a nice bag of cash, it created a significant third receiver need. From the start of free agency, Jennings was a dream solution. The only problem was that his reported contract expectations were around $20 million per year. The fact that he was still available after the draft seemed to confirm those reports. There’s no way the Vikings could afford that sort of deal. Somehow, Jennings signed with Minnesota for a base salary of only $8 million. Incentives could boost that to $13 million. Even at $13 million, he’s a steal. Now, the Vikings have the best receiving trio in the league.
This wasn’t the most active free agency in Vikings franchise history but it might be the most efficient. It helps to luck into a starting quarterback, and potential franchise quarterback, for only $1.3 million. A top-three corner for $4 million? A starting-caliber tackle for $4 million? An elite third receiver for a base of $8 million? The Vikings filled four critical roster positions for less than $18 million. The roster is stronger than it was in March and it was done by cutting costs. That’s pretty efficient.