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Minnesota Vikings Reacts Survey Week 6: How Many Wins?

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Welcome to SB Nation Reacts, a survey of fans across the NFL. Throughout the year we ask questions of the most plugged-in Vikings fans and fans across the country. Sign up here to participate in the weekly emailed surveys.

We have, once again, reached the point of the week where we ask our readers to give us their opinions on how things are going with the Minnesota Vikings, courtesy of our SB Nation Reacts poll. We’ve got a couple of questions for you this week.

The first question, as always, is whether or not you feel that the Vikings are heading in the right direction. We saw a pretty significant drop-off in confidence last week following the loss to the Pittsburgh Steelers, as we did after the loss to Atlanta in Week 2, so I’m curious to see if we get a jump this week like we did after the Vikings followed up a loss with a victory.

Our other question for this week is a chance for everyone to re-evaluate how many wins they think the Vikings will end up with this year, as they head into the bye with a 3-2 record through their first five games. I think a lot of us were expecting a pretty hefty win total for the purple this season, but now we’re giving everyone an opportunity to determine whether or not they were too optimistic. . .or, perhaps, not optimistic enough.

As always, we invite you to make your voice heard on this one by casting your vote in our poll and sounding off in the comments section about this week’s topics.

Have at it, ladies and gentlemen! We’ll have the results for you sometime before the Sunday slate kicks off for Week 6, since our favorite team won’t be participating in the festivities.

Source: https://www.dailynorseman.com/minne...ta-vikings-reacts-survey-week-6-how-many-wins
 
Minnesota Vikings Odds: What Does the NFC North Look Like Now?

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After putting together a rousing come-from-behind victory in Week 5, the Minnesota Vikings have hit their bye week with a record of 3-2 on the 2025 NFL season. That has them sitting in third place in the NFC North, which once again appears to be shaping up to be one of the best and most competitive divisions in the league. But how do the odds stack up at this point in the year?

Well, according to our friends at FanDuel, the Vikings are a bit of a long shot to bring home the division crown. To be honest, it’s a bit of a head-scratcher.

Right now, the Detroit Lions are slotted in as the division favorite, as their odds are currently +105 to win the division. The Green Bay Packers, who already have a win over Detroit this season, are right behind them at +120. For the uninitiated, the +105 or +120 is the amount of potential profit you would receive on a $100 wager.

Then you get to the Vikings, who are currently at +1000 to win the NFC North. That, in betting terms, makes them a longshot, but they’re still significantly better off than the Chicago Bears, who are currently at +2000.

Detroit being at the top of the list makes sense, but. . .and I’ve said this before, I’m sure. . .I just must not be seeing what everyone else is seeing in Green Bay. In their last two games they blew a 10-point lead to the Cleveland Browns with less than four minutes remaining, and they followed that up by leaving their defense at home in a 40-40 tie against the Dallas Cowboys. I know that there are a lot of people who really, really want the Packers to be some sort of juggernaut, but they’re not there right now, certainly.

The Vikings have dealt with a bunch of injuries to this point, as we know. This bye week is coming at a pretty good time for them, as they can look towards their return to U.S. Bank Stadium in Week 7 with the hope that they’ll get some very important pieces back in place here sooner rather than later.

I’d be interested to see how these odds look in a few weeks after the Vikings have gotten some of their walking wounded back on the field. Perhaps we’ll take another look at them then. But, for now, you might have an opportunity to make a decent profit here if you think the Vikings can still pull out an NFC North division title this season.

Source: https://www.dailynorseman.com/minnesota-vikings-odds/91680/minnesota-vikings-odds-nfc-north
 
Vikings Vibe Check

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A Quick Synopsis.​


We made it…. to the bye week. The 2025 season has been a bumpy one so far for the Minnesota Vikings. Each week has been a proverbial box of chocolates, as we haven’t known what each game was going to look like for this team. We witnessed a stunning 4th quarter comeback in week one that showcased J.J. McCarthy’s killer instinct. Week two’s performance had many questioning if this team was even good. We got diced up by Bijan Robinson and lost in a game that didn’t see a touchdown until late in the 4th quarter. The game against the Falcons never truly seemed out of hand until the very end (unless you count McCarthy getting sacked six times as out of hand, which, I will concede, is a strong argument to the contrary).

Week three was the Isaiah Rodgers show against a Bengals team that we know is bottom of the barrel in 2025. Week four was a tough overseas battle with the Pittsburgh Steelers that was oddly within reach, even though the run defense looked sluggish against a journeyman backup running back making his first start with the Steelers. Minnesota could have squeezed out a win if a couple of things went their way. This past week we saw a gritty 4th quarter comeback and some of KO’s best play calling of the season, when it mattered most. The offense was effectively moving the ball all day, despite losing the turnover battle 0-2. Under head coach Kevin O’Connell, the Vikings are now 5-15 when losing the turnover battle.

Things are looking up.​


A few weeks ago, I wrote an article about how the Vikings hit “rock bottom.” I stand by my take that it couldn’t get any worse after the week two loss to Atlanta. Here we are, going into a week 6 bye with a 3-2 record, despite the offensive line having four starters in week one and dwindling down to one by the end of week 5. I mean seriously, it is incredibly impressive that the Minnesota offense was effective at all, considering that in the 4th quarter, Will Fries was the only starting offensive lineman out on the field. Having a left tackle on a snap count is one of the most absurd strategies I have seen implemented by an NFL team. I feel like it is rare as offensive linemen tend to stay in for an entire game to ensure continuity. I expect that Darrisaw’s ramp up period will end over the bye week.

The approach to Darrisaw exemplifies the Minnesota Vikings’ philosophy of taking care of their players and being more concerned about the long-term health of the team rather than winning a couple football games. It has been a struggle through five games, but the 2025 Minnesota Vikings are showing strong signs of resiliency. KO talks all the time about overcoming adversity. Well, this season is a chance for him to put the team mantra of more is required into action.

It’s easy to lose sight of the team aspect of football. It’s not all about X’s and O’s, or stats, or rage bait that Diana Russini puts out there. It’s about a group of men banding together to achieve milestones that are bigger than themselves as individuals. Having a winning record with three out of five games started by a backup quarterback is about the most you can ask for. The Vikings left London with a victory while running at, what I would estimate, 75% maximum efficiency.

It’s not how you start; it’s how you finish.​


You might think it’s early to talk about playoffs with the four-game gauntlet the Vikings face coming out of the bye. You might think that, but you’d be wrong. If we can continue to win games and keep our record above .500, by the time the end of the season stretch comes around, we can make a serious push for playoff contention. A team can’t be a dark horse if they roll into the playoffs with a 14-3 record. The path forward is still a murky one, especially considering that our starting quarterback hasn’t played in over three weeks. And yes, J.J. McCarthy is the starter over Carson Wentz.

Their play has been comparable through the first five weeks of the season. Both have epic fourth quarter comebacks, both have made some great and poor throws, and both have been sacked a million times. Although Wentz has filled in admirably, he has mostly served as a backup quarterback for a reason. He is already showcasing his maximum potential as a near 10-year veteran. McCarthy, on the other hand, has the propensity to improve week in and week out, thus giving him a much higher ceiling.

Everything this Minnesota Vikings team does is strategic. Call McCarthy’s injury “bogus” all you want. And yes, maybe he wasn’t quite ready to start, even though, again, he led an epic 4th quarter to win over the Chicago Bears in week one. Welcoming a child into the world, especially as a 22-year-old is a life changing event. These games off essentially acted as parental leave for J.J. McCarthy, which I believe he and every new parent deserve. He has had time to bond with his son while sharpening his mental game. I have no doubt that when he comes back in week 7, that he will come back ready to ball out.

Another nugget of enthusiasm is that we have yet to see McCarthy and Jordan Addison on the field at the same time in an NFL regular season game. If you remember the storylines from training camp and the pre-season, you know that McCarthy and Addison were developing a special connection. We will see that start to show up on film as soon as they take the field together.

I’m not giving up. Neither are you!​


So, what are the vibes in Minnesota? For me, they are what they have been since free agency started back in March: hopeful. I BELIEVE in this TEAM. The Wilfs have created a world-class organization, the coaching staff has created a culture of winning, and the players trust each other. So far, this is the team’s most intriguing season I have seen since Case Keenum was the starting quarterback. The best is yet to come in 2025 for the Minnesota Vikings. The cautious approach to player health is designed to have the team healthy when it matters most in December and January.

That is the trajectory I envision for this team, one that is healthy and a sneakily dangerous playoff contender. Once the offensive line becomes more stable and cohesive, the only other concern I have for this team is stopping the run. However, I know Brian Flores has had the same thought, so I have no doubt that this team will figure it out.

So, if you’re anxious about what the rest of the season holds, don’t be! We got this. SKOL!!!

Until Next Time.

  • Jesse M.

Source: https://www.dailynorseman.com/minne...n/91633/minnesota-vikings-vibe-check-bye-week
 
Minnesota Vikings News and Links: The Bye Week Blues!

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I am not a fan of the bye week but I realize that the players need it. If the NFL is ever going to 18 games then I can imagine that there will be two bye weeks. They might even expand the game day rosters by another couple of players. But the bye week is here and there are probably not any games I want to watch in their entirety. Maybe Kansas City vs Detroit? I’d want to see how Baltimore does against the Rams but only if Lamar Jackson plays.

I’ll have to figure something out though because the “honey-do” list is omnipresent and indelible.

What games are you going to watch?

Minnesota Vikings News and Links​


What can we glean from Vikings’ trip to Dublin, London?

Minnesota Vikings coach Kevin O’Connell recently found a way to succinctly describe his team’s 10-day international road trip.

“You’re almost to the end,” a journalist remarked during a news conference last Friday.

“Two sleeps,” O’Connell interjected, mimicking the phrasing parents sometimes use with restless children. “Two sleeps left. But who’s counting?”

Vikings players, coaches and staffers were more than ready to head home two sleeps later. A trip that began with confidence proved to be a challenge, one that would test any NFL team’s routine-oriented process.

The Vikings’ medical staff was taxed by a rash of injuries, and their personnel department had limited options to fortify the roster. Some players and coaches took advantage of the free time abroad to see the sights, first in Dublin and then in London. But many said they felt out of sorts while away from their families and admitted they were much more tired — because of the change in sleep patterns and limited recovery tools — than they feel during a normal NFL week.

“It was tough,” tight end T.J. Hockenson said. “You’re not eating the way you normally eat. You’re not getting the recovery you normally get. You’re not seeing the people you normally see. You’re not getting the ‘juice’ you usually get. There’s so many things that go into it. But we talked about it all week. There’s so many excuses. You can point to one. You can point to two. You can point to 20. At the end of the day, it’s like, ‘Let’s grind. Let’s not seek comfort.'”

Hockenson precisely paraphrased the weeklong message delivered by O’Connell, who said he’s a “big believer that if you’re looking for obstacles and excuses, you’re going to find them.” It was O’Connell’s way of asking everyone in the organization to move past a suboptimal working environment.

No one on the Vikings’ football staff is more no-nonsense than defensive coordinator Brian Flores, and even he found himself vacillating between the benefits and detriments of so much time away.

“I’m not a homebody, but I certainly miss my family,” Flores said. “They were here for Ireland. That was great. Once they go, it’s just, the boys had a game [that I missed]. We had a lot of FaceTime. But it’s good to be here with the team. There’s certainly some team building and camaraderie happening. … Guys are out catching up, spending time together. That’s good from a team bonding standpoint.

“Overall, look, you get an opportunity to go overseas, to go to London, to go to Ireland, see the world, that’s great. It tells you what football can do for you.”

As a majority of Irish fans waved NFL-provided “Terrible Towels” and sang wildly to the traditional playing of “Renegade” by Styx at the start of the fourth quarter — a Steelers staple back at home at Acrisure Stadium — the Vikings were clearly impacted by the unfamiliar surroundings.

They committed nine penalties, including a false start on a silent cadence by normally reliable left tackle Christian Darrisaw. Right guard Will Fries inexplicably ran downfield to block on a passing play, wiping out a third-down conversion to the Steelers’ 6-yard line. The Vikings settled for a 41-yard field goal. Two defensive players, cornerback Byron Murphy Jr. and linebacker Dallas Turner, responded to post-play provocation from the Steelers and received personal fouls.

“You play certain teams and you know what you’re kind of signing up for,” O’Connell said. “That’s not to take a shot at anybody, but that falls in direct alignment with playing the game that they wanted to play.”

Acquiring reinforcements was a geographical and administrative challenge. Any player the Vikings signed would have to have a passport and be ready to jump on a transatlantic flight on Tuesday to be ready for Wednesday practice. The Vikings ultimately added one practice squad lineman, tackle Matt Waletzko, just to give themselves an adequate number of players for a normal practice.

O’Connell later suggested the NFL should make roster accommodations in the future.

“Like anything the NFL has done from an international standpoint, anything is possible,” he said. “I think they’ve tried their absolute best and we’ve got a great group of people that work for us in-house that have made the trip very much one that I think is absolutely doable. I think there’s going to be some factors in the future if this is something that is going to become a normal reality.”

By the end of the week, most players had had their fill.

“I’m definitely ready to go home,” Allen said Thursday. “We’re creatures of habit. Not being able to have my routine isn’t as fun, but it is what it is.”

Of spending the week in London, O’Connell said: “It should feel as normal as possible to our guys while dealing with not sleeping in your own bed and all that stuff, but that’s kind of little stuff to me.”

“We’ve had some success as of late with some of the quick passing game,” O’Connell said in London, “and I think that’s a credit to Carson’s discipline of getting the ball out of his hands, trusting progressions. In some cases the ball’s coming out to a third or fourth progression in the same amount of time that another player might spend on number one.”

Through it all, O’Connell seemed to want McCarthy back on the field — but only after he advanced through a predetermined set of landmarks. That left the impression that Wentz could remain the starter after the Week 6 bye, when the Vikings will host the Philadelphia Eagles on Oct. 19.

Darrisaw had taken all 76 of the Vikings’ offensive snaps the previous week in Dublin, his second game since returning to the lineup, and could be seen repeatedly getting up slowly between plays.

“Those [76] snaps that I took last week was a lot,” Darrisaw said. “My body is just getting used to it.”



Former Vikings QB praises ‘next level’ preparation by Kevin O’Connell

Daniel Jones was part of the Minnesota Vikings for less than two months, but his time with the franchise left a big impression on him before his breakout performance with the Indianapolis Colts this season.

Jones has led the Colts to an impressive 4-1 start, completing 71.3% of his passes for 1,290 yards, nine total touchdowns and three interceptions. He was recently on the Fitz & Whit podcast with ex-players Ryan Fitzpatrick and Andrew Whitworth, where he talked about his short time in Minnesota and how it opened his eyes after six years with the Giants.

“I always thought I worked really hard, I tried to work really hard, and it was important for me to prepare; watching film, study. I think I did that,” Jones said. “But going to Minnesota, I saw how Sam [Darnold] prepared. I saw how Kevin [O’Connell] prepared those guys, Josh McCown, Grant Udinski, that crew, and how detailed they were, day-in-and-day-out on every little bit of the plan.

“How they’re going to study it. What they’re looking for, walking through it, quizzing each other in the quarterback room. That made a big impression on me: ‘this is maybe the next level of some of that stuff.'”



4 concerning Vikings statistics that must improve after the bye

Sack percentage (offense): 11.7 percent
NFL rank: 32nd

Through five weeks, no team has taken more sacks than the Vikings, whose quarterbacks have gone down 21 times on 180 dropbacks. That 11.7 percentage leads the league; the Ravens are the only other team with at least a 10 percent sack rate on offense.

Third down conversion percentage (offense): 31 percent
NFL rank: 31st

Percentage of first downs gained via rush (defense): 47.1 percent
NFL rank: 32nd

The raw numbers for the Vikings’ rushing defense (yards per game, yards per carry, etc.) aren’t great. But this stat we found was particularly interesting: 47 percent of Vikings opponents’ first downs are coming on the ground, which is the highest rate in the league. Teams aren’t having a ton of success against the Vikings through the air, but why throw the ball when you’re confident you can move the chains with the run game?

Accepted penalties per game: 8.8
NFL rank: 1st (in a bad way)



6 Major Points About 2025 Vikings at Week 6 Bye

Since 1990, when the NFL expanded to six playoff teams per conference, teams that opened 3-2 have made the playoffs 50.3 percent of the time. In that same span, teams that opened 2-3 made the playoffs 22.3 percent of the time.

Chasing evasive takeaways | by Rob Kleifield
Minnesota’s defense has stolen the ball twice in its four other games. Overall, the Vikings are averaging 1.4 takeaways per outing.

But only 0.5 sans the flash-in-the-pan performance against the Bengals.

Power of the ‘Invisible Presence’ | by Rob Kleifield

Here’s how O’Connell phrased the power presiding over Minnesota (even more than 4,000 miles from home):

“Our locker room is just about the right stuff. It’s hard to explain. We call it the invisible presence, and it’s something that needs to be built and carved and shaved to each individual team every single year, but it’s important, and it’s something that matters. And I’m sure there’s going to be people that listen to that and think that’s the strangest thing they’ve ever heard. But so be it. It matters to the Minnesota Vikings.”



Whether J.J. McCarthy starts against Eagles is about more than his ankle

Clearly, the first bar for McCarthy to clear in order to put himself in consideration for the Week 7 start is to show that he’s back to full strength. He needs to get in a full week of practice and demonstrate that he can drive off of his back ankle while throwing the ball, as well as move around athletically without any issues.

But that alone won’t be enough.

What Kevin O’Connell and the Vikings also need to see from McCarthy is evidence that he’s learned from what went wrong in his first two starts and that he’s ready to effectively operate their offense upon his return. That starts, at a basic level, with the fundamentals of his lower-body mechanics. He needs to be dropping back with proper technique and tying his feet to his eyes as he goes through progressions. And then he needs to get the ball out of his hands a lot quicker than he did in his first two NFL starts against the Bears and Falcons.



Vikings had a surprising emergency plan if both QBs went down in London

Had an emergency arisen, running back Cam Akers would’ve been inserted at quarterback. Coincidentally, the Vikings ran a trick play that saw Akers throw a 32-yard touchdown pass to tight end Josh Oliver.

Akers isn’t a stranger to the quarterback position. In high school, he played quarterback but was a five-star recruit as a running back — the No. 7 overall recruit in the country, per 247Sports. He passed for 3,128 yards with 31 touchdowns and rushed for 2,105 yards and 34 touchdowns en route to being named the Gatorade Player of the Year in Mississippi as a senior in 2016.



Latest NFL news potentially opens the door for the Minnesota Vikings to fix their run defense with 1 simple move

The Minnesota Vikings’ run defense has been an issue so far this season.

Through five games, the Vikings have allowed 132.2 yards per game on the ground, which ranks 25th in the NFL. However, they are only allowing 289.8 yards per game, which ranks sixth. They are still first in the league in EPA per play on defense at -0.12, but that drops to 25th in EPA/rush, which is positive at 0.008.

Many will look at the trade of Harrison Phillips as the catalyst for these issues. Still, there is a possibility the Vikings find his replacement, making a move that fits general manager Kwesi Adofo-Mensah.

Tuesday afternoon saw a couple of trades across the NFL, and one of them stood out in a big way. The Baltimore Ravens traded a promising young edge rusher in Odafe Oweh to the Los Angeles Chargers.

That leads to the all-important question: Will the Ravens have a fire sale now that they are 1-4? If they do, the Vikings should inquire about nose tackle Travis Jones.

A third-round pick in the 2022 NFL Draft, Jones has been a constant on the Ravens’ defensive front. It isn’t just about stopping the run with Jones; he can do a little bit of everything. You don’t want him to be a designated pass rusher, but he can push the pocket and absorb multiple blockers with his 6-4, 338-pound frame. He can also do a nice hump move that would make him and Jonathan Allen friends.



The numbers show that Minnesota Vikings offense is set for positive regression and it’s easy to see how they get there

The good news for the Vikings is that you can attribute the majority of those to the lack of continuity on offense due to injuries, especially at center and quarterback. Having the starters return is going to be hugely impactful, as will the bye week, where O’Connell will work on a solution to fix this. So many of these can be fixed by just being smarter and more cohesive.

Going into the season, the Vikings were looking to improve in two areas: short yardage runs and red zone success. They still need to improve in short yardage situations, but they have been improved in red zone conversion rate.

Last season, the Vikings went 14-3 with a lot of success on offense, but they didn’t succeed in the red zone. They ranked 19th in the NFL at 55.7% (34 touchdowns in 61 trips). This year, they have improved in the red zone, albeit with a smaller sample size at 66.7% (10 touchdowns in 15 trips). One of the biggest factors for that success has been Jordan Mason, who has three touchdowns, all of which are inside the five yard line. That is a very good sign that the Vikings have found success in fixing this issue, especially with the issues on the offensive line. Theoretically, if they can get healthy, this should make things even better.



Is Minnesota’s Post-Bye “Gauntlet” Really A Gauntlet?

The Eagles are 4-2, and the Vikings play the 3-2 Chargers on the road four days later. After a 10-day break, they play the 4-1 Lions on the road, then return home for 1-4 Baltimore.

Already, the back end of the “gauntlet” doesn’t look as difficult. The Ravens are considering everything after their worst start since 2015. However, even though the Eagles, Chargers, and Lions lead their division, they don’t look as formidable as they did at the beginning of the season.



Where the Vikings stand in the NFC playoff picture entering Week 6

The Vikings are one of four NFC teams with a 3-2 record (Seahawks, Commanders, Rams) heading into Week 6. Each division leader in the NFC (Eagles, 49ers, Bucs, Lions) sits on a 4-1 record, while the Packers sit in the middle ground on a 2-1-1 record after their wild 40-40 tie with the Cowboys in Week 4.

So, if the playoffs were to start today, Minnesota would make the postseason as the No. 7 seed thanks to tiebreakers over the Commanders and Rams. The Seahawks hold a ‘strength of victory’ tiebreaker over the Vikings, so they currently are the No. 6 seed in the NFC.



5 Vikings players who have boosted their stock in the first 5 weeks

QB Carson Wentz
Two things can be true at the same time: One can believe J.J. McCarthy should get the starting quarterback job back once he’s healthy, while also recognizing that Wentz did exactly what the Vikings needed him to do over the past three weeks while McCarthy was hurt. The Vikings had to find a way to go 2-1 or better, and they were able to do that.

Wentz was able to provide offensive competency for the Vikings, which they struggled to find during McCarthy’s first two games. He got the ball into the hands of Jefferson and his other weapons, completing 69 of 100 passes for 759 yards, five touchdowns, and two picks. Out of 37 quarterbacks with at least 50 dropbacks this season, Wentz ranks 17th in passer rating, 13th in adjusted EPA per play, and sixth in completion percentage over expected.

RB Zavier Scott
CB Isaiah Rodgers

DT Jalen Redmond
Redmond, on a league minimum salary, leads the Vikings in sacks (3) and is the team’s highest-graded defensive tackle by PFF. His pressure rate is right in line with Hargrave’s and higher than Allen’s, and he’s been a better run defender than both vets.

DT Levi Drake Rodriguez
He’s been overshadowed a bit by Redmond’s emergence, but Rodriguez has had quite the start to the season in his own right. The 2024 seventh-round pick, who played at the smallest of schools in college, looks like a legitimately good NFL defensive tackle. LDR uses his violent hands to make plays against the run — his four tackles for loss are tied with Redmond and Greenard for the team lead — and to occasionally supply some pass rush juice. He figures to play 30+ snaps on a weekly basis moving forward.



5 Vikings players whose stock has fallen in the first 5 weeks of 2025

WR Adam Thielen
Five games in, it looks like a move that simply didn’t have to happen. Thielen has been targeted eight times and has caught a total of four passes for 37 yards, plus a two-point conversion. And after at least seeing a good bit of playing time in the first three games, Thielen has played a total of 26 snaps (out of a possible 141) since Addison returned to the field in Week 4. He’s barely on the field right now, and it’s tough to see how that changes without an injury to Justin Jefferson, Addison, or Nailor. Perhaps most notably, the Vikings went with running back Zavier Scott in a receiver role over Thielen late in the loss to the Steelers in Dublin.

QB J.J. McCarthy
With Wentz being included in the “stock up” article, McCarthy has to go in this one. To be clear, 55 dropbacks in two games is simply far too small of a sample size to panic about a highly-drafted 22-year-old quarterback who has shown a lot of encouraging signs in preseason and training camp action, not to mention leading an incredible fourth quarter comeback in his regular season debut. There’s still plenty of reason to believe O’Connell is going to get quality play out of McCarthy, and perhaps very soon.

But we also can’t totally ignore the data we currently have on McCarthy, which isn’t pretty. Out of the 37 QBs with at least 50 dropbacks this season, he ranks dead last in sack rate, 36th in adjusted EPA per play and completion percentage over expected, and 35th in passer rating and success rate. He was right there with guys like Cam Ward and Joe Flacco as one of the NFL’s least effective quarterbacks in his first two games before suffering a high ankle sprain, even with the great final quarter in Chicago mixed in.

TE T.J. Hockenson
LB Ivan Pace Jr.

DT Jonathan Allen
One of the Vikings’ big free agent acquisitions of the offseason hasn’t done much to make his impact felt over the first month. Allen doesn’t have a sack, and PFF has charted him with 11 pressures on 123 pass-rush snaps. That’s a nine percent pressure rate, which is slightly below his career norms.



7 Trades the Vikings Could Pull Off This Month


College Football Today​


7:30 p.m. | No. 24 South Florida at North Texas | ESPN2
9 p.m. | Fresno State at Colorado State | CBSSN
9 p.m. | Rutgers at Washington | FS1


Ian Strong | Rutgers | WR | 6’3″ | 211 | JR
Eric O’Neill | Rutgers | EDGE | 6’3″ | 250 | RSR
Kwabena Asamoah | Rutgers | OG | 6’2″ | 311 | RJR
Denzel Boston | Washington | WR | 6’3″ | 209 | RJR
Jonah Coleman | Washington | RB | 5’9″ | 229 | SR
Tacario Davis | Washington | CB | 6’3″ | 190 | SR

Carver Willis | Washington | OT | 6’5″ | 291 | RSR

I want to see Coleman and Davis tonight.




Again, we all know the rules, but in case someone is new:

  • No discussion of politics or religion
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  • Leave the gender hatred at the door
  • Keep the bad language to a minimum (using the spoiler tags, if you must)
  • Speaking of which, if discussing a newer show or movie, please use spoiler tags
  • No pictures that could get someone fired or in serious trouble with their employer
  • If you can’t disagree in a civil manner, feel free to go away
  • While navigating the open thread, just assume it’s sarcasm

Source: https://www.dailynorseman.com/minne...ota-vikings-news-and-links-the-bye-week-blues
 
Minnesota Vikings News and Links: Who Gets Your Game Ball!

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That was a really good win on Sunday. You might not be able to tell if you scroll through the comments of the recap thread. You could be led to believe the team lost.

The Vikings pulled off a very impressive victory especially when you consider the players they were missing and that Darrisaw was on a snap count that somehow left him out in the crucial fourth quarter. Maybe the trainers feel it is best to go as long as they want and then that is all? Maybe they do not want him to come out and then go back in?

I thought they battled and played well and did what they needed to do to get the win. I cannot ask for more than that. I think it is a great time for the bye week since the team has had more than it’s fair share of injuries this season. Fire the trainers!

My Game ball goes to Blake Brandel! He handled the pivot very well for having never played there before.

I am always looking at college football, free agents in 2026, and possible trades. I wonder if the team will pull off a trade.

Minnesota Vikings News and Links​


McCarthy on the mend, Wentz not thinking ahead as Vikings’ QB decision looms

“I’ve done plenty of looking ahead in my life. I’m done doing that,” Wentz said after leading the Vikings on a game-winning, fourth-quarter drive against the Browns on Sunday in London. “I’m very much trying to live in the moment and appreciate the moment right now. I’m gonna enjoy this one, get healthy, and see what happens.”

Head coach Kevin O’Connell gave a non-answer when asked if Wentz has earned the right to keep starting: “I’m just excited we got the win today, and we’re going to move forward in this bye and get as healthy as we can at all positions, and attack this thing for the next few games.”

According to NFL Network’s Tom Pelissero, McCarthy could be full go for practice ahead of Minnesota’s Oct. 19 game in Minneapolis against the Eagles.

“My understanding is the plan is for McCarthy to return to practice next week, get some reps during the bye. They’ll see how he does. Then, try to get him back to full participation heading into Week 7 against the Eagles,” Pelissero said Sunday on NFL Network.

“Let’s be clear: The Vikings are not just focused on when and how quickly they can get J.J. back on the field. They’re also focused on when they can get him in a groove and ready to play well. This is not some type of soft benching. He has a legit high ankle sprain,” Pelissero explained.

“This is a guy who not only missed his entire rookie season because of knee surgery, he hasn’t practiced on consecutive days since before the Week 1 opener this year. They do want to get, and fully intend, for J.J. McCarthy to be back in the lineup, but they want to be smart about how they do it.”



KOC gives updates on J.J. McCarthy, Carson Wentz, other injured Vikings

“We’ll be able to get him some extensive work, kind of as a lead-in to next week,” O’Connell said. “And then I anticipate his workload building up. We’re gonna really take advantage of that bonus Monday (practice), not only with him but with our whole team.

“J.J. got some work today and he’ll get some work throughout the rest of the week,” he added. “We’ve got some other guys he’ll be getting some work with on the field and then we’ll pick it up officially next week, but I’m encouraged about where he’s at right now.”

“We’ll be able to get him some extensive work, kind of as a lead-in to next week,” O’Connell said. “And then I anticipate his workload building up. We’re gonna really take advantage of that bonus Monday (practice), not only with him but with our whole team.

“J.J. got some work today and he’ll get some work throughout the rest of the week,” he added. “We’ve got some other guys he’ll be getting some work with on the field and then we’ll pick it up officially next week, but I’m encouraged about where he’s at right now.”

On the offensive line, the Vikings will hope to have Jackson back at left guard after he missed the last two games following surgery on his wrist. That would give them at least three members of their starting O-line, along with Christian Darrisaw at left tackle and Will Fries at right guard. We know they won’t have center Ryan Kelly, who will miss at least three more games on IR. And one player who O’Connell notably didn’t mention as someone he expects to return to practice next week is right tackle Brian O’Neill (MCL).

“I think what we’ve learned is we have another high-quality center option with Blake,” O’Connell said. “Getting Jurgs back practicing again will give us a chance to assess what the best five looks like, and that’s what we’ll go with. Blake had a really, really strong day.”

O’Connell said Cashman (hamstring) will have his 21-day practice window opened up next week, which means he’s getting close to coming off of injured reserve. Cashman has now missed the requisite four games on IR, but it’s not necessarily a guarantee that he’ll play in Week 7.



What Kevin O’Connell wants to see next from JJ McCarthy

“He’s had some real moments of growth through this time,” O’Connell said. “I think watching the way Carson’s kind of gone through progressions quickly, just the value of putting the ball in play, even when it’s not your first progression, even when it’s not the most exciting completion of all time.”

“You’re getting to TJ [Hockenson] off of a little nudge and a protection to help here or there and TJ is a check down element… he had one on the touchdown drive at the end where he caught just a simple ball over the middle and went for 14 with some really good run after catch,” O’Connell said. “I think he’s kind of taken a lot of that, of just watching it closely and my dialogue with him.”

“The most critical part is going to be technique and fundamentals of playing the position the way he worked so hard to build up throughout the spring and the summer, getting him back into the mandatory nature of certain things from a fundamental standpoint that will only help him perform at a high level,” O’Connell said.

“I think it’s going to be more about the physical side of his lower body mechanics and then just trying to put together a game plan for him throughout the practices of how much can he do, what’s the soreness level coming out of practices to be able to try to have the most consistent level of a ramp up we can with him,” O’Connell said.

“We’ll be able to get him some extensive work, you know, kind of as a lead in to next week,” O’Connell said. “And then I anticipate his workload building up. We’re going to really take advantage of that bonus Monday.”

Wentz’s own health is going to be a question for the Vikings as well. He left the game briefly with a shoulder injury before returning to lead a game-winning drive against the Browns.

“He’s still getting further evaluation, but he’s pretty sore in that left shoulder,” O’Connell said. “So that will be something that we’ll be taking a look at throughout this week.”



O’Connell hit right notes with gameplan vs. Browns

In the case of the Minnesota Vikings victory over the Cleveland Browns on Sunday, one number tells the story: Carson Wentz’s average time from snap to throw was 2.43 seconds, the fastest in the NFL in Week 5 per NFL NextGen.

“I just told [Wentz] to trust me,” O’Connell said in his postgame press conference. “I just told him, let me worry about as best I can what’s happening up front and help where I can. I just want you to play fast and see it and throw it.”

According to Kevin Cole’s Unexpected Points newsletter, the Vikings had a 51.1% success rate on offensive plays and the passing success ranked in the 80th percentile. Cole wrote:

“Among 33 quarterbacks with at least 80 drop-backs this season, Wentz ranks a respectable 12th in EPA per play (+0.18) and has a positive completion percentage over expectation.”



Kevin O’Connell defends T.J. Hockenson amid Vikings TE’s quiet start

“We’re asking a lot of him right now that doesn’t necessarily coincide with him being one of the best route-running tight ends in the NFL,” said head coach Kevin O’Connell, unprompted, after the Vikings’ win over the Browns. “There’s some sacrifice going on, all across our football team, to do whatever is required to win one game. And that mentality can be a powerful thing as we inevitably start to get some guys back.”



Vikings snap count analysis and notable PFF grades from win over Browns

Vikings offensive snap counts vs. Browns (out of 65)
LG Joe Huber: 65
C Blake Brandel: 65
RG Will Fries: 65
OT Justin Skule: 65
WR Justin Jefferson: 65
QB Carson Wentz: 64
TE T.J. Hockenson: 55
WR Jordan Addison: 49
RB Jordan Mason: 43
WR Jalen Nailor: 42
LT Christian Darrisaw: 41
TE Josh Oliver: 29
RT Walter Rouse: 24
RB Zavier Scott: 14
WR Adam Thielen: 14
FB C.J. Ham: 12
QB Max Brosmer: 1
RB Cam Akers: 1
TE Nick Vannett: 1

Top 5 PFF grades on offense (min. 20 snaps)

  1. Jefferson — 82.9
  2. Darrisaw — 74.5
  3. Addison — 70.5
  4. Wentz — 67.1
  5. Nailor — 65.2

Vikings defensive snap counts vs. Browns (out of 70)
S Theo Jackson: 70
S Josh Metellus: 70
LB Eric Wilson: 70
CB Byron Murphy Jr: 69
CB Isaiah Rodgers: 67
OLB Jonathan Greenard: 66
OLB Dallas Turner: 65
LB Ivan Pace Jr: 48
DT Jonathan Allen: 48
DT Jalen Redmond: 41
DT Levi Drake Rodriguez: 37
DT Javon Hargrave: 33
S Harrison Smith: 29
DT Tyrion Ingram-Dawkins: 27
CB Jeff Okudah: 20
OLB Bo Richter: 9
S Jay Ward: 1

Top 5 PFF grades on defense (min. 20 snaps)

  1. Hargrave — 87.6
  2. Greenard — 75.8
  3. Metellus — 74.3
  4. Rodriguez — 71.1
  5. Turner — 71.0


One Trade Every NFL Team Should Make Before the 2025 Deadline

Minnesota Vikings
Proposed trade: Sixth-round pick to Saints for OL Trevor Penning
It hasn’t worked out in New Orleans for Penning, the 2022 first-round pick who has struggled to find a starting position. On the bright side, Penning offers versatility as a lineman with starting experience playing tackle and guard.

Chicago Bears
Proposed trade: Second-round pick to Titans for DT Jeffery Simmons

Denver Broncos
Proposed trade: Fourth-round pick to Falcons for TE Kyle Pitts

Los Angeles Rams
Proposed trade: Conditional third-round pick to Titans for CB L’Jarius Sneed

New York Jets
Proposed trade: RB Breece Hall to Cardinals for fourth-round pick

Seattle Seahawks
Proposed trade: Second-round pick to Browns for CB Denzel Ward



Eagles Under Fire For Free Agency Mistake; CB Thriving With New Team

Philadelphia still has a talented defense this year, but it’s nowhere near as dominant as it was last season. They lost multiple key players, including cornerback Isaiah Rodgers. Rodgers wasn’t a superstar piece for the Eagles last year, but Philadelphia is feeling his loss much more than anybody expected.

“I promise this isn’t just a case of hindsight being 20/20. Even last season, when he served as CB3 for the Philadelphia Eagles behind James Bradberry and Darius Slay, Rodgers flashed at times as a rangy cover man,” Landers wrote. “The signs were there, and they were enough for the Vikings to give him a shot at a starting gig on a two-year, $15 million deal.

“Safe to say Rodgers has taken that opportunity and run with it. The headliner is his performance against the Cincinnati Bengals last month, in which he both returned an interception and a fumble for a touchdown en route to NFC Defensive Player of the Week honors. But even beyond the splash plays, Rodgers has shined in Brian Flores’ defense, a big part of what’s kept Minnesota afloat despite all the dysfunction at quarterback.”



Vikings wife shuts down Lake Minnetonka boat plan with Love Boat reminder

There will be no hooker parties on Lake Minnetonka this week as the wives of Minnesota Vikings players are well aware that Oct. 6 marks the 20-year anniversary of the infamous “Love Boat Scandal.”

A cruise on Lake Minnetonka was mentioned as an idea in a group chat about a bye week getaway, but Samantha Van Ginkel, whose husband is Vikings linebacker Andrew Van Ginkel, helped pivot the conversation to something less traumatic in Vikings lore.

“As a lifelong Vikings fan, I’ll never forget what happened the last time a boat was involved… so when a few people started planning a cruise on Minnetonka for bye week, I dropped an article in the group chat with allll the details. Safe to say, no one’s setting sail this week,” Mrs. Van Ginkel revealed Monday morning.

View Link



Again, we all know the rules, but in case someone is new:

  • No discussion of politics or religion
  • No feeding of the trolls
  • Leave the gender hatred at the door
  • Keep the bad language to a minimum (using the spoiler tags, if you must)
  • Speaking of which, if discussing a newer show or movie, please use spoiler tags
  • No pictures that could get someone fired or in serious trouble with their employer
  • If you can’t disagree in a civil manner, feel free to go away
  • While navigating the open thread, just assume it’s sarcasm

Source: https://www.dailynorseman.com/minne...ikings-news-and-links-who-gets-your-game-ball
 
How to make sure Daily Norseman shows up in your Google search

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As many of you are likely aware, Google searches are … different these days.

The good news is Google is offering a solution for folks who like to get their news from specific sources. If you want to help Daily Norseman — while also streamlining all your Google searches — there is now a way.

Simply click on this link and add Daily Norseman as one of your “Source preferences.” That’s all there is to it!

Back in August, the tech giant debuted a feature called “Preferred Sources.” It’s a way for Google to prominently feature the results from websites you trust, like Daily Norseman:

“With the launch of Preferred Sources in the U.S. and India, you can select your favorite sources and stay up to date on the latest content from the sites you follow and subscribe to — whether that’s your favorite sports blog or a local news outlet. …

“When you select your preferred sources, you’ll start to see more of their articles prominently displayed within Top Stories, when those sources have published fresh and relevant content for your search.”

As some of you might know, AI searches are hurting outlets around the world and in all spaces. We’ve worked hard at Daily Norseman to build a brand you can trust and rely on for Minnesota Vikings coverage. Our goal is to serve you, the fans. If you’re a fan of our work and want to get the best Minnesota Vikings coverage possible, this is an excellent win-win to improve your Google searches while helping Daily Norseman out.

Source: https://www.dailynorseman.com/minne...preferred-sources-search-results-instructions
 
Vikings Offense: Bye Week Breakdown

Tyler Forness and Dave Stefano examine the Minnesota Vikings’ offense, discussing injuries, quarterback changes, penalties, and the coaching tweaks needed for a second-half surge. Can the Vikings deliver an offensive explosion?


Vikings offense explosion ahead? As the Minnesota Vikings enter their bye week at 3-2, The Real Forno Show dives deep into offensive projections, QB debates, and untapped potential. Hosted by Tyler Forness and producer Dave Stefano on this Vikings 1st & SKOL production, this episode uncovers why Kevin O’Connell’s unit could surge post-bye, blending expert analysis with fan-favorite insights. From injuries impacting play-calling to surprising depth revelations, it’s a must-listen for Purple faithful eyeing playoff glory.

In this breakdown of the Vikings offense bye week episode, Forness and Stefano dissect the team’s current state amid a injury-riddled start, emphasizing growth under O’Connell’s scheming. They highlight how pressure up front has been the offense’s Achilles’ heel, yet opportunities abound with better execution. Key discussions include the ripple effects of 13 missed starter games, procedural penalties tied to QB cadence and line chemistry, and red zone improvements jumping to 66.7% touchdown rate. The hosts praise the unit’s adaptability, projecting McCarthy’s return and a potential scoring surge to 24+ points per game against a tough upcoming schedule.

  • QB Debate: Wentz vs. McCarthy: Carson Wentz boosts EPA per play to 14th league-wide, but J.J. McCarthy’s “rookie-like” growth in sack avoidance and easy buttons signals upside; Forness predicts McCarthy starts post-bye.
  • Running Back Situation: Jordan Mason’s impact shines despite injuries, adding short-yardage TDs; pass-blocking depth from the group enables versatile play-calling.
  • Wide Receiver Success: Jefferson’s generational talent leads, Addison’s clutch plays impress, Nailor’s breakout routes go underutilized due to protection issues, and Thielen adds veteran depth.
  • Tight Ends Blocking Duties: T.J. Hockenson and Josh Oliver chip aggressively against elite edges like T.J. Watt and Myles Garrett, delaying routes but ensuring survival; healthier line could unlock vertical threats.
  • Offensive Line Depth: Better than expected with backups like Blake Brandel and Michael Jurgens stepping up; chemistry fixes could slash the league-worst 12.6% sack rate.
  • Unit’s Ceiling: Sky-high potential with star talent and O’Connell’s adaptations; injuries as a “blessing in disguise” build resilience for Eagles, Chargers, Lions, and Ravens gauntlet.

Listen:

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Watch:


Whether you’re dissecting Vikings stats or craving unfiltered hot takes, The Real Forno Show delivers premium Minnesota Vikings podcast content that’s essential for fans navigating the NFC North grind. Tune in on Vikings 1st & SKOL via Fans First Sports Network for more episodes packed with film breakdowns, injury updates, and bold predictions—it’s your gateway to staying ahead on the Purple path to Super Bowl aspirations.

FAN WITH US!!!


Tyler Forness @TheRealForno of Vikings 1st & SKOL @Vikings1stSKOL and A to Z Sports @AtoZSportsNFL, with Dave Stefano @Luft_Krigare producing this Vikings 1st & SKOL production, the @RealFornoShow. Podcasts partnered with Fans First Sports Network @FansFirstSN and the network’s NFL feed over at Pro Football Insiders @Pro_FB_Insiders. Your ultimate source for NFL insights, breaking news, and expert analysis. From draft prospects to game-day strategies, we’ve got the inside scoop!

Question:


What’s your bold prediction for the Vikings’ offensive breakout post-bye?

Source: https://www.dailynorseman.com/minnesota-vikings-podcasts/91709/vikings-offense-bye-week-breakdown
 
NFL Admits Missed Call on Will Reichard Field Goal Attempt

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In the wake of the Minnesota Vikings’ 21-17 victory over the Cleveland Browns in Dublin a week ago, we mentioned a field goal attempt by Will Reichard that went wide right after it hit the wires that were holding up the SkyCam above Tottenham Hotspur Stadium. Tonight, the NFL has, apparently, done something that it rarely ever does.

They admitted they were wrong. Sort of.

Sources: #Vikings K Will Reichard’s agents and the team’s front office requested that the NFL remove his missed FG from last week’s London game after it clearly struck a camera cable, causing the ball to take an unnatural turn to the right.

The NFL acknowledged it was a missed… pic.twitter.com/VLNayoFKXl

— Jordan Schultz (@Schultz_Report) October 12, 2025

According to NFL insider Jordan Schultz, the Vikings appealed to the league to take the miss off of Reichard’s statistics for the season, citing the interference from the SkyCam. The league said that they would not, in fact, take the miss off of Reichard’s record for the season, but they did admit that the officials missed the call.

That was Reichard’s first miss of the season on any sort of kick. Going into the London game, Reichard was perfect on field goal attempts, and he remains perfect on extra points so far this season. He’s had a pretty solid bounce back after having his struggles in the second half of last season, struggles that came (at least in part) because of an injury that caused him to miss multiple games.

In any event, the league has admitted that their officials in London missed the call on the play, a missed call that should have resulted in Reichard getting another opportunity to make the kick. However, we all know that he’s still perfect on the season, and isn’t that what really matters here?

Source: https://www.dailynorseman.com/minne...reichard-field-goal-attempt-minnesota-vikings
 
Week 6 NFL Discussion

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This is the one week this season where we fans of the Minnesota Vikings will not get to see their team in action. However, there is still a bunch of other games taking place around the NFL, and around here that can only mean one thing.

Yes, for the fifth time in six weeks this NFL season, it’s a RED ZONE SUNDAY here at The Daily Norseman, where we can just sit back, relax, and let the rest of the league unfold around us. If you’re watching the games this afternoon and evening, we hope that you’ll spend some of your time with us.

Be advised that, at some point here, our non-Vikings NFL discussion threads will be moving to the “Feed” section over on the right-hand side of the page, as soon as I can figure out how to format the posts over there the way I can do them here. For now, however, here we are.

Here are all the games that are playing from coast-to-coast in the event that you have not been blessed with the Red Zone Channel.

Early Games on CBS​

Week-6-CBS-Early.png

  • Red – Cleveland Browns at Pittsburgh Steelers – Ian Eagle, J.J. Watt
  • Blue – Los Angeles Chargers at Miami Dolphins – Andrew Catalon, Charles Davis, Jason McCourty
  • Green – New England Patriots at New Orleans Saints – Spero Dedes, Adam Archuleta

Late Games on CBS​

Week-6-CBS-Late.png

  • Red – San Francisco 49ers at Tampa Bay Buccaneers – Jim Nantz, Tony Romo
  • Blue – Cincinnati Bengals at Green Bay Packers – Kevin Harlan, Trent Green

Games on FOX (Early unless noted)​

Week-6-FOX.png

  • Red – Los Angeles Rams at Baltimore Ravens – Kevin Burkhardt, Tom Brady
  • Blue – Dallas Cowboys at Carolina Panthers – Adam Amin, Greg Olsen
  • Yellow – Seattle Seahawks at Jacksonville Jaguars – Chris Myers, Mark Schlereth
  • Orange – Arizona Cardinals at Indianapolis Colts – Kevin Kugler, Daryl Johnston
  • Green – Tennessee Titans at Las Vegas Raiders (LATE) – Kenny Albert, Jonathan Vilma

The Sunday night game this evening features the Detroit Lions visiting the Kansas City Chiefs. And we have another Monday Night Football doubleheader this week, with the early game featuring the Atlanta Falcons hosting the Buffalo Bills and the late game bringing us the Washington Commanders hosting the Chicago Bears.

That’s a look at the schedule for today, ladies and gentlemen. Again, if you’re going to be watching any of today’s NFL action, we hope that you’ll take some time to hang out here with us.

Enjoy the games, everyone!

Source: https://www.dailynorseman.com/open-threads/91740/week-6-nfl-discussion-minnesota-vikings-fans
 
SB Nation Reacts Results: Vikings Fans Slowly Regaining Confidence

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We’re a bit late getting you our SB Nation Reacts survey results this week, but we’ve got them for you now.

Well, some of them, anyway.

The first question we wanted everyone’s opinion on, as we do every week, was whether or not you feel the Vikings are heading in the right direction. After a thrilling comeback victory in Week 5, things are trending back upward among the fan base.

Week6Confidence.png

After dropping down into the low 40% range last week, we’re back to a majority of folks thinking this team is going in the right direction, as 62% of our respondents answered that question in the affirmative. I mean, this team is 3-2, so surely things can’t be all bad, right?

We also asked you to re-evaluate how many games you thought the Vikings would win this season, and. . .unfortunately, I don’t have the results for that one at this point. I’m not sure what the delay is, but hopefully I can get an answer and have those results to you as part of this week’s survey results.

As always, we thank everyone who took the time to participate in our survey for this week, and we’ll have another one ready for you here in a day or two.

Source: https://www.dailynorseman.com/minne...s-minnesota-vikings-fans-regaining-confidence
 
Minnesota Vikings News and Links: Can The Vikings Beat The Eagles?

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No matter who starts for the Vikings, the Eagles are coming into this game in a fowl mood. They do not want to have three straight losses. If the Vikings run defense is seriously a problem then the 4th ranked Eagles offensive line (per PFF) could really allow Saquon Barkley to go off. Now you could argue that the Eagles rush attack is not that good so afar and the offense overall has not been that good. While true, I think they are going to look at what the Falcons were able to do and try to repeat it. I really do not like to see a team coming off two staright losses. Oh well, three straight losses never hurt another team right?

NFL offensive line rankings ahead of Week 6

Minnesota Vikings News and Links​


Kevin O’Connell Outlines Focus of Work as J.J. McCarthy Returns to Practice

“It was great to get back on the grass and have some good sessions out there, kind of getting back to a lot of the principles of lower-body mechanics and things that had been really good parts of his early journey here,” O’Connell said Monday at his first media availability since the club’s Week 6 bye. “[It] didn’t even hit me till we were out there (together) – he had practiced one time since we left Chicago.”

McCarthy will rejoin his teammates at practice this week in some capacity, according to O’Connell.

“I don’t necessarily want to put a percentage on where I think he’s at health wise,” the coach commented. “I think this week will be massive for our whole team, but just to see J.J. back out there getting reps and working through the process of building that foundation back up [will be encouraging].”

O’Connell said he was “very fortunate to get that time” with McCarthy over the bye week, considering the 2024 No. 10 overall draft choice doesn’t possess an extensive body of work, yet. They predominantly worked on throwing mechanics from the ground up, talking through repetitions in pursuit of consistency.

“Quarterback play is about the foundation of getting to that premier base and body position at the top of your drop, whatever that drop is,” O’Connell clarified what he wants McCarthy to refine as he ramps back up. “That could be quick game, that could be a five-, seven-step drop. That can be a play-action pass where you turn your back to the defense. Whatever it is, you’re still getting to that optimal position at the top of your drop so then you can read with your feet and eyes tied together and play in rhythm.”

A key element to McCarthy’s maturation into Minnesota’s franchise quarterback will be his processing speed, which is something O’Connell believes he has been able to connect with watching Carson Wentz.

Wentz, the 2016 No. 2 overall pick, has gone 2-1 in McCarthy’s stead with a 99.5 passer rating, and owns the league’s quickest average Time to Throw among qualified passers per Next Gen Stats (2.55 seconds).

Conversely, McCarthy averaged 3.15 seconds from snap to pass in his first two tastes of a live defense.

“I think one of the things he’s taken away from these two or three weeks of watching Carson play was just the power of completions that maybe don’t necessarily always go to the first or second progression,” O’Connell noted. “It might be T.J. [Hockenson] helping out on a protection (and releasing into a route late) and it’s a critical 12-yard gain when all we did was really check the ball down. Or it’s being surgical with your accuracy when No. 1 is open. And you do that by getting to that foundation and then playing with great balance and rhythm from that point. It’s something that seems like ‘Quarterback Play 101,’ but I watched a lot of football yesterday and didn’t see it as much as you would think you should see it.”

“And that’s just the nature of playing a really difficult position with a lot of variables in front of you, down the field, different coverages and techniques and leverages, and we’re trying to give the best plays we possibly can,” O’Connell continued. “But within those plays, you have five eligibles for a reason, and finding that open eligible and putting the ball in play, and the power of preserving not only yourself, but the integrity of staying efficient as an offense ends up being the quarterback’s job a lot of the time when it’s not always fair based upon how things are around them, or the adversity around them, from a standpoint of some of the injuries that have hit us, and that’s just part of why the position is so difficult.”

That’s why the bye week lended a beautiful opportunity for McCarthy to make important progress.

“The beauty of the work last week was, ‘This is purely just about, let’s just work on the technique and fundamentals and break it down to a place where we can really take tangible [reflections] – wow, that felt different, that felt great, or that’s why we coach it like that,'” O’Connell explained of their work together. “And pretty soon he’s throwing the ball great. He’s got a smile on his face, and you’re stacking reps upon reps that will matter as now he gets to transition to actual real reps on the practice field.”

It’s too early for O’Connell to accurately gauge whether McCarthy will progress enough in time to play Sunday against Philadelphia, or if Wentz, who is dealing with a sore left, non-throwing shoulder, will make his fourth start for Minnesota and second in his 10-year career versus the team that drafted him.

But McCarthy back on the practice field is a positive step for everyone.

“I think there’s the decision that is the public one,” O’Connell said, “and I think there’s the decision with what we’re going to do for the game. And those two things can be on different timelines, although I know that’s not the most comforting thing to share with you guys. But there is a feel of making sure that we’re preparing the quarterback position for the game, knowing we’ve won games with two different guys this year, and we’ve found a rhythm at times on offense that as much as that quarterback plays a huge role in it, we’ve got to make sure our offense is prepared to play with that true all 11 mindset.”



Vikings’ QB situation ‘murky’ ahead of big game against Eagles

“The Vikings’ quarterback situation is murky, to say the least,” said Tom Pelissero on Sunday, noting that J.J. McCarthy still isn’t 100% healthy from the high ankle sprain he suffered in Week 2 against the Atlanta Falcons, and that Carson Wentz is dealing with a left shoulder injury that he suffered in London against the Cleveland Browns.

“J.J. McCarthy, I’m told, got good work during the bye week. He should be able to return to practice this week, but McCarthy is still not 100% on that ankle. They gotta see his mobility. They gotta see how the ankle responds. And they gotta make sure he is comfortable and in a groove from an operational perspective before they put him back out on the field,” Pelissero said.

Here’s what Pelissero said about Wentz: “He could be limited in practice this week. A lot to sort through to figure out who’s going to be out there on the field next week against the Eagles.”



Kevin O’Connell shares encouraging injury updates on 7 key Vikings

Blake Cashman’s 21-day practice window has been opened. That gives the Vikings three weeks to activate him from injured reserve, which is an indicator that he’s close to returning from the hamstring strain he suffered in Week 1 against the Bears.

Cashman wasn’t the only player head coach Kevin O’Connell had injury news about on Monday.

“You will also have Donovan Jackson, Michael Jurgens, Brian O’Neill, and J.J. McCarthy taking part in the work today, as well as throughout the week in different capacities,” O’Connell said. Let’s dive into the specifics…

Carson Wentz is still dealing with soreness
“He was sore coming out of the game,” said O’Connell, noting that Wentz hurt his left shoulder in London against the Browns. “He’s gotten to a good place where he can participate and take part in the preparation. The biggest thing for him is it’s a non-throwing shoulder, so it’s a matter of working through that soreness as it comes to him.”

Best-case scenario for the offensive line?
There’s no guarantee that Jackson, Jurgens, or O’Neill return for the Eagles game, but all three could be available. If that’s the case, the Vikings could have four-fifths of the original O-line intact for a game against a dangerous Eagles defensive front.

Best-case O-line:

LT: Christian Darrisaw (he’s a lock to play)
LG: Donovan Jackson
C: Michael Jurgens or Blake Brandel
RG: Will Fries (he’s a lock to play)
RT: Brian O’Neill

The debate is whether Brandel, who was really good in his first career game at center in Week 5 against Cleveland, is a better option than Jurgens, who has given up some ugly pressures.

The worst-case scenario would be a repeat of what the Vikings went with against Cleveland.

LT: Christian Darrisaw
LG: Joe Huber
C: Blake Brandel
RG: Will Fries
RT: Justin Skule



Vikings Report Card: Kevin O’Connell’s offense needs an identity while Jonathan Greenard and Jalen Redmond have the defense playing well

Offensive superlatives
MVP: LT Christian Darrisaw
When the offensive line got Darrisaw back, they immediately got better. The first two games saw quarterback J.J. McCarthy get sacked 19 times, including a 22.2 sack percentage against the Atlanta Falcons. Once Darrisaw returned, they could immediately count on him holding the fort down, making everyone else’s job that much easier on the rest of the line, including allowing T.J. Hockenson to release without having to chip.

Glue guy: WR Justin Jefferson
Biggest surprise: OL Blake Brandel

Biggest disappointment: QB J.J. McCarthy
This is an easy one for the Vikings. McCarthy was viewed by many as someone who could step right in and take the Vikings to another playoff berth. Pair that with McCarthy hurting his ankle compiles the entire situation. McCarthy isn’t worth worrying about at this point, but it’s a brutal one.

Offense overall grade: B-

Defensive superlatives
MVP: EDGE Jonathan Greenard
When you watch the defense, Greenard continues to make an impact in nearly every sense of the word. Greenard is attacking the offensive line in the running game, as a pass rusher, and even proving to be a talented player when dropping into coverage. He is making every other player’s job easier, and that is huge for a defense that has seen a lot of growth on the defensive line.

Glue guy: CB Byron Murphy Jr.
Biggest surprise: DT Jalen Redmond
Biggest disappointment: ILB Ivan Pace Jr.

Defense overall grade: B

2025 draft class superlatives
Overachiever: DT Tyrion Ingram-Dawkins
You don’t expect a fifth-round pick to become a serious rotational player, but that is exactly what we have with Ingram-Dawkins. He’s played 98 snaps over the course of the first five games with three of them over 24 snaps. He’s been good against the run and finding ways to impact throwing lanes with his length. There is still a lot of room for growth, but that is coming every day.

Rookie we need to see more from: OL Donovan Jackson
Underachiever: WR Tai Felton

Draft class overall grade: C+

Coaching report card
Grade: B



Vikings EDGE Dallas Turner remains a controversial player despite thriving in Brian Flores’ defense

When we look at Minnesota Vikings general manager Kwesi Adofo-Mensah‘s NFL Draft classes, they are a mixed bag. We know how the 2022 NFL Draft class ended up, and Adofo-Mensah has addressed his strategy.

“I thought a lot about those days and competing, trying to compete on multiple timelines and different things like that. I had a conversation with Kevin [O’Connell],” said Adofo-Mensah in August of 2024. “This is probably a year ago or something, around then. I asked him one time, what was it like when we were down 33-0? You know, when you feel like you’re down. When I entered the building, trying to compete, aging roster, salary cap stuff, I think there were times where I felt down 33-0.

“As we all know, that game starts with one play, one drive, and you build. I think at times I might have been guilty of trying to maybe have a 33-point play all at once. I think once I identified that, I kind of really just, and I think if you’ve seen since then, it’s been really foundationally just taking good steps, building to a certain critical point where I think we compete over the long term.”

That process has led to the Vikings making better draft decisions over the next few years, and one of them has been very controversial: edge rusher Dallas Turner.

How is Turner playing so far this year? If you go onto Twitter, you’ll see a lot of negative about his performance, because of his lack of sacks.

It’s a difficult conversation to have with Turner, especially because of how nuanced it is. He was raw and didn’t have a body ready for the NFL just yet. He had just 310 snaps as a rookie, mainly because Andrew Van Ginkel and Jonathan Greenard had All-Pro-caliber seasons ahead of him. Despite that limited playing time, he thrived in multiple instances, including this impressive interception against the Seattle Seahawks in December.

When it comes to rushing the passer, the quickest way to the quarterback is by making the path as short as possible. Turner can bend around the arc and use leverage to attack the offensive lineman with power. The coaching staff believes in Turner.

“I can promise you guys that my excitement for Dallas Turner, every time I’ve had a chance to talk with you, has been real. It’s been authentic. It’s been genuine,” said head coach Kevin O’Connell ahead of the Vikings’ Week 2 matchup against the Atlanta Falcons. I hope you think all the things that I say to you guys is real, authentic and genuine, but I’m so excited for him, just because there is a personal football journey that takes place with every player in the NFL, and the jump that he is currently experiencing will be highlighted clearly with Gink [Van Ginkel] being out this week, but we have viewed it from day one as three potential starters.”

The other main aspect is how much the run defense has done with Turner on the field. In the first three games, when Turner didn’t play the majority of snaps, the run defense was significantly better with him on the field. Why? He’s incredibly versatile and has an impact in many ways.

Here's more evidence that Dallas Turner has been impressive this season https://t.co/DpF3rWUZoe pic.twitter.com/WviwS0uBI1

— Tyler Forness (@TheRealForno) September 22, 2025


3 Minnesota Vikings players who could be on the trade block in the coming weeks

The three players we believe could be on the trade block are:

QB Carson Wentz
LB Ivan Pace Jr.
WR Adam Thielen

The team has made it clear they want to stick with J.J. McCarthy at quarterback, and if he is healthy, Carson Wentz has shown he has some value. If a team that needs a serviceable backup to cover up a starter being injured were to call, Kwesi Adofo-Mensah should listen. The same goes for Adam Thielen, who has proven to be a disaster of a trade for the team. Trading him away is not likely to get the fifth-round pick back they sent away, but anything is better than nothing.

The last suggestion may seem controversial, but Ivan Pace Jr. has proven he was overlooked as an undrafted free agent, but he has a limited skill set. He has a unique ability to be a reliable asset in pass rush situations, but in run defense, he has struggled. Eric Wilson has emerged as someone who can make plays in the absence of Blake Cashman, so with Pace Jr. on the final year of his deal, perhaps the team looks to get something in return.

Note: Extremely doubtful any of these players are moved.



Why were Bryant McKinnie and Ray Rice with the Vikings on Monday?

“Quick trip to MN with Ray Rice to chat with the Vikings! We got into the real stuff,” McKinnie announced on social media, noting that they discussed:

Life during & after football
Handling success & pressure
The true meaning of brotherhood
Overcoming tough times
Transitioning out of the league

“The biggest takeaway? Your mental health is non-negotiable, and asking for help is a superpower,” McKinnie said. Shoutout to the Vikings organization for having us and for their continued commitment to their players’ well-being. It was a powerful day”

McKinnie and Rice were close during their days with the Ravens. In fact, they were known as the Ravens’ odd couple, with McKinnie, at 6-foot-8, a foot taller than Rice. Rice’s nickname for McKinnie was “Slim Slow,” and McKinnie referred to Rice as “Shorty Smalls.”

“Mac is one of the funniest people in the world,” Rice said of McKinnie in 2013. “He’s just one of those guys that when you get close to him, you’re in. You know what you’re getting. We understand each other. He’s a great football player, but an even better person off the field. This is my man. I’m telling you, there’s not a day that I come in and don’t first look for Mac.”

“He’s a great football player, but an even better person off the field. This is my man. I’m telling you, there’s not a day that I come in and don’t first look for Mac.”



Alvin Kamara to Chiefs? New WR for Giants’ Jaxson Dart? 10 NFL trades that should happen before 2025 deadline
Breece Hall to the Chargers

Note: I’d like to see the Vikings trade for Hall.

Trey Hendrickson, Alvin Kamara headline 8 notable NFL trade candidates ahead of Nov. 4 deadline




Again, we all know the rules, but in case someone is new:

  • No discussion of politics or religion
  • No feeding of the trolls
  • Leave the gender hatred at the door
  • Keep the bad language to a minimum (using the spoiler tags, if you must)
  • Speaking of which, if discussing a newer show or movie, please use spoiler tags
  • No pictures that could get someone fired or in serious trouble with their employer
  • If you can’t disagree in a civil manner, feel free to go away
  • While navigating the open thread, just assume it’s sarcasm

Source: https://www.dailynorseman.com/minne...ews-and-links-can-the-vikings-beat-the-eagles
 
Minnesota Vikings in the Power Rankings — Entering Week 7

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Hello again, sports fans. We’re back with another season of putting together a consensus power ranking for the Vikings each week, and with the bye week now in the rear-view mirror, we’re off and running.

Let’s talk to it (rankings are hyperlinked for maximum clickage):

The Rankings​

NFL.com — 19th (last week: 16th)​


Key excerpt: “…the arrow is pointing upward. But as of right now, it’s hard to know where this team is, given the topsy-turvy start and the rash of injuries.”

The Athletic/New York Times — 17th (last week: 16th)​


Key excerpt: “(Justin Jefferson) has done well to survive the quarterback mess in Minnesota, but it hasn’t been the year fantasy managers were expecting.”

ESPN.com — 18th (last week: 16th)​


Key excerpt: “QB decisions are open to scrutiny.”

Pro Football Focus — 15th (last week: 18th)​


Key excerpt: “ If (McCarthy)’s not set to go, we’ll have a Carson Wentz revenge game. Wentz’s 61.8 overall PFF grade is 30th among quarterbacks.”

Pro Football Talk — 18th (last week: 18th)​


Key excerpt: “We’ll learn a lot about what the 2025 Vikings will be on Sunday against the Eagles.”

CBS Sports (Pete Prisco) — 16th (last week: 17th)​


Key excerpt: “They come off their bye with a big home game against a desperate Eagles team. It looks like J.J. McCarthy should be back under center for the Vikings this week.”

The Score — 19th (last week: 18th)​


Key excerpt: “(McCarthy) needs to show signs of his first-round talent if Minnesota is going to survive the gauntlet schedule that lies ahead.”

Sports Illustrated — 19th (last week: 16th)​


Key excerpt: “Now we wait and see whether Kevin O’Connell will give us what we truly want: the Carson Wentz revenge game against a reeling Eagles team.”

USA Today (Nate Davis) — 21st (last week: 18th)​


Key excerpt: “QB1 J.J. McCarthy’s return is still TBD. The Vikes’ schedule is not, now set to serve up four consecutive opponents who qualified for last season’s playoffs. Interesting conundrum.”

Yahoo! Sports — 10th (last week: 9th)​


Key excerpt: “The rest of the teams in this tier (teams to watch) are all very good, but there are reasons to be worried about their chances of being a Super Bowl contender.”

New York Post — 20th (last week: 18th)​


Key excerpt: None provided.

—————

Average ranking: 17.5 (192 ranking points/11 rankings| High: 10th; Low: 21st)

Spare thoughts: In case you hadn’t noticed, we added Pro Football Focus to the ranks and dropped NFL Trade Rumors (it appears they didn’t do rankings this week?). What’s hard for me with these rankings is that, in my heart of hearts, I believe the Vikings are better than most of these rankings suggest (and just realized how much I love Yahoo! Sports haha) but I also can’t make a case for them to be above many of them, either.

I guess that’s the issue with unrealized potential. Hopefully, they take care of business on Sunday.

What do you think? Join the conversation below (and recommend other power rankings to add if you wish)!

Source: https://www.dailynorseman.com/minne...vikings-in-the-power-rankings-entering-week-7
 
Vikings Reacts Survey Week 7: What’s Up at Quarterback?

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Welcome to SB Nation Reacts, a survey of fans across the NFL. Throughout the year we ask questions of the most plugged-in Vikings fans and fans across the country. Sign up here to participate in the weekly emailed surveys.

It’s that time of the week again, ladies and gentlemen. Yes, it’s time to ask you, the readers of the best Minnesota Vikings website on these vast interwebs about how you feel about our favorite football team. This week, we have a pair of connected questions for you, along with our regular question.

That regular question, of course, is how you feel about the direction of the team. We saw a slight jump in that after the victory in Week 5 and the bye week, but now you’re going to get another chance to re-evaluate how you feel about the purple heading into Sunday’s big game.

The other two questions we have for you this week relate to the team’s quarterback situation. The questions may look the same, but they are different. One is which of the Vikings’ two primary quarterbacks should start (assuming both of them are ready to go), while the other one is which one you think will start. This should be an interesting one.

As always, we invite you to make your voice heard by casting your votes in our survey below, as well as sounding off in the comments section.

With that, have at it, ladies and gentlemen! We’ll have the results of this one for you, as well as the answer that we missed from last week’s survey, before things kick off on Sunday afternoon.

Source: https://www.dailynorseman.com/minne...eacts-survey-week-7-j-j-mccarthy-carson-wentz
 
Eagles at Vikings: Second Injury Report

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The Minnesota Vikings and Philadelphia Eagles have issued their second injury reports in advance of Sunday’s matchup at U.S. Bank Stadium. Here they are:

Minnesota Vikings​

  • OLB Tyler Batty, Knee, Full
  • LB Blake Cashman, Hamstring, Full
  • C Michael Jurgens, Hamstring, Full
  • QB Carson Wentz, Left Shoulder, Full
  • DL Tyrion Ingram-Dawkins, Hip, Limited
  • LG Donovan Jackson, Wrist, Full
  • QB J.J. McCarthy, Ankle, Limited
  • RT Brian O’Neill, Knee, Limited
  • OLB Andrew Van Ginkel, Neck, Limited
  • LT Christian Darrisaw, Vet Rest Day, DNP
  • OLB Jonathan Greenard, Hamstring, Limited

For the Vikings, Donovan Jackson was upgraded to full participant, so he is on track to start on Sunday as expected. Christian Darrisaw was added for his usual veteran rest day. More concerning is the addition of Jonathan Greenard, who was limited with a hamstring injury. Hopefully that won’t keep him out on Sunday. McCarthy continuing to be limited suggests he won’t be starting on Sunday. There is some chance Andrew Van Ginkel could play on Sunday, but the schedule for O’Neill suggests it’s less likely he’ll play. Tomorrow’s injury report should clarify some/most of the doubts on who will play on Sunday and who won’t. Lastly, while Michael Jurgens looks good to go, it was Blake Brandel taking snaps with Carson Wentz in the portion of practice open to reporters, suggesting Brandel has indeed taken over as starting center with Ryan Kelly on IR.

Philadelphia Eagles​

  • TE Grant Calcaterra, Oblique, DNP
  • LG Landon Dickerson, Ankle, Limited
  • CB Quinton Mitchell, Hamstring, Full
  • LB Zack Baun, Finger, Full
  • DT Jalen Carter, Heel, Limited
  • DT Jordan Davis, Shoulder, Full

For the Eagles, two status changes from yesterday. First, starting cornerback Quinyon Mitchell was upgraded to full participant, suggesting he’ll play on Sunday. The Eagles did have a practice squad cornerback working with the starters during the portion of practice open to reporters, suggesting he may be elevated for the Vikings game. Whether that casts doubt on the availability of current starters is open to interpretation. Additionally, Jalen Carter was downgraded to limited, which casts some doubt on his availability, although he said he will play on Sunday. Landon Dickerson remained limited for a second practice, making it less likely he’ll play on Sunday.



Follow me on X/Bluesky @wludford

Source: https://www.dailynorseman.com/minne.../91834/eagles-at-vikings-second-injury-report
 
Minnesota Vikings News and Links: The Eagles Will Be A Good Test

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Win or lose, the Eagles will be a good test to see where the team stands in the NFC pecking order. A loss wont be the end of the world and a win wont mean the team is destined. They still have along ways to go and, hopefully, they can remain free of any major injuries. Who starts at Quarterback does not really matter although by the sounds of things, Wentz will get another start. He seems to be OK with whatever happens which is nice.

I am going to most likely pick the Vikings to win straight up but will be very nervous.

Minnesota Vikings News and Links​


Vikings QB pressers may have revealed the answer to the week’s big question

McCarthy was asked a variety of different questions at his first press conference in a month, but the most notable thing he said had to do with the health of his right ankle.

“Ankle is, you know, it’s getting there,” he said. “I wouldn’t say it’s 100 percent right now, but we’re striving every day to get there as fast as possible.”

Is it at a place where he can play on Sunday?

“Me, selfishly, I’m gonna play if it was off or not,” McCarthy said. “But we gotta be smart here and understand there’s a lot of things that go into place. At the end of the day, I’m just gonna do what I’m told and try to get better as fast as possible.”

Also interesting is that McCarthy said he received timelines ranging from two to six weeks after suffering the injury in a Week 2 loss to the Falcons. By the time Sunday rolls around, he’ll be at five weeks of recovery time. He was officially listed as a limited participant in practice on Wednesday.

“I’ve never felt a high ankle (sprain) before,” McCarthy said. “I’ve had low ankles. But just based off of what a lot of well-respected second opinions have said, they said it’s four to six, two to six (weeks). I feel like it was gonna be in that range, and we’re still in that range. It’s unfortunate and they’re really annoying, injuries, but we’re just continuing to work to get to 100 percent as quick as possible.”

Wentz is currently dealing with an injury to his non-throwing shoulder. But he was a full participant in Wednesday’s practice and said he’s “feeling good” when asked about the injury. “It’s just one of those things, you just play through it. I’m feeling pretty good right now.

Wentz, who is in his tenth NFL season with his sixth different team, said he’s approaching this week the same way he always does. He’s been a starter and a backup over the years, so this theoretical limbo area between the two roles isn’t going to affect him.

“Even the first couple weeks here when J.J. was playing, I approached it the same,” he said. “I prepare, go through my routine, go through my program of how I watch film, how I study the plays, how I get ready, what I do later in the week, how I take care of my body. That doesn’t really change. That’s the beauty of it, quite frankly. Having done both roles in my career so far, I have what works for me and what gets me ready to play, and that’s what I’ll be doing.”

Wentz also went on to talk about a variety of other things. He said he hasn’t thought much about the fact that the Eagles, the team he spent his first five seasons with, are coming to town this weekend, saying those days feel like “multiple lifetimes ago at this point.” He talked about wanting to clean up some of the little things he’s seen on his tape from the past three games. Mostly, he just kind of sounded like a guy who is planning on playing on Sunday.



What Kevin O’Connell said about the Vikings’ QB decision on Wednesday

The second question he was asked is the one on the minds of Vikings fans everywhere: “Where do things stand as far as your starting QB for Sunday?”

“They stand in the same place they did Monday when I answered that question,” O’Connell replied in much more terse fashion than the vast majority of his presser answers.

The Vikings still have three practices to get to this week, starting on Wednesday afternoon. Both J.J. McCarthy (ankle) and Carson Wentz (shoulder) will get reps in those sessions, their head coach said.

“They’re both gonna get work, both gonna get reps,” O’Connell said. “Very much looking forward to our whole team getting back out there.”

As O’Connell said on Monday, the timing of the coaching staff’s quarterback decision and the timing of when the public finds out the answer are two different things.

Like this one, on a topic he’s covered plenty in recent weeks: What does he most want to see from McCarthy this week?

“I think the big thing is just getting him back on the grass, in uniform, practicing, getting real live reps of a pass rush and taking drops and applying some of the things that he’s worked really hard on as of late, as he’s kind of gotten to that phase of his rehab,” O’Connell said. “Applying it and then, when he does that, instant dialogue about what he’s able to do and what it felt like.

“I’m having a blast coaching him. It started last week, when he was able to really start ramping up a little bit. That 1-on-1 work, and then obviously the work he does with Josh and Jordan (QB coaches McCown and Traylor) is gonna be critical.”

Asked about the focus on McCarthy’s mechanics, which he’s talked about quite a bit, O’Connell noted that the 22-year-old hasn’t had all that much practice time over his two seasons with the Vikings, due to a pair of separate injuries. He also mentioned that in McCarthy’s most recent game against the Falcons, he finished the night playing through what the Vikings later learned was a high ankle sprain.

“He’s been here (for parts of two years), but that doesn’t necessarily mean he’s been on the grass, practicing, doing the things that help you build a layer of consistency where you can not only take it to the game with you, but then the ebbs and flows of the position, whether it’s the pocket breaking down or maybe it’s, once the injury happened, being firm on that back foot,” O’Connell said. “And what the combination of a lot of those experiences can do to your fundamentals are a very, very normal thing for a young player.”

“That was really a significant injury that he was playing through in that (Atlanta) game,” he added. “That, coupled with how the game had gone and the fact that he had about an hour and 20-minute practice on that Friday after leaving the hospital on Thursday, sleeping there, and showing up here, I mean there was a lot of variables to that one performance that I know, because he hasn’t been out there, we’re taking a lot of looks at, and I understand that. But there’s a bigger picture to playing quarterback and how I view the position.”

It’s also not the only element that exists. Wentz, who helped lead the Vikings to a 2-1 record over their last three games, is dealing with a fairly significant injury to his non-throwing shoulder. He’s working hard in hopes of being available for the Vikings, whether his number is called as the starter or if he returns to a backup role.

“We’ll work through the week, but he got some good work in Monday, at least feeling positive from a health standpoint to go through and throw,” O’Connell said. “He took a normal amount of throws, there wasn’t any throws he didn’t take because of it. But there’s a layer of working through it, even though it’s his non-throwing shoulder, for sure.”



Checking in with Carson Wentz & J.J. McCarthy as Vikings Prep for Eagles



Brian Flores’ comments about Javon Hargrave’s performance raises multiple questions about the defensive line’s future

The Vikings are second in the NFL in EPA/play and first in EPA/drop back. However, the struggles have all come against the run, against which they are 25th in EPA/play. Those struggles are a big issue for the Vikings through five games, including a disaster against the Atlanta Falcons, when Bijan Robinson ran all over them.

The biggest factor here is the trade of Harrison Phillips. It has asked multiple players to play in roles that they aren’t suited for, with the most significant one being Javon Hargrave.

One thing that has been obvious about Hargrave is how he wins. He’s a gap-shooting defensive tackle who thrives rushing the passer. What he doesn’t do well is handling double teams. Defensive coordinator Brian Flores was asked about the attention that Hargrave is getting and likened it to Justin Jefferson being double-teamed.

“He’s a good player, so he gets a lot of attention. And I think as a whole, defensively when we see that, how do we use that to our advantage?” said Flores during Tuesday’s press conference. “Who can we maybe sneak through, if there’s a lot of attention being paid to him, to make them pay attention to somebody else. Essentially, that’s the process we go through.

“I think it’s no different than offensively, if somebody’s getting double-teamed and somebody else has got to open so, whether it’s Hargrave or Allen or Greenard. I think that happens from time to time. And when it does, we just try to, I don’t say, offset it, but make them think about another person, so that we can then free that player up again. But oftentimes, they’re just going to think of, stay on, on, on the one guy, and then, which means somebody else has got.”

Hargrave has played 177 snaps this season, with 22 coming as the 0T/1T nose tackle. He’s getting bullied consistently in those situations, especially on early downs, in the running game. His Pro Football Focus run defense grade this season is 43.5, which is a significant downgrade from what Phillips brought last season. However, he is still bringing a lot of value as a pass rusher with 13 pressures and 2.0 sacks so far this season on just 95 pass rush reps.



What’s waiting for the Vikings next might be the NFL’s nastiest gauntlet

Up to this point, the Vikings have had the easiest schedule in the NFL. The rest of the way, their schedule is the league’s most difficult. It’s time to buckle up for a gauntlet of games, starting this Sunday against the defending Super Bowl champions.

Those numbers come from Sharp Football Analysis and are based on the “total efficiency” of all 32 teams through the first six weeks of the season. In the graphic below, you can see the Vikings at the very bottom.

Strength of schedule: rest of season vs prior

top-5 hardest future schedules:
1. Vikings
2. Giants
3. Eagles
4. Cardinals
5. Lions

top-5 easiest future schedules:
1. Patriots
2. Browns
3. Jets
4. Saints
5. Bengals

more analysis:https://t.co/RI5Vy6Bdkl pic.twitter.com/85iacA4LIY

— Warren Sharp (@SharpFootball) October 15, 2025

On the surface, it’s obviously concerning that the Vikings are just 3-2 so far after playing the schedule they’ve faced. At the same time, the two opponents they’ve lost to — the Falcons and Steelers — aren’t bad teams. The Falcons just beat the Bills on Monday night, and their overall metrics are hurt by an aberration of a 30-0 loss to the Panthers. The Steelers are 4-1. The Vikings had plenty of opportunities to win both of those games, but losing the turnover battle a combined 6-1 was too much to overcome.



A.J. Brown says the vibes are normal and Eagles are motivated ahead of matchup vs. Vikings

The Eagles lead the league in red zone offense (87.5%), scoring touchdowns on 14 of 16 red zone opportunities. That is the best red zone touchdown efficiency by an NFL team through six games since at least 2000. That’s where the good vibes stop from a statistical standpoint.

Philadelphia is 30th in total offense, 25th in rushing offense, and 29th in passing offense entering Week 7.

Things are looking up offensively for Brown, and since Week 2, the All-Pro wide receiver is tied for 3rd among NFL wide receivers with four games of 5+ catches, behind Ja’Marr Chase and Amon-Ra St. Brown (five each). Brown had 80 yards on six catches in Week 6 at N.Y. Giants.

“We’re not letting a loss just humble us…this team is fine, this team is motivated and just trying to get on the same page.”

AJ Brown says the Eagles vibes are normal after back to back losses: pic.twitter.com/7pxriBbTEZ

— Devan Kaney (@Devan_Kaney) October 15, 2025


Brian Flores has the key to stopping Jalen Hurts, and it plays right into the Vikings’ hands

Brian Flores’ defense is the worst nightmare for Jalen Hurts
One of the biggest struggles that Jalen Hurts has as a quarterback is playing against zone coverage. He thrives against man coverage more than anything, especially when teams blitz him. Out of 34 qualifying quarterbacks per TruMedia:

Vs. Man: 13th in EPA/play
Vs. Zone: 28th in EPA/play

It’s quite simple: Hurts shreds man coverage, and especially does so against the blitz. It helps that the Eagles have great wide receivers in A.J. Brown and DeVonta Smith to exploit man coverage. It’s harder to win against zone because Brown and Smith do a better job attacking people than space, and it makes it much easier for Hurts to see in open space. He struggles mightily to see things develop, especially when pressured.

When you look at the Vikings, they attack quarterbacks frequently. They rank first in EPA/dropback when they run zone at -0.33, and 12th in man coverage at -0.01. It looks significantly more impressive when you see how well they run zone coverage.



Elite Speed Only Part of Isaiah Rodgers’ Acceleration with Vikings

n Week 3 this season, the 5-foot-10, 180-pound cornerback emerged from the secondary and shadows of his past as the first NFL player with a pick six, a scoop-and-score and two forced fumbles in one game.

He “played out of this world,” said Defensive Coordinator Brian Flores, “for the lack of a better term.”

Really, there is nothing more on-the-nose to describe the game Rodgers savored Sept. 21 against Cincinnati. He intercepted a pass and sprinted 87 yards for his first career defensive score. Shortly after, he forced and recovered a fumble and dashed 66 yards to the opposite end zone for his second defensive touchdown. Rodgers also rejected a jump ball while on an island against Tee Higgins, who has a 6-inch height advantage, and canceled a 15-yard catch by Ja’Marr Chase with one of his knockouts.

Grizzled vet Harrison Smith suggested an asterisk in the record books since Rodgers did all that in a half.

“What makes this story more interesting is my wife,” former Vikings cornerback Xavier Rhodes offered. “She called my phone, she was like, ‘Oh my God, I thought he had your record! I was about to get upset, but he didn’t. I’m good. All right, I love you,’ and she hung up the phone. I’m like, she is something else!”

The three-time Pro Bowl honoree and 2017 First-Team All-Pro Rhodes was hanging in a stadium suite when Rodgers lived out “every corner’s dream,” gave Rhodes’ wife a scare and made his mentor proud.

“He was always willing to learn,” Rhodes said of Rodgers, who entered the NFL with the Colts the same year Rhodes went from Minnesota to Indianapolis. “You have some guys that come in the game and think they know it all and think you can’t really tell ’em anything, or they would sit there and act like they are listening to you and still do their own thing. But with him, he was a student of the game. He wanted to get better.”

Upon their initial meeting, Rhodes said he thought “Isaiah was a great breath of fresh air.”

“It’s no ego with him. Zero ego. Like, he doesn’t have an ego,” Rhodes shared repeatedly. “You can go, ‘Isaiah, I need you to be the kicker’ – ‘OK’ – and he’s gonna do it with a smile on his face. It’s hard to find players like that, man. It’s hard to find someone that’s gonna give it his all no matter where you put him.

“That’s why we gravitated to one another because that’s someone you need around you,” Rhodes said. “That’s someone you need in your life, ’cause we’re all gonna have bad days, and you’re gonna need a guy like Isaiah that’s gonna be around you to joke around with you, make you laugh and lift your day up.”

Rhodes continued, “You tend to forget [about your blessings in life], but a guy like him, he’s always gonna remind you, ‘Bro, we’re here in the NFL, we’re part of the less than 1 percent, let’s live it up.’ “

Five games into his first season as a full-time starter, Rodgers is a Top 4 cornerback in the NFL, according to Pro Football Focus (min. 100 snaps). His 82.2 overall grade is boosted by the top score in coverage (86.1), as well as the first “perfect” game grade (99.9) since PFF started data collection in 2006. According to PFF numbers, he’s allowed only 11 receptions on 21 targets for 96 yards, zero touchdowns and a 44.9 passer rating against.

“Personally, I just feel like he’s going to do more,” Rhodes said. “And once he’s (even) more consistent, we’re going to have a conversation of him being one of the best Vikings players or DBs they’ve ever had.”

The success was anticipated by people close to Rodgers, like Rhodes, and college teammate Jordin Hamilton, who was a junior at UMass when Rodgers – “this super, super skinny kid” – materialized.

“He may have been all of 5-9, a buck 35 soaking wet, if that,” Hamilton said.

“Seriously,” Rodgers’ good friend to this day emphasized, “he was tiny.”

Hamilton said he doesn’t think he saw Isaiah, or ‘Zay’, squat over 185 pounds in the lead up to his freshman season. He remembers training camp that summer vividly, though, because Rodgers was a blur in conditioning tests and zippy on defense, capturing passes left and right – as if he was the target.

“I’ll never forget,” Hamilton reminisced. “We had Andy Isabella on our team at the same time, who ended up being a second-round draft pick [in 2019]. He was by far the fastest player on our team. And then we’re running 40-yard sprints and this new kid is not just beating Andy; he’s dusting him. So we’re like, ‘Hold on, who is this little guy? Like, Isaiah, where are you from? Like, how are you fast like this?’ “

When Rodgers was ready to swap UMass’ logo for an NFL shield, he was already firmly on the radar of Flores, whose pathway from scout to assistant with New England (90 odd miles from campus) drew him to Rodgers making plays in multiple phases, as he was entering his first year as the Dolphins head coach.

Both men had to wait – Rodgers to hear his name late in the sixth round with the 211th selection, and Flores to coach someone he believed was an ascending talent. Historically, good things are well worth it.

“I was all in,” Flores said this summer, rehashing his desire to acquire Rodgers in free agency.

“I’m happy we got him,” the defensive coordinator added. “He’s got a great football IQ and acumen.”

Hamilton and Rhodes are elated, too.

“I was talking to him the other day, and I was just like, ‘I’ve had so many people reach out to me about [your playmaking] you would think that my name is Isaiah Rodgers and I was the guy out there doing it,'” Hamilton joked. “I’m just happy for him. I think that truly the sky’s the limit for him. I know that people say that all the time when it comes to people’s success and things of that nature. But truly, I think that this year for him, whether it’s this late in his career or not, I think this is gonna be a major turning point.

“If I could say anything about him, he’s the class clown, but the class clown that would get straight A’s, which is not typical of a quote-unquote class clown,” Hamilton added. “He’s always been a guy that makes light of certain situations even when things aren’t going the best, and I think that translated over to the field ’cause in order to succeed as a cornerback you gotta have that mentality. Everybody’s gonna get caught on at some point in time. It’s just all about how you kind of bounce back and react to that.”

On the heels of his historic NFC Defensive Player of the Week performance, Rodgers responded to a question – What’d Flo’ tell you after the game? – with frankness: “I told him, that’s why I came here.”

“I just knew, once I finally got my shot, whether it was Year 6 or Year 10, whenever that time came, I was going to be the best Isaiah Rodgers I could be,” the 27-year-old said humbly. “I just think everything happens for a reason, and I think it’s perfect timing for it to be now rather than earlier in my career where I was more of an immature player and don’t think I would’ve meshed [with Flo’] and this system.

“So I think everything is perfect timing,” Rodgers reiterated, flashing a radiant smile. “I’m in the right state of mind, and I just want to go out there and make plays like he expects the whole entire unit to do.”



Wes Phillips Pounds the Table for Unlikely Viking

Blake Brandel Might Be Best at Center of all His Experiments

Phillips spoke to the media on Tuesday and said about Brandel, “The way Blake handled this game, I think we might be looking at a situation where this could be his best position of all five across the line. And getting Jurgens back into practice is just a plus for us. And we’ll see where all those guys are at throughout the week as we assess.”

“Going back to years past, Blake hasn’t played a lot of center, but they’re always working those guys because of these situations, the interior backups particularly, have to at least be swing guards. Having some center flex centers that are only centers, kind of limit you with your roster. Generally, they have to at least function at guard. So those guys get worked in throughout the offseason.”



NFL news, injury updates: J.J. McCarthy back at practice for Vikings ; Lamar Jackson expected back soon




Again, we all know the rules, but in case someone is new:

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Source: https://www.dailynorseman.com/minne...news-and-links-the-eagles-will-be-a-good-test
 
Eagles at Vikings: Final Injury Report

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The Minnesota Vikings and Philadelphia Eagles have issued their final injury report and injury designations in advance of Sunday’s matchup at U.S. Bank Stadium. Here they are:

Minnesota Vikings​

  • OLB Tyler Batty, Knee, Full, QUESTIONABLE
  • LB Blake Cashman, Hamstring, Full, QUESTIONABLE
  • C Michael Jurgens, Hamstring, Full, QUESTIONABLE
  • QB Carson Wentz, Left Shoulder, Full, NO DESIGNATION
  • DL Tyrion Ingram-Dawkins, Hip, Limited, QUESTIONABLE
  • LG Donovan Jackson, Wrist, Full, NO DESIGNATION
  • QB J.J. McCarthy, Ankle, Limited, QUESTIONABLE
  • RT Brian O’Neill, Knee, Limited, QUESTIONABLE
  • OLB Andrew Van Ginkel, Neck, Limited, OUT
  • LT Christian Darrisaw, Vet Rest Day, Full, NO DESIGNATION
  • OLB Jonathan Greenard, Hamstring, Limited, NO DESIGNATION

For the Vikings, they will get Donovan Jackson back at left guard, but probably not Brian O’Neill at right tackle, who remained limited in Friday’s practice and has a questionable designation. Kevin O’Connell announced that Carson Wentz will start at quarterback and Max Brosmer will be the backup. J.J. McCarthy, who remained limited in practice all week, will be the emergency third quarterback on Sunday. Blake Cashman and Tyler Batty should be activated from IR and be available on Sunday given they’ve been full participants in practice all week. Andrew Van Ginkel was ruled out as he is still dealing with his neck injury. Difficult to determine when he’ll be back, but his practicing in full pads and helmet this week was a sign of progress. Tyrion Ingram-Dawkins was limited all week in practice so he seems less likely to be active, but Jonathan Greenard will start after being limited with a hamstring injury in practice this week.

Philadelphia Eagles​

  • TE Grant Calcaterra, Oblique, DNP, OUT
  • LG Landon Dickerson, Ankle, Full, QUESTIONABLE
  • CB Quinton Mitchell, Hamstring, Full, NO DESIGNATION
  • LB Zack Baun, Finger, Full, NO DESIGNATION
  • DT Jalen Carter, Heel, Limited, QUESTIONABLE
  • DT Jordan Davis, Shoulder, Full, NO DESIGNATION

For the Eagles, only three designations. Backup tight-end Grant Calcaterra was ruled out after not practicing all week, while Jalen Carter, who said earlier in the week that he would play Sunday, is listed as questionable after being downgraded to limited on Thursday and Friday, presumably after suffering a setback with his heel injury. He had a questionable designation last weekend and did not play. Starting left guard Landon Dickerson is said to have a questionable designation, although he is not listed with such on the injury report on the Eagles website. There is a mistake there somewhere. He was a full participant in practice on Friday after being limited on Wednesday and Thursday, and wasn’t expected to play on Sunday, but perhaps he’s progressing better than anticipated. Quinyon Mitchell, who was dealing with a hamstring injury, was a full participant in both Thursday and Friday practices and will start at cornerback on Sunday.



Inactive players are announced about an hour before the game on Sunday and that’s when we’ll get the final status on those with questionable designations.

Follow me on X/Bluesky @wludford

Source: https://www.dailynorseman.com/minnesota-vikings-injuries/91905/eagles-at-vikings-final-injury-report
 
Breakdown of Blame (Weeks 3 and 4)

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Between the games against Cincinatti and Pittsburgh, Carson Wentz was sacked nine times. This edition was difficult and took longer to write than I truly wanted it to. There have definitely been some protection issues stemming from an incohesive and injured offensive line for the Minnesota Vikings. I will get to a point where I am compiling data to look at trends throughout the season and pinpoint the most impactful reasons for our pass protection woes. There was a request for pie charts for each play, but unfortunately, I am not there yet. However, I did include visuals for the breakdown of the sacks that occurred versus the Steelers. Let’s get into it!

Week 3 at US Bank Stadium vs. the Cincinatti Bengals.​


Q1 9:45. Wentz gets sacked on 3rd and 7.

Cincinatti lines up in a nickel double mug set. The ball is snapped and the Bengals drop two defenders into coverage and rush four. Wentz takes a quick two step drop and then loads like he is going to throw. He has Hockenson open about five yards down the field.

He has a chance for a completion and a possible first down if Hock is able to get some YAC but decides to pull it down and scramble left. Donovan Jacks was helping Darrisaw with a double team for too long and allowed a free tackle to pursue the quarterback. Wentz tries to scramble out to the left side but goes out too far and causes Darrisaw to lose leverage. He tries to go back inside and is swarmed by three Bengals.

Whose fault? Donovan Jackson 20%. Carson Wentz 75%. Game situation 5%.

Q1 3:46. Carson Wentz gets sacked on 1st and 10.​


Cincinatti lines up in a 4-3 defense. The Vikings come with an extra blocker in Josh Oliver. The ball is snapped, and the right end drops into coverage with a middle linebacker bringing pressure. It’s a six to four advantage. Wentz has all day to throw. The offensive line was holding their ground and created a great pocket. Wentz was looking for Hockenson on a deep crossing route, but it was not open.

Jalen Nailor blew by his defender on the left side, but Wentz didn’t see it, probably because he was locked on #87. Mason was open for an easy dump off and had no defenders within 10 yards of him. Instead of taking the dump off opportunity, Wentz tucks the ball and runs directly into a defensive lineman. In this scenario, the quarterback needs to know where his safety valve is.

Whose fault? Carson Wentz 100%.

Q2 3:38. Carson Wentz gets sacked on 3rd and 12.​


It is a five on four advantage for Minnesota. Cincinatti runs a stunt on the inside and seem to be purposely singling out Michael Jurgens. Number 58 gets him to commit to a double team block with right guard Will Fries and then number 90 for Cincinatti comes from the left side and pushes him off his spot.

Wentz has some room to his left to get outside of the pocket, but is looking downfield and attempts to tuck and run. There were no receivers open down the field, the play likely would have at best wound up as an incompletion. That being said, Wentz’ skillset doesn’t seem to include a strong ability to generate plays off script.

Whose fault? Michael Jurgens 40%. Good defense 50%. Carson Wentz 10%.

Week 4 in Ireland vs. the Pittsburgh Steelers.​

Q1 7:06, Carson Wentz gets sacked on 3rd and 9.​


Pittsburgh lines up with four down linemen and Patrick Queen lurking behind T.J. Watt. The ball was snapped pretty quickly once the Vikings got to the line, which makes me think that they believed they had the right play called for the defense they were seeing. Pittsburgh loaded the left side of the offensive line with three down linemen. It was a four on three advantage in favor of the Vikings on the left side.

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Jordan Mason stayed for a double team with Brian O’Neill on T.J. Watt, who was effectively blocked on the play. However, that left Patrick Queen open with a straight line at the quarterback. It was a great disguise by Pittsburgh, as Queen patiently waited to use Jordan Mason as cover.

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O’Neill is understandably focused on number 90 for Pittsburgh, and once Mason comes of the block, the Pittsburgh defense has a two on one advantage against O’Neill. Patrick Queen then absolutely demolishes Wentz. You can also see an absolutely wide-open Justin Jefferson run across his face, with Wentz never even looking in his direction. With the down and distance situation, Wentz is looking to the endzone for a touchdown instead of checking down to Jefferson, who would likely have at least gotten a first down to extend the drive.

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Whose fault? Great defensive effort 60%. Carson Wentz 20%. Game situation 20%.

Q2 13:20. Carson Wentz gets sacked on 3rd and 12.​

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Before the snap, Wentz motions Zavier Scott to the right side and Patrick Queen follows and stops right on top of T.J. Hockenson. His job is to take away the short pass on third and long. Pittsburgh rushes four on this play, but the protection breaks down quite quickly. Wentz takes a three step drop and looks like he wants to unload quickly to Jalen Nailor, but sees that he is covered.

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The blocking isn’t pretty on this play. You can see Scott with a little room to operate, but you can also see how far he is from the first down marker. On a third and long situation, you need a little time for the play to develop to get a chunk play. You can see above that Darrisaw is losing is matchup on the defensive end. Wentz senses the pressure and tries to roll out to the right. He had the possibility of a first down pass to Addison, but by the time the throw was an option, he was already on the ground.

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It was not a great play by Darrisaw, and coupled with the down and distance, there was not a high likelihood of success on this play.

Whose fault? Game Situation 20%, Christian Darrisaw 80%.

Q3 13:41. Carson Wentz gets sack on 3rd and 11.​

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On another third and long situation, Minnesota is expecting pressure from the Steelers’ defense, and they get it. Before I get too far into this, I will mention that there was a holding penalty by Jordan Mason, which would have negated any play that may have occurred if Wentz hadn’t been sacked. The Pittsburgh defense is no joke, and they absolutely swarmed the offensive line on this play.

Play-three-snap-4-2.jpg

You can see in this frame that it looks like Minnesota has the perfect protection called to stop the five man blitz. Notice Brandel blocking Casey Hayward on the left side of the offensive line. He blocks him into Darrisaw, leaving Mason one-on-one with Patrick Queen.

Play-three-snap-2.jpg

This is the last moment that Wentz has before the pocket collapses. He does rear back looking like he is going to throw to Nailor in the middle of the field, but the timing isn’t right as Nailor’s route is ends up as a comeback at the line to gain. Wentz needed another moment to throw but doesn’t get it.

Play-three-snap-3.jpg

This is the moment where Wentz wants to throw. Nailor is taking a quick step to fake inside and then turns the other way and stops, causing Jalen Ramsey to lose his footing. Also, notice Blake Brandel on the ground. When he came of his block of Hayward, he was tasked with repositioning and blocking number 51. He obviously wasn’t able to make that happen. Again, any completion would have been called back by the holding call, so this was not a great opportunity for Minnesota.

Whose fault? Game situation 30%. Great defense 40%. Blake Brandel 20%. Jordan Mason 10%.

Q3 6:53. Carson Wentz gets sacked on 1st and 10.​

Play-four-snap-1.jpg

You will see in a moment how excellent this play disguise was by Pittsburgh. At the snap, there are four down linemen and two linebackers in the middle. Wentz had just motioned Josh Oliver, who looks like he is going to protect against T.J. Watt on the right side of the offensive line. The Vikings have a play action pass called here, looking to take advantage of an aggressive Steelers defense.

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You can see number 25 for Pittsburgh time the snap well enough to run right in between Blake Brandel and Christian Darrisaw. Mason has to make a split-second decision as soon as he runs past Wentz and is able to block 25 and basically give him the old back body drop. Unfortunately, the linebacker shot the gap right behind him and put pressure on Wentz, who was actually able to avoid the initial hit.

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Wentz attempts to slide back up into the pocket, but 25 for Pittsburgh is right there waiting for him. He had basically a zero percent chance of making anything happen on the play. He probably should have just taken the sack and lived to fight another day. However, he tried to make a play when nothing was there.

Play-four-snip-4.jpg

I utilized the red circle to make it apparent, but as you can see, nobody has the football. That is, in fact, not a good thing. Luckily Minnesota was able to recover the fumble.

Whose fault? Great defense 100%.

Q3 6:04. Carson Wentz gets sacked on 2nd and 11.​

Play-5-Snip-1.jpg

This one is a little difficult to diagnose. This is an interesting nickel formation by the defense. Notice how line backers and the corner are lined up almost directly behind the down linemen, almost like they are trying how many defensive players they actually have in the box. After watching the tape on this a few times, I am still trying to figure out what exactly the plan was for Minnesota on this play.

Play-5-Snip-2.jpg

The play design is a fake pitch designed to get the defense to commit to the blocks sliding to the left. What I don’t understand is why they thought this poor excuse for a block on T.J. Watt was going to make the play successful. Also, number 95 did not bite on this play fake at all, so he was right there to box in Wentz.

Play-5-Snip-4.jpg

It looks like Jordan Addison is his first read here. He does have some space, so if he was going to attempt a throw to Addison this is the time to let it rip. Instead, he switches focus to Hockenson but decides to not throw it and tuck the ball.

Play-5-Snip-5.jpg

Here is a visual of the moment when Wentz goes down. My final analysis on this is that Pittsburgh didn’t play the defense that KO was looking for. I don’t see a whole lot of room for Wentz to make a play, so maybe we see this one come back later in the season with a tweaked design.

Whose fault? Play call 85%. Defensive scheme 15%.

Q3 1:25. Carson Wentz gets sacked on 3rd and 9.​

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This is the sixth and final sack that Wentz took in this game and thank goodness! I am so tired of watching him get destroyed by the Steelers defense. Everyone on the offensive line knows their assignments on this play. The Minnesota offense finds itself in another third and long situation, which has been exacerbating circumstances throughout the entire game.

Play-6-Snip-2.jpg

Going from the left side of the image, you see Thielen chipping T.J. Watt trying to slow him down just a little bit. Will Fries takes on Patrick Queen with a good block. Jordan Mason sees the blitzing linebacker and meets him at the point of attack. Michael Jurgens is basically beaten as soon as the ball touches Carson Wentz’s hands. Brandel has help from Darrisaw on Heyward. But the outside linebacker is coming on a delayed blitz and Darrisaw has to go handle him.

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In this next frame, you can see the pocket collapsing. Justin Skule is unable to handle T.J. Watt, while Brandel and Jurgens are turned around looking the wrong way. Looking at Wentz’ posture, this is the moment he wants to throw. He is looking at Hockenson here, who is running on an out route.

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This is last possible moment Wentz could get the ball out of his hands to have any chance for a completion. The timing on this route is obviously disrupted as Wentz is on his but about one tenth of a second after this moment. As you can see below:

Play-6-Snip-5.jpg

Not much good was going to come of a pass attempt here.

Whose fault? Michael Jurgens 60%. Blake Brandel 20%. Justin Skule 20%.

There you have it. I hope you didn’t enjoy this article, because I sure didn’t enjoy writing it! I’m kidding, it was tough, but I am blessed to even have to opportunity to write for the incredible Daily Norseman community. Hopefully we get healthy and clean things up, so this series can turn into what we can credit for explosive plays! I will save that for a game where Minnesota doesn’t give up ANY sacks.

Until Next Time.

  • Jesse M.

Source: https://www.dailynorseman.com/minne...eeks-3-4-minnesota-vikings-sacks-carson-wentz
 
Philadelphia Eagles at Minnesota Vikings: Game Time, Channel, Radio, Streaming and More

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It’s game day, ladies and gentlemen! For the first time in almost a month, our Minnesota Vikings will be taking to the field at U.S. Bank Stadium as they host the Philadelphia Eagles in Week 7 NFL action. We want as many people as possible to be able to follow along with the action, so let’s make sure everyone has the information they need to do just that.

Television Info​


For just the second time this season, the Vikings will be playing at the best possible time for NFL games to kick off, which is noon Central time on Sunday. This game will be handled by the FOX family of network, including KMSP-9 in the Twin Cities, with Adam Amin and Greg Olsen on the call. If you’re wondering whether or not the game is going to be shown in your area, here is the map from the folks at 506 Sports. The Eagles/Vikings game is represented by the red area.

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If you are outside of the red areas, you’ll have to find the game via YouTube NFL Sunday Ticket.

For our men and women serving overseas. . .I’ve gotta be honest, I have no idea what the American Forces Network is doing right now. Because of the government shutdown, AFN Is down to three channels (AFN News, AFN Now, and AFN Sports), and they’re not putting out their schedules at the moment, so I’m not sure if AFN Sports will be showing the game or not. You’ll have to check on your own.

Radio Info​


If you’re going to be traveling or just prefer to listen to things through the magic of radio, we have updated our list of Vikings Radio Network affiliates for this season. Wherever you are in the upper Midwest, you should be covered.

If you have satellite radio, you can catch the Vikings feed on Channel 228. If you’re utilizing the SiriusXM app, you can listen on the Vikings’ permanent home there, which is Channel 820.

Referee Info​


According to the folks from Football Zebras, the officiating crew for this game will be led by Bill Vinovich. The last time the Vikings saw Vinovich’s crew was last December at U.S. Bank Stadium, when his crew handled the Vikings’ 23-22 victory over the Arizona Cardinals.

Weather Info​


With this game taking place at U.S. Bank Stadium, the weather obviously won’t have any effect on the game play itself. If you’re traveling to the game or you’re planning on tailgating, it’s going to be a pretty perfect fall morning in the Twin Cities according to our friends at WeatherNation. Temperatures will be in the mid-50s at kickoff with winds out of the northwest at around 10 miles/hour, and those conditions will persist until it’s time to make your way home.

Betting Info​


According to Fanduel, the Vikings remain a 2.5-point underdog going into this one, and the over/under is still at 43.5 points.

Streaming Info​


With this game being on FOX, I don’t believe there’s another legal way of streaming this one, outside of Sunday Ticket. If I’m incorrect, someone can correct me in the comments.

Do not, however, link illegal streams in the comments. That’s bad, mmm-kay?

That should be all of the information you need to follow along with all of the action of this afternoon’s game at U.S. Bank Stadium between the Philadelphia Eagles and your Minnesota Vikings. We’ll have our first Open Thread of the day dropping half an hour before kickoff at around 11:30 AM Central, and we hope that you’ll join us!

Source: https://www.dailynorseman.com/minne...ota-vikings-game-time-channel-radio-streaming
 
What Now for the Vikings?

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The Minnesota Vikings just lost a very winnable game due to several key miscues, dropping them to 3-3 on the season and last place in the NFC North division standings. It was the fourth game this season the Vikings have been -2 or worse in the turnover battle, a situation that carries just a 15% win rate in the NFL. The Vikings also failed to score a touchdown on five of six trips to the redzone, due to numerous miscues including a holding penalty that negated a touchdown, a snap over the quarterback’s head, a missed open receiver and bone-headed intentional grounding penalty by Carson Wentz, and a dropped TD pass that could and should have been a more accurate throw. The Vikings defense did a good job bottling up the Eagles’ ground game, but Isaiah Rodgers getting beat twice over the top compromised what had otherwise been a solid defensive performance.

Self-inflicted miscues have plagued the Vikings in five of their first six games this season, whether turnovers, penalties, or missed assignments. It’s an ongoing problem Kevin O’Connell has identified several games ago but so far his team has failed to correct. There are positives as well in different aspects of the Vikings’ game, and they are getting healthier on both sides of the ball, but have only one solid game in six attempts.

So what now for the Vikings as they navigate the season?

Despite Squandered Opportunities, Season is Not Lost​


The Vikings are 3-3 with eleven games to play. Eleven. It’s a long season and everything is still within reach. As disappointing as the first injury-riddled third of the season has been, the Vikings have plenty of opportunities to get right. In many ways, since the Vikings got hit hard with injuries- including to starting quarterback J.J. McCarthy- just getting through the early part of the season within striking distance is an acceptable if disappointing outcome. But it does put the onus on a healthier Vikings team to eliminate the miscues against a tougher slate of opponents to maintain a path to the postseason.

One More Game with Carson Wentz at Quarterback​


The Vikings are on a short week with a Thursday night game upcoming at the Los Angeles Chargers, so that likely means one more game with Carson Wentz at quarterback until a healthy J.J. McCarthy has a full week of practice to prepare for his first start since mid-September. The Vikings face a Chargers team that has been reeling with injuries having dropped three of their last four games. Their one victory being over the hapless Dolphins. The Chargers are a very beatable team at this point despite the Vikings having to travel on a short week. Managing a victory here sets the Vikings up for the return of McCarthy and a nearly fully healthy team if Andrew Van Ginkel is able to return as well.

Healthy Vikings Team vs. Tough Slate of Opponents​


Getting J.J. McCarthy back with a healthy and solid offensive line and Jordan Addison and Aaron Jones is a recipe for an improved offense to go along with a solid defense that may be fully healthy if Andrew Van Ginkel is back.

Their first game at this point may be the toughest on the schedule at Detroit. Not a must-win game but a victory would bring a ton of momentum. Home games against a Ravens team that will still be missing some key pieces and a Bears team a Vikings team missing several pieces beat on the road are both tough but winnable games. Road games against the Packers and Seahawks will be key in determining potential playoff seeding. J.J. McCarthy will need to be hitting his stride over this stretch of games for the Vikings to have a chance at the postseason.

The Vikings will then have tests against three NFC East teams- Commanders followed by road games at Dallas and New York- to keep pace leading to their final two games- both at home- against the Lions and Packers that will also likely have a big impact on postseason seeding.

It’s a Long Season​


One week can bring big swings in performance and outlook for any NFL team. What seems impossible or inevitable one week can change with a couple upsets and/or injuries. The Ravens were Super Bowl favorites at the beginning of the season. The Colts and Patriots looked like also-rans. The Chiefs looked doomed but now look as strong as ever.

In the NFC, it’s pretty wide open with no real dominant teams- and no real cupcakes either. 9-8 may be good enough for a playoff spot the way the season is playing out. But for the Vikings, their focus has to be on the Minnesota Vikings- who have been their toughest opponent so far this season. When the Vikings commit fewer mistakes than their opponents, they win. They have the roster to compete and beat any team in the league, but not when losing the turnover battle or batting under .250 on third down or in the red zone. While not perfect, the Vikings defense is good enough to keep them in the game against any team, but the offense needs competent quarterback play to take advantage of their host of offensive weapons and now healthy offensive line.

They’ll have another opportunity in four days and need to start getting it right as McCarthy comes back and ramps up over the rest of the season. Everything is still in reach for the Vikings, but they have to stop beating themselves before they can become a contender.



Follow me on X/Bluesky @wludford

Source: https://www.dailynorseman.com/minnesota-vikings-2025-season/91980/what-now-for-the-vikings
 
Philadelphia Eagles 28, Minnesota Vikings 22: Red Zone Woes Doom Vikings

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The Minnesota Vikings had plenty of opportunities to get themselves a victory over the defending world champions. In the end, however, they simply made too many mistakes to make it happen.

The Vikings came away with just one touchdown in six trips to the red zone at U.S. Bank Stadium, and their inability to convert in those situations left the door open for the Philadelphia Eagles, who defeated the Vikings by a score of in Week 7 action.

The Eagles drew first blood in this one, as they took the opening kickoff and marched 75 yards in 12 plays, capping things off with a 37-yard touchdown pass from Jalen Hurts to A.J. Brown to take an early 7-0 lead.

Minnesota cut into the Philadelphia lead on their first possession, as Will Reichard connected on a 59-yard field goal to make the score 7-3. The field goal attempt was preceded by replacement center Blake Brandel snapping the ball way over Carson Wentz’s head on third down, taking the offense from being in position to score a touchdown to having to settle for the long field goal attempt.

Philadelphia added to their lead early in the second quarter, as Wentz threw a pass right to Eagles’ linebacker Jalyx Hunt, who went into the end zone untouched for a 42-yard pick six to put the visitors ahead, 14-3.

Wentz then followed that up with another interception, when he launched a pass towards Jordan Addison in double coverage that was picked off by Andrew Mukuba to set the Eagles up near midfield. The Vikings’ defense prevented any further damage, and they got themselves into scoring position on their next possession. However, a touchdown pass from Wentz to Jalen Nailor on 4th-and-1 was taken off the board by a holding call on Blake Brandel, and the Vikings called on Reichard again. He connected from 33 yards out, and the Vikings still found themselves down by a touchdown at 14-6.

Reichard cut the deficit more on the Vikings’ first drive of the second half, as he connected from 28 yards out to make the score 14-9. The Vikings pushed down into the red zone on their drive, but Wentz took a pretty inexplicable intentional grounding penalty and forced the purple to settle for three.

It didn’t take the Eagles long to increase their lead after that, as two plays into their next possession Hurts found Devonta Smith for a long 79-yard touchdown that saw him get behind the Vikings’ defense on a blitz. That score made it 21-9 midway through the third quarter.

The Vikings then finally made it into the end zone, as Jordan Mason took a direct snap and outran the Eagles’ defense to the left pylon for a 1-yard touchdown run to make it 21-16 late in the third quarter.

.@jpmason27 on his own!

📺: @NFLonFOX pic.twitter.com/SoBI9MYepR

— Minnesota Vikings (@Vikings) October 19, 2025

The Eagles had a chance to extend their lead on the second play of the fourth quarter, as they called on Jake Elliott for a 42-yard field goal attempt, but he pushed it wide to the right to keep it a 5-point game. The Vikings then got more scoring from Will Reichard, as he connected from 35 yards out to make it a 2-point game, 21-19.

Philadelphia had another answer on the next drive, as Hurts threw his third touchdown pass of the afternoon. He found A.J. Brown again, as the two of them connected from 26 yards out to put the Eagles ahead, 28-19, with six and a half minutes remaining in regulation.

The Vikings had a touchdown taken off the board late in the fourth quarter, as T.J. Hockenson made an unreal effort on a throw from Wentz that was originally called a touchdown, but after review it was ruled that Hockenson didn’t maintain control all the way through the catch. Instead, the Vikings got Will Reichard’s fifth field goal of the day, a 29-yarder to make it 28-22 with just under two minutes remaining.

It looked like the Vikings might have an opportunity to get the ball back, but Hurts came up huge on a 3rd-and-9 play when he found A.J. Brown for a gain of 45 yards to salt it away for the Eagles.

The Vikings fall to 3-3 on the season, and they now have to turn around on a short week and make a trip to the West Coast when they face the Los Angeles Chargers in Week 8 on Thursday Night Football.

The Vikings lose to the Eagles in their return after their bye week by a final score of 28-22. Thank you to everyone who got their coverage of this week’s game right here at The Daily Norseman!

Source: https://www.dailynorseman.com/minne...gles-minnesota-vikings-final-score-game-recap
 
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