News Vikings Team Notes

Wild Card Monday Playoff Discussion

gettyimages-2255082144.jpg


It’s time to wrap up Wild Card Weekend with the last AFC matchup of the first round. We’re heading to Pittsburgh, as the AFC South champion Pittsburgh Steelers will play host to the Houston Texans. Kickoff for this one will happen at 7:15 PM Central time, and the game will be broadcast on ABC and ESPN.

The winner of this game will travel to take on the New England Patriots in next weekend’s AFC Divisional Playoffs. The other AFC divisional matchup will see the Buffalo Bills hit the road to take on the top-seeded Denver Broncos.

The two NFC divisional matchups will see three NFC West teams among the final four clubs. One matchup will be one of the matchups that we saw in Week 18, as the top-seeded Seattle Seahawks will face off with the San Francisco 49ers, while the other side of the bracket will have the Chicago Bears hosting the Los Angeles Rams.

If you’re going to be watching tonight’s contest, here’s a place for you to do it with your fellow Minnesota Vikings fans.

Enjoy tonight’s game, folks!

Source: https://www.dailynorseman.com/minne...ard-monday-playoff-discussion-texans-steelers
 
Jordan Addison Arrested. Again.

gettyimages-2254814952.jpg


UPDATE: The law firm that represents Jordan Addison has released a statement.

On Jordan’s behalf, his legal team has already initiated the investigation, identified witnesses, and we are reviewing the viability of a claim for false arrest. He looks forward to the legal process and upon full investigation, we are confident Mr. Addison will be exonerated.

— Younger & Associates/QB Limited/Tim Younger (@YoungerAssoc) January 13, 2026

The statement reads:

On Jordan’s behalf, his legal team has already initiated the investigation, identified witnesses, and we are reviewing the viability of a claim for false arrest. He looks forward to the legald process and upon full investigation, we are confident Mr. Addison will be exonerated.

Original story below.



The offseason for the Minnesota Vikings is officially eight days old, and we already have our annual Jordan Addison offseason issue.

Heavy Sports is reporting that Addison was arrested and charged with trespassing at the Seminole Hard Rock Hotel and Casino on Monday at approximately 3:46 AM local time. He was charged with a first-degree misdemeanor for trespassing inside an occupied structure or conveyance and was released on a $500 cash bond, according to the Hillsborough County Sheriff’s Office.

This is the third consecutive offseason that Addison has run into trouble with the law. As a rookie, he was caught going 140 miles an hour, an incident where he pled guilty to a single count of speeding to avoid a charge of reckless driving. This past offseason, he reached a plea deal from an incident where he was found asleep behind the wheel of his car, blocking traffic on a freeway near the Los Angeles Airport. That plea deal caused him to miss the first three games of the 2025 season for violations of the league’s Personal Conduct policy.

This is a relatively fresh incident, so there has not been any statement from the team at the current time, but I’m sure they’ll have the usual statement about not having any further comment at the present time here relatively soon. Kevin O’Connell and Kwesi Adofo-Mensah are currently in the middle of their season-ending press conference, so it might be a bit.

This is not particularly great timing for Addison. The team is going to have to come to a decision soon as to whether or not they’re going to pick up the fifth-year option on Addison’s rookie contract, and given his history of off-field issues, he may be looking at more discipline from the league depending on what happens with this latest incident.

In any case, it appears we have our first story of the offseason to keep track of. As always, as more news from this comes down, we’ll bring it to you here.

Source: https://www.dailynorseman.com/minne...rdan-addison-arrested-again-minnesota-vikings
 
Minnesota Vikings $50M Cap Crunch 2026?

Vikings face $44-50M cap overage in 2026! Tyler Forness & Dave Stefano break down cuts (Hargrave, Jones, Hockenson), restructures (Jefferson, Greenard, Darrisaw), & extensions on The Real Forno Show.


The Minnesota Vikings are staring down a massive projected $44-50 million overage in effective salary cap space for 2026 after their 2025 spending spree—discover how GM Kwesi Adofo-Mensah can fix it with smart cuts, restructures, and extensions in this eye-opening episode of The Real Forno Show!

In this insightful episode of The Real Forno Show, hosted by Vikings reporter Tyler Forness and producer Dave Stefano on Vikings 1st & SKOL, the duo delivers a comprehensive salary cap primer for the Minnesota Vikings’ challenging 2026 offseason. Tyler breaks down effective cap space vs. projected figures from Over The Cap, explaining, “right now… the Vikings are the second to last in the NFL… negative 44 [million]… effective cap space… negative 49.99 million,” factoring in draft picks and roster minimums. With $20.7 million potential rollover from 2025, the team needs to clear roughly $28-36 million to get compliant, but Tyler stresses it’s manageable: “it is pretty easy to fix the salary cap.” They explore options like extensions for foundational pieces, restructures to spread money, and cuts for veterans, while weighing long-term ramifications and why pushing costs to future years works for stars like Justin Jefferson. Dave adds, “This was done on purpose… it will be relatively easy.”

Key Points from the Episode:

  • Vikings projected $44-50M over (effective cap space includes draft picks; rollover helps reduce to ~$28M needed).
  • Extend Brian O’Neill: Saves $15M+ (new hit ~$8M; keeps cornerstone RT long-term).
  • Restructure Jonathan Greenard, Justin Jefferson (saves $13-17M each), Christian Darrisaw ($10M); retain young talent.
  • Cut or restructure T.J. Hockenson: Cut saves ~$9M but opens TE hole; restructure preferred due to blocking/role value.
  • Likely cuts: Javon Hargrave ($10-11M savings), Aaron Jones ($7-8M; injury concerns), Ryan Kelly ($8M; concussion history/retirement risk).
  • Overall: Combo of 5 moves could create $60-90M space; pushes money forward but aligns with core pieces staying.

Listen:

View Link

Watch:


Don’t miss The Real Forno Show for expert, no-BS Minnesota Vikings analysis, cap breakdowns, draft previews, and offseason strategy on this top Vikings podcast! Subscribe to Vikings 1st & SKOL on YouTube, hit notifications, and join the SKOL community for weekly deep dives.

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.

Question:


What move do you think the Vikings should prioritize first—restructuring Jefferson, cutting Hargrave, or extending O’Neill? Drop your thoughts in the comments! SKOL!

Source: https://www.dailynorseman.com/minnesota-vikings-podcasts/94513/minnesota-vikings-50m-cap-crunch-2026
 
Will Reichard, Andrew DePaola Garner All-Pro Honors

gettyimages-2253015469.jpg


The National Football League has announced the All-Pro teams for the 2025 season, and two-thirds of the Minnesota Vikings’ specialists have been recognized for their play this season.

Kicker Will Reichard was named a First-Team All-Pro for his performance this past season, while long snapper Andrew DePaola was named to the Second Team.

For Reichard, this is his first time being named to an All-Pro squad. We went over most of his accomplishments a couple of days ago when he was named the NFC’s Special Teams Player of the Month for December/January, but it’s pretty hard to argue that he wasn’t the best kicker in the NFL this past season. He was perfect on his extra points, only missed two field goals (one in controversial fashion), and did pretty much everything the Vikings asked of him after a rookie season that saw him battle injuries and struggle a bit after his return. If there were any questions about Reichard, he certainly answered them in 2025.

This is the fourth consecutive year that DePaola has made one of the All-Pro teams, and he’s alternating between the first and second teams. He was a First-Team All-Pro in both 2022 and 2024, and was named to the Second Team in 2023 and 2025. At age 38, he’s the oldest member of the Vikings’ roster, but to this point has not given any indication that he’s planning on hanging it up or anything like that. He’s due to be a free agent, but I’d be pretty surprised if the Vikings didn’t work out some sort of deal to bring him back.

Reichard and DePaola were the only two members of the Vikings’ roster to be named to the All-Pro squads this season, which is both expected and disappointing at the same time.

Congratulations to Will Reichard and Andrew DePaola on being named All-Pros for their performances during the 2025 NFL season!

Source: https://www.dailynorseman.com/minne...andrew-depaola-all-pro-team-minnesota-vikings
 
Brian Flores Scores Two More Interviews

gettyimages-2244828921.jpg


In today’s episode of As the Flores Turns, our beloved defensive coordinator has gotten two more interviews, one of which could turn out to be particularly worrisome for fans of our Minnesota Vikings.

According to our friends over at Hogs Haven (among numerous other sources), today Brian Flores interviewed for the vacant defensive coordinator job with the Washington Commanders. The Commanders fired their former defensive coordinator, Joe Whitt, at the end of the season, and head coach Dan Quinn had taken over the defensive playcalling responsibilities from him during the season as the Commanders fielded one of the worst defenses in the NFL. I honestly don’t think that Flores would leave the Vikings to make a parallel move to try to rebuild a defense as bad as Washington’s, but I suppose it couldn’t hurt him as far as potential leverage for a new contract is concerned.

The one that could be problematic for us Vikings fans comes from the AFC North, as the Pittsburgh Steelers are reportedly going to be interviewing Flores for their head coaching vacancy after Mike Tomlin stepped down after nineteen seasons on Tuesday. Flores was the linebackers coach in Pittsburgh in 2022 before the Vikings hired him to be their defensive coordinator, and the Steelers just seem to be the sort of franchise that would be willing to ignore the fact that Flores still has his lawsuit pending against the NFL in order to make him their head coach.

While the Pittsburgh job might be a bit of a rebuild. . .they’ve got an aging roster and a big question mark at quarterback, among other things. . .it also comes with the benefit of having, quite possibly, the most patient ownership group in NFL history. Since the Steelers hired Chuck Noll in 1969, there have been twice as many Popes (6) as there have been Pittsburgh Steelers head coaches (3). Noll held the job from 1969 to 1991, then Bill Cowher took over in 1992 and stayed until 2006, and then Tomlin was hired and stayed in that position until just a couple of days ago. So, if the Steelers do have to do a full-on rebuild, at least Flores would, in all likelihood, get the opportunity to see it through all the way.

We’ll do our best to keep up with everything that’s going on with Brian Flores and any other members of the Vikings’ coaching staff that might be swapping out over the coming days and weeks. For now, I guess we just have to keep our fingers crossed and hope that he really, really likes Minnesota enough that he wants to just hang out and keep running the defense he’s put together over the past three seasons.

Source: https://www.dailynorseman.com/minne...elers-washington-commanders-minnesota-vikings
 
And The Award Goes To…

gettyimages-1238572691.jpg


The 2025 Minnesota Vikings’ season is officially over. Nine wins, eight losses, and a whole bunch of “what-ifs.” There was some good and some bad, but overall, given last year’s performance and expectations, without a playoff berth, it’s impossible to call this campaign “successful.” Let’s say it was… passably enjoyable?

As we’re gearing up for the NFL honors and the traditional movie, television, and music awards season over the next few months, let me take a moment to present some of my personal awards for the Vikings’ season.

And the award goes to…

Most Valuable Player (MVP) Award: Will Reichard (PK)

Unless it’s 1982, your coach is Joe Gibbs, and your kicker is named Mark Moseley, this isn’t ideal. The Baby-Faced Assassin (h/t to “oofda”) with stellar hair was the epitome of consistency in a season defined by inconsistency everywhere you looked. A 94.3% success rate on field goals (33 for 35), with one of those misses more controversial than the recent Stranger Things series finale. Perfect on extra points for the season. Top 10 in points scored at the position, despite the Vikings ranking 28th in total yards. Nailing a franchise-record 62-yarder. The NFC Special Teams Player of the Month for December.

Not since the 2009 NFC Championship Game have the Vikings been robbed so blatantly. Our hero was denied Pro Bowl honors. At least he did make the Next Gen Stats 2025 All-Pro Team. Still, what a joke.

(UPDATE: After this was uploaded, it was announced that Will Reichard was indeed named an NFL First-Team All-Pro. Well-deserved.)

The good news? Historically, the terms kicker and heartbreak have gone together like peanut butter and jelly or Rick Spielman and 7th-rounders. We now have confidence that we may finally have found our Adam Vinatieri, or, at minimum, that we won’t have to enter high-pressure situations with that all-too-familiar feeling of perpetual dread.

Most Improved Player Award: Dallas Turner (OLB)

You can never have enough pass rushers, and the Vikings appear to have hit on a potential perennial Pro Bowl talent in Dallas Turner. None of this was guaranteed when the season began. The pressure was on, especially given the draft capital used to trade up to select him in the 2024 NFL Draft.

Fortunately, Brian Flores’s praise of Turner’s development in OTAs, minicamps, and training camp proved prescient. His snap count rose from 28% to 66% because Andrew Van Ginkel missed significant time early in the season, creating more opportunities later on. He finished the season with Pro Football Focus (PFF) grades of 83.6 and 72.2 against the Lions and Packers, respectively. Overall, Turner tallied eight sacks, 15 additional QB hits, four forced fumbles, 11 tackles for loss, and 66 combined tackles. He won’t even turn 23 until next month.

If trends hold, KAM has put together some solid first-round hits since 2022. While J.J. McCarthy remains a work in progress, Jordan Addison has been great, Dallas Turner has had his breakout season, and Donovan Jackson put together a solid rookie campaign despite battling multiple injuries.

Breakout Player Award: Jalen Redmond (DL)

In a season of ups, downs, and some head-scratching moments, I’ve enjoyed nothing more this year than the feel-good story of Jalen Redmond. Given the age and salary cap considerations tied to the Javon Hargrave and Jonathan Allen signings, the defensive line was always going to be a glaring need heading into 2026. Instead of a five-alarm fire, Redmond now gives the Vikings some flexibility. It should still be an early priority in the draft, but now KAM can venture into Day 2 knowing he has an emerging star on the roster, should the board dictate that the Vikings go CB, safety, or center with the #18 overall pick.

In his 793 snaps, Redmond logged a 72.7 overall PFF grade for the season (22nd/134), recorded 35 pressures (25th/134), six sacks (11th/134), 42 solo tackles (9th/134), and a forced fumble for good measure. While we can’t proclaim that we’re looking at the next John Randle, it would surprise absolutely no one if Redmond makes the Pro Bowl next season. Likewise, an extension this offseason is well deserved.

Best Free Agent Signing Award: Eric Wilson (ILB)

Eric Wilson’s second stint with the Vikings was nothing short of fantastic. Originally signed to a 1-year, $2.6 million deal for what appeared to be veteran depth, he laughed in the idea’s face and had a career-best season. In 16 starts, Wilson recorded 115 combined tackles, 6.5 sacks, 17 tackles for loss, and four forced fumbles. He also made the Next Gen Stats 2025 All-Pro Team, which noted the following: “Wilson’s 22.5% pressure rate was the highest by any player with 150+ pass rushes since 2022, his 4.4 yards per target allowed in coverage were the fewest among linebackers, and his 20 run stuffs were the third-most in the NFL.”

Wilson was an outright menace for opposing offenses all season long. He fit Flores’s scheme brilliantly and seemed to be at or near the ball on every damn play. Like Redmond, he’s earned a nice raise this offseason – and hopefully it’s with the Vikings. Unlike Redmond, who is an Exclusive Rights Free Agent (ERFA), Wilson is an Unrestricted Free Agent (UFA) and can sign anywhere. Where there’s a will, there’s a way, and you’d think KAM and Rob Brzezinski will figure out a way to keep Wilson on the roster next season despite salary cap hurdles.

I’m So Glad This Guy is Our Best Player Award: Justin Jefferson (WR)

In a season marked by, let’s call it, “erratic” quarterback play, Justin Jefferson still managed 84 receptions and 1,048 yards. That’s impressive enough. But the reason I’m so grateful he’s on my favorite football team is the things you can’t ascribe numbers to. The leadership. Serving as the team’s mentor and motivator. Embodying the idea that saying the right things can be just as important as doing the right things. On and off the field, being the example young players aspire to emulate.

Jefferson had every reason to be frustrated by how this year played out. In the NFL, nothing is guaranteed. Sacrificing a season in his prime to spend valuable snaps as a decoy while a 22-year-old, first-time starter goes through developmental hiccups is the ultimate selfless move. I think J.J. McCarthy will be our QBOTF. I have a great deal of confidence in that, in fact. Is it a certainty? Absolutely not. What is guaranteed is that I know Justin Jefferson will do everything in his power to make that a reality, in word and deed. Let’s hope it’s a winning bet. Yeah, he’s earned it.

Source: https://www.dailynorseman.com/minne...-goes-to-minnesota-vikings-2025-season-awards
 
Aaron Jones Named Finalist for USAA Salute to Service Award

gettyimages-2253529714.jpg


The three finalists for this year’s Salute to Service Award, sponsored by USAA, were announced earlier on Thursday, and the Minnesota Vikings’ nominee is among them.

Vikings running back Aaron Jones has joined Dallas Cowboys tight end Jake Ferguson and San Francisco 49ers running back Christian McCaffrey as the finalists for this year’s award. The winner will be announced at this year’s NFL Honors ceremony, which will take place on 5 February in San Francisco.

Jones’ family has a distinguished history of military service. His late father, Alvin Sr., served 29 years in the Army, and his mother, Vurgess, served 27 years in the Army. His older brother, Xavier, is currently serving in the Air Force. Aaron and his twin brother, Alvin Jr., also founded the A&A All the Way Foundation, a nonprofit organization that emphasizes support of youth in military families. In addition, for each home game during the 2025 season, Jones hosted a military family, giving them each a personal visit to express his thanks and making sure they had a memorable game day experience.

Should Jones win the award, USAA will donate $25,000 to his nonprofit of choice, and the NFL Foundation will match that donation with another $25,000.

Congratulations to Aaron Jones on being one of the three finalists for this year’s USAA Salute to Service Award, and here’s hoping that he’s the one who gets his name called at the NFL Honors ceremony for the big prize!

Source: https://www.dailynorseman.com/minne...saa-salute-to-service-award-minnesota-vikings
 
Minnesota Vikings News and Links: Giddy-up!

gettyimages-2254636887.jpg


Well, boys and girls. Looks like we will continue to beat that horse!

The offseason fun/drama is in full effect now. The press conferences from KAM and KOC were interesting. There are a lot of interpretations out there about what their plans are for the QB room. The consensus appears to be that they are aware of the fact that they need to upgrade that room. It does not mean that JJ is going to be gone or is not the starter. I am guessing there will be a competition. JJ has shown some really good flashes. I would not call it All Pro level yet but he is still young. The issue is that KAM and KOC are probably aware that they cannot miss the playoffs again next year no matter what happens at QB. That is good a thing. Never forget that in the end …

View Link

Minnesota Vikings News and Links​


Kevin O’Connell has ‘a lot of confidence’ Vikings will retain DC Brian Flores as coaching carousel spins

Vikings coach Kevin O’Connell told reporters Tuesday that Flores sits atop their list of priorities as they enter the 2026 offseason and feels the urgency to keep the coordinator, whom O’Connell said the Vikings have “been really aggressive” in pursuing.

“I think he’s more than deserving, everything he’s brought to our organization over these last three years,” O’Connell said, via the Minnesota Star Tribune. “Not surprised people are wanting to talk to him about that role. Excited for him to do so, all while knowing our No. 1 priority — really before the season even ended — our No. 1 priority has been to get that thing done with him.”

O’Connell stated he has “a lot of confidence” the Vikings will come to an agreement to keep Flores. General manager Kwesi Adofo-Mensah, meanwhile, took a different approach to the matter, attempting to quell worries about a defensive decline if Flores were to leave.

“He is unique, and he does have a unique play style, but if you really look down deep, what does Flo value?” Adofo-Mensah said. “Versatility, physicality, the things that matter in good defensive football … that everybody values. Flo kind of takes those pieces and puts it together in an artwork that’s different than most, but the core colors that are a part of that painting, a lot of people share those same things.”



Kevin O’Connell talks J.J. McCarthy, goals for Vikings’ 2026 QB room

“In the quarterback room, it’s about having the deepest talented room you possibly can, each and every year,” O’Connell said. “What that looks like at a pretty impactful position on your salary cap, when you’re able to possibly plan for your depth chart looking in a way where you can be competitive no matter what.”

“I think there has to be (competition),” O’Connell said. “I think that’s what’s going to make everybody better in that room. I definitely want a competitive situation in that room.”

Asked directly if he wants McCarthy to be the starter in 2026, Adofo-Mensah gave a non-committal answer, not wanting to put himself or the team in any sort of bind. O’Connell wasn’t asked that question directly, but he also straddled the line between expressing support for McCarthy and making it clear that competition is needed to elevate the room as a whole.

“Obviously J.J.’s gonna be a major, major emphasis for our staff and our team and me personally,” O’Connell said. “We’ll figure out what that looks like as we navigate the early part of this offseason, when it comes to managing the roster. I think ultimately, we’ve gotta decide how to not only continue J.J.’s progression, allow him to continue to ascend as a young player, but at the same time, I think the competition in that room will only enhance our entire team.”

At this juncture, McCarthy appears to be too talented and inexperienced to give up on, but also too flawed and injury-prone to fully commit to. That’s why bringing in a veteran and letting a true competition play out feels like a logical answer.

“I was really encouraged by the type of football he started to play toward the second half of the season, finishing the way he did,” O’Connell said. “But we’re still looking at a quarterback who’s started ten games. Ten out of a possible 34 in two years. Not the ideal path for a young quarterback to develop on the field, but I thought he did.”

This is a critical offseason for McCarthy. He’s got a lot of work to do to put himself in position to win an offseason competition and hold onto the starting job in Minnesota. It starts with developing consistent, repeatable mechanics that can allow him to be more accurate and stack completions together within the Vikings’ offense. The one thing that neither O’Connell nor Adofo-Mensah have any doubt about it how hard McCarthy will work to get to where they need him to be.

“He wants it more than anybody I’ve ever been around, and he’s got an offseason where he’s going to have time to not rehab an injury,” Adofo-Mensah said. “And we’re excited to see what development he takes and the steps he takes towards being available for us.”

“J.J. McCarthy is a guy that wants to be great,” O’Connell said. “I know he’s going to work tirelessly to do that. I know his teammates have a lot of confidence in what he’s gonna go to work to improve on this offseason and come back, have a great offseason, and be ready to hit the ground running in 2026. I think a deep and talented quarterback room will only enhance his ability to do that, and (I) look forward to being a part of that process.”



Vikings GM admits mistakes on Daniel Jones; trusted J.J. McCarthy despite ‘incomplete information’

In an eye-opening press conference on Tuesday, Minnesota Vikings general manager Kwesi Adofo-Mensah admitted that the Vikings didn’t handle Daniel Jones’ free agency the right way last offseason, while also acknowledging that J.J. McCarthy started in 2025 despite “incomplete information.”

“You’re trying to make sure that you don’t lock yourselves into what you did and thinking that it’s always right,” Adofo-Mensah said. “I always go back to the process and what we thought at the time. It’s easier to go and be revisionist and results-based, but going to really think through what we had at the time, I still understand why we did what we did. The results maybe didn’t play out the way we wanted them to, but ultimately, I think that at the end of the day, we could’ve executed better in certain places.”

Adofo-Mensah didn’t give specifics initially, but he later admitted that he regrets how they handled the Daniel Jones negotiations. Here’s what he said when a reporter asked if the Vikings were “overconfident” about Jones returning.

“I don’t want to say overconfidence, but I do think him being here was something that we kind of considered and thought would impact his decision. But ultimately, there are free agents, and to your point, learning lessons. I think, execution-wise, you have to treat it as such. No matter what the conversation is or relationships are, free agents are free for a reason, and they’re allowed to vet all their options. Ultimately, we could’ve executed better around that.”

Adofo-Mensah then said that they gave McCarthy the chance to start this season even though they had limited information to support the notion that he was ready.

“We talk a lot about the path of young players isn’t linear, and you don’t know how the first three games, four or five games are going to go. We have a lot of historical studies about what the first few games are going to look like, or that first year could look like, in a sense, and ultimately, that’s why we tried to build the team, knowing those growth pains could come, to be able to overcome them and withstand them, in a certain sense,” Adofo-Mensah began.

“Ultimately, a lot of this job — RG [Ryan Grigson] calls it fast eyes, and this isn’t a fast-eye decision, but in a perfect world, you would have had a full sample, three years of watching him play in the NFL before. That’s not how this works. And sometimes you have to go on incomplete information. And the information we had was all good, but it was admittedly incomplete and small-sampled. So ultimately, we trusted in the information we had, we trusted our coaches, we trusted in the team around him to do that. And so, it’s hard to — really when you think about that and then go look back at the season, as I talked about, you saw the improvement at the end. You saw the flash of the player we thought he could be. So, in that sense, I can’t say that we were overconfident. Maybe the timing didn’t work out with other aspects of our team, whether that be injuries or different things like that. But ultimately, we’re comfortable with where we are, and we’re excited about where he can go.”



Takeaways: Kevin O’Connell & Kwesi Adofo-Mensah on Vikings 2025 Season & Coaching Staff

“This season was not, in any way, shape or form, what we planned or hoped for,” O’Connell said, “but just the way they finished, the way they continue to fight, the way they stayed together and continue to strive for success through adversity, was impressive to watch. And so fortunate to be around the great group I get to be around.

“The same for our coaches. Total compliment to our coaching staff for helping to persevere through what was a difficult season at times and, ultimately, finishing the way we did, 5-0 down the stretch, shows a lot about those guys,” O’Connell continued. “And most importantly, our players, our staff.”

Adofo-Mensah called it “obviously disappointing” to be on the outside of the playoffs looking in.

“That’s not the standard we set here for ourselves. It’s not the standard we’ve set for our fans,” he said. “At the same time, I have a great deal of respect for how the season finished.

“That’s a great credit to K.O. and his staff, the core group of players that we’ve assembled in this locker room,” Adofo-Mensah added. “We had a lot of things that showed flashes of the team we wanted to be, but ultimately we weren’t consistent enough, and that’s what we’re going to try to do, find that consistency — find that ability to turn flash into reality over the course of a 17-game season to get us where we want to go.”



No 1. Mike Pettine retiring

O’Connell shared during his press conference that Assistant Head Coach Mike Pettine will be retiring.



No 2. Outlook on Flores

O’Connell noted more than once that the organization has been “aggressive” in efforts to retain Flores while also respecting his opportunity to interview with other teams. (ESPN’s Adam Schefter announced via X Tuesday that the Ravens had completed an interview with Flores for their head coach vacancy.)

“Flo’ knows exactly how we feel about him, but at the same time, we want to be really supportive. I’m really excited for him,” O’Connell said. “I think he’s going to, for sure, talk to one team about their head coaching position. Would not be surprised at all if it ends up being multiple. I think he’s more than deserving with everything he’s brought to our organization over these past three years. It’s been an awesome process to go back to when I first sat down with him, really talked about this vision and his impact and what it’s inevitably ended up being. It’s been a really positive thing for me. Our relationship is super strong.

“We’re talking almost every day and just making sure he knows the intent of where we’re at to have him as our defensive coordinator,” O’Connell continued. “He’s kept no secrets about his desire to stay here doing that role, as well. But I think it’s important that he totally commits to going through this process, especially the head-coaching process, and putting his best foot forward — which I know he will.”

O’Connell later added: “Based upon my conversations […] I have a lot of confidence we’re going to be able to get something done with him as our defensive coordinator.”



No 3. Darrisaw and the OL

Minnesota used 26 (26!!) offensive line combinations during the 2025 campaign.

“I think the lineup we thought we’d have played 83 snaps together? … That’s not what I expected,” Adofo-Mensah said. “I stand up here, partly, because I’ve been accountable my whole life, and I don’t think you run from opportunities to get better; so I always want to make sure I’m doing that. But you can also point out context that might be an outlier — and what would it look like if they did have the ability to play together?

“It’s something we’re thinking about, and you’re trying to make sure you don’t let the outlier kind of thing rob you of the lesson,” he added. “That’s really how I would try and phrase it.”

Adofo-Mensah was asked specifically about Christian Darrisaw, who returned this past season from an ACL tear but continued to experience setbacks. He noted “time is on our side” with Darrisaw now being more than a year removed from the initial injury.

“Another year of rehab, strengthening, things like that,” the Vikings GM said. “But we’ve seen how important he has been to our play. So when we’re addressing things in the draft or free agency, we have to be mindful of that.”

Adofo-Mensah emphasized making sure the team has ample depth at the left tackle position.

“I don’t want to say ‘insurance,’ but we’re always trying to have a roster aspiration as a GM, that when that first guy goes out, the next guy comes in and is as good as [the starter],” he said. “Is that reality? No. But that’s the mindset we’ve got to take, and that’s a position we’ve probably got to be more mindful of.”



Note: Kwesi continues to baffle with his ramblings. Like this “you don’t let the outlier kind of thing rob you of the lesson”. What lesson? Then he says this “that’s a position we’ve probably got to be more mindful of” when talking about a backup to Darrisaw. Was he not “mindful” when he signed Skule?



Jordan Addison’s legal team ‘confident’ he’ll be ‘exonerated’ after arrest

According to Hillsborough County Jail records, Addison was arrested by Seminole Indian Police at 3:46 a.m. local time on Monday and booked into the county jail at 7:33 a.m. He was released at 2:40 p.m. Monday after posting a $500 cash bond.

Addison was booked for probable cause trespassing in an occupied structure or conveyance on the 5200 block of Orient Road, which is the site of the Seminole Hard Rock Hotel & Casino. The alleged crime is a first-degree misdemeanor.

“On Jordan’s behalf, his legal team has already initiated the investigation, identified witnesses, and we are reviewing the viability of a claim for false arrest,” Younger & Associates said on social media. “He looks forward to the legal process and upon full investigation, we are confident Mr. Addison will be exonerated.”

Addison’s arrest hit the news cycle just before Vikings head coach Kevin O’Connell and general manager Kwesi Adofo-Mensah were scheduled to address the media for their annual season-ending press conference.

O’Connell said it was “premature” for him to speculate on Addison’s arrest, while Adofo-Mensah delivered a more nuanced response.

“Jordan is unique because 99% of the days that Jordan Addison is a Viking, he’s a joy to be around,” Adofo-Mensah said. “He’s incredibly intelligent, confident, responsible. And then it’s like all of us: What are you like on those 1% of days? Is it the type of thing that draws attention or not? Obviously that’s something we have to consider when you’re talking about long-term ramifications of a contract extension and different things like that, or letting somebody like Jalen Nailor leave.”



Minnesota Vikings are linked to a potential Anthony Richardson trade, and it’s bound to happen for one reason

Over the past few months, I have been vocal about the Vikings making one trade this offseason: Indianapolis Colts quarterback Anthony Richardson. Our Colts beat writer Destin Adams linked the two teams on Monday, and it makes all the sense in the world.

“The Vikings have their own former first-round pick who hasn’t panned out the way they were hoping, in J.J. McCarthy,” Adams wrote. “His struggles on the field and string of injuries caused Minnesota to miss the postseason, and the team will have to consider bringing in competition at QB for next season.

“Richardson is set to make just $11 million on the final year of his rookie contract in 2026. Due to the Colts having to take on part of his salary to trade him, his new team would owe him less than $6 million next year.

“The Vikings won’t find a more cost-effective option to compete with McCarthy. It’s also pretty well known at this point that Vikings head coach Kevin O’Connell was a big fan of Richardson during his draft process. The two even shared a touching moment after the Colts played the Vikings in 2024.”



Note: The headline could lead someone to believe that this is more than just two goobers dreaming up trades. Apparently, the Vikings are “linked” to Richardson just because these bozos thought of a trade. As a long time clown myself (I prefer Homie the Clown), I do like to dream of trades.



5 hypothetical trade packages for Anthony Richardson with NFL teams wondering if the Colts are ready to move on from the QB

Trade Offer
Vikings send: 2027 conditional fourth-round pick that can turn into a second via play time incentives
Colts send: QB Anthony Richardson and a 2027 seventh-round pick



What are 3 realistic trades the Minnesota Vikings could make in 2026?
Vikings receive: QB Mac Jones | 49ers receive: : Vikings’ 2026 3rd-round pick (97th overall)
Vikings receive: Patriots’ 2026 2nd-round pick (60th overall) | Patriots receive: EDGE Jonathan Greenard, Vikings’ 2027 7th-round pick (through Philadelphia)
Vikings receive: Ravens’ 2026 3rd-round pick (80th overall) | Ravens receive: WR Jordan Addison



Note: The Mac Jones trade idea is being bandied about and I do not recall any of these folks giving a reason as to why the 49ers would trade their backup QB. What will they do for a backup QB after trading Jones. I suppose they can do it because they get a 3rd round pick but if they have playoff aspirations then they probably want to keep Jones. On the other hand, selling high and getting a 3rd round pick now while signing some other QB as a backup may appeal as well because Jones may not fetch a 3rd round compensatory pick.


Cap Space Work​


2026 Cap : (-$46,383,588) – this changes almost daily
Trade Hockenson and a 6th to the Broncos for a 4th
Cut Jones
Cut Hargrave
Cut Kelly
Extend O’Neill 3 yr 69M
Restructure Jefferson (max)
Restructure Darrisaw (max)
Extend Redmond 2 yr 23M
Extend Wright 2 yr 6M
Give Zavier Scott & Bo Richter the ERFA tender
Sign RB Kenneth Gainwell 2 yr 10M
Sign CB Eric Stokes 2 yr 16M
Cut Smith (retires) Post June 1



Updated 2026 Cap : $18,104,182
2027 Cap : $3,825,291



In 2027 the team could cut Allen and Metellus and try to trade Greenard which would result in …
2027 Cap : $45,370,291



What free agents would you target with about 18M in cap space?


Yore Mock​


Trade Partner: Broncos
Sent: TJ Hockenson, 6.194
Received: 4.108


Trade Partner: Jaguars
Sent: 2.49, 4.108
Received: 2.56, 3.100, 4.124


PICK: 18 Mansoor Delane CB LSU 6’1″ 187
PICK: 56 A.J. Haulcy S LSU 6’0″ 222
PICK: 82 Connor Lew IOL Auburn 6’3″ 303
PICK: 97 Max Klare TE Ohio State 6’5″ 243
PICK: 100 Nick Singleton RB Penn State 6’0″ 226
PICK: 124 Drew Allar QB Penn State 6’5″ 235
PICK: 161 Brian Parker II OT Duke 6’5″ 305
PICK: 234 Aiden Fisher LB Indiana 6’1″ 231
PICK: 240 Xavier Nwankpa S Iowa 6’2″ 215





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

While navigating the open thread, just assume it’s sarcasm

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

Source: https://www.dailynorseman.com/minne...537/minnesota-vikings-news-and-links-giddy-up
 
Will Vikings Trade for Anthony Richardson? A 2026 QB Competition Option

Will the Vikings trade for Anthony Richardson? Sign Malik Willis? Or stick with JJ McCarthy? Tyler Forness breaks down every option and predicts the move that could define Minnesota's future.


Vikings QB shakeup: Will Anthony Richardson replace J.J. McCarthy? Dive into the drama on The Real Forno Show as Tyler Forness predicts a bold trade. In this episode, hosts Tyler Forness and Dave Stefano analyze the Minnesota Vikings’ quarterback competition for 2026, sparked by Kevin O’Connell’s call for competition and Kwesi Adofo-Mensah’s non-committal stance on McCarthy. With a possible Vikings QB trade, looking at the potential Anthony Richardson Vikings acquisition, evaluating a Malik Willis free agent signing, and the lack of 2026 NFL Draft prospects, this podcast episode hooks fans with insider predictions and realistic options amid a barren QB market.

In a candid discussion on The Real Forno Show, Tyler Forness declares, “I think the Vikings are going to end up trading for Richardson,” citing the low cost of a compensatory third-round pick and Richardson’s MVP-level upside despite his inaccuracies and injury history. Co-host Dave Stefano chimes in on the market shortage, noting, “There’s a shortage on the market, so whoever goes is gonna be expensive.” The episode covers free agents like Malik Willis, who might demand a three-year $90 million+ deal, and dismisses “pipe dreams” like Joe Burrow or Lamar Jackson trades with low odds (~10-20% for Burrow, ~5-10% for Jackson). Forness emphasizes McCarthy’s inconsistencies, saying, “J.J. McCarthy’s not a franchise quarterback right now,” while exploring trades for Mac Jones, Kyler Murray, and Geno Smith.

Key points include:

  • QB Competition Realities: O’Connell wants genuine competition; McCarthy’s injuries (missing 25 of 35 games) and mechanics need fixing in the offseason.
  • Free Agent Options: Limited market; Willis could cost ~$90M over three years; Aaron Rodgers and Daniel Jones (injury) dismissed as poor fits.
  • Trade Candidates: Richardson as top prediction for his tools and O’Connell’s past interest; Mac Jones might require a second-round pick; low odds for Burrow (discontent in Cincinnati) or Jackson (high cap hit).
  • Draft Outlook: Barren 2026 class with Fernando Mendoza likely first overall; Vikings at No. 18 prioritize other needs unless value drops.
  • Other Topics: Jordan Addison’s arrest discussed as a misdemeanor but compounding issues; potential Hockenson cut critiqued as bad business.

Listen:

View Link

Watch:


Don’t miss The Real Forno Show for unfiltered Minnesota Vikings analysis, bold takes, and offseason breakdowns—it’s your go-to Vikings podcast on Vikings 1st & SKOL, partnered with Fans First Sports Network. Subscribe for episodes on draft prospects, free agency moves, and more to stay ahead of the purple faithful.

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.

What do you think:


Should the Vikings trade for Anthony Richardson or stick with developing JJ McCarthy? Share your thoughts in the comments!

Source: https://www.dailynorseman.com/minne...thony-richardson-a-2026-qb-competition-option
 
Vikings Not Bringing Back OL Coach Chris Kuper

gettyimages-2254736867.jpg


We have officially gotten word of the first change to Kevin O’Connell’s coaching staff for the 2026 offseason, and while it’s one that a lot of folks may have expected, it gives us something to look at as far as what may come next for the Minnesota Vikings.

The team has announced that they will not be retaining offensive line coach Chris Kuper, whose contract expires at the end of the season.

Kuper was an original member of O’Connell’s staff, joining the team shortly after O’Connell was hired in February of 2022. He played eight seasons in the NFL, spending his entire career with the Denver Broncos. He then coached with the Miami Dolphins for several seasons before becoming an assistant offensive line coach with the Broncos in 2019, holding that job for three seasons before joining the Vikings.

The Minnesota offensive line was in a constant state of flux this season, to put it lightly. The team invested heavily in the interior of the offensive line in terms of draft capital and free agent spending. However, due to injuries across all of the positions along the offensive line, the starting five they envisioned when the season started (Christian Darrisaw, Donovan Jackson, Ryan Kelly, Will Fries, and Brian O’Neill) played just 84 snaps together this season, and the Vikings had more different offensive line combinations on the field this season than any other team in the NFL. I’m not sure how much that contributed to Kuper losing his job, given that the team had plenty of struggles at the position during all four seasons of Kuper’s tenure as the offensive line coach, but I’m sure that didn’t help things.

I’m not well-versed on who could, potentially, be in line to be Kuper’s replacement, or whether the team will look to promote from within the current coaching staff or bring someone in from the outside, but I’m sure we’ll be hearing plenty of news about that over the next few days.

What do you make of the news of the Vikings not bringing back Chris Kuper, folks? Let us know in the comments section!

Source: https://www.dailynorseman.com/minne...ikings-not-bringing-back-ol-coach-chris-kuper
 
NFL Saturday Divisional Playoffs Discussion

gettyimages-2255781449.jpg


The NFL playoffs resume today, folks. Today’s action has the top seeds in both conferences in action, hosting teams that are both coming off of short weeks after winning games this past Sunday, and then taking to the road in hopes of continuing their path to the Super Bowl.

The first game of the day will take us to Denver for the AFC Divisional Round, as the Denver Broncos will play host to the Buffalo Bills. Buffalo escaped with a come-from-behind victory over the Jacksonville Jaguars last weekend, as Josh Allen’s 1-yard touchdown run with just over a minute remaining sealed a 27-24 victory. The Broncos come into this one as the top seed in the AFC for the first time since 2015, the year they won their last Super Bowl. This game will be broadcast on CBS and Paramount+, with kickoff scheduled for 3:30 PM Central time.

If the Broncos win this game, they will host the AFC Championship Game next weekend. If Buffalo wins, they will travel to face the winner of tomorrow’s game between Houston and New England.

For the nightcap, we’re heading up to Seattle for the third game this season between the Seattle Seahawks and the San Francisco 49ers. These two teams split their two regular-season matchups this year, with the Niners winning 17-13 in Week 1 at Seattle and the Seahawks getting the victory at Levi’s Stadium in Week 18 (with the #1 seed on the line), 13-3. San Francisco took out Philadelphia last week by a score of 23-19, and even though it seems like they lose 2-3 important players to injury every week, they just keep on chugging along. Speaking of injuries, this one has a bit of additional intrigue with the news that Sam Darnold was listed as questionable for this one with an oblique injury he suffered late in the week. We’ll have to see if and how much it affects his play. This game is slated to start at 7:00 PM Central and will be broadcast on FOX.

If San Francisco wins, they will head to either Chicago or Los Angeles for the NFC Championship Game next Sunday. If the Seahawks win, either the Bears or the Rams will head to the Pacific Northwest.

If you’re going to be watching today’s games, here’s the spot for you to talk about them with your fellow Minnesota Vikings fans.

Enjoy the action, folks!

Source: https://www.dailynorseman.com/minne...yoffs-discussion-bills-broncos-49ers-seahawks
 
NFL Sunday Divisional Playoffs Discussion

gettyimages-2256271735.jpg


Today, the National Football League will set the other half of both Conference Championship Games, as the two remaining Divisional Round games are set to kick off with another doubleheader.

Like yesterday, the early game will give us an AFC matchup, this one between the Houston Texans and the New England Patriots. The Patriots won a defensive struggle last weekend over the Los Angeles Chargers, while the Texans demolished the Pittsburgh Steelers and, with any luck, ended the career of Aaron Rodgers so we don’t have to hear any “Rodgers to the Vikings” speculation this offseason.

This one is set to kick off at 2:00 PM Central time and will be aired on ABC and ESPN. The winner will get a trip to Denver next Sunday to face off with the Broncos, who are now suddenly without starting quarterback Bo Nix, who broke his ankle in their win over Buffalo yesterday and will miss the remainder of Denver’s playoff run.

The nightcap will take us to Soldier Field for a matchup between the Los Angeles Rams and the Chicago Bears. Both of these teams had come-from-behind victories in their first playoff matchups, as the Rams managed to take down a feistier-than-expected Carolina Panthers team, while the Bears came back from being down multiple scores at halftime to defeat the Green Bay Packers.

NBC and Peacock will be your network for this one, with kickoff currently slated for 5:30 PM Central time. The winner of this one will head out to Seattle next weekend to take on the Seahawks, who blew the 49ers out of the playoffs last night.

If you’re going to be watching the games today, feel free to hang out here and talk about them with your fellow Minnesota Vikings fans.

Enjoy the action, everyone!

Source: https://www.dailynorseman.com/minne...layoffs-discussion-texans-patriots-rams-bears
 
A Look at the Vikings’ 2026 Opponents

gettyimages-2254642376.jpg


With the 2025 season in the rearview, let us take a premature and (likely) abysmal early look at the Minnesota Vikings’ 2026 opponents and how I feel about them – i.e., how difficult I expect them to be.

What else are we going to talk about? Sam Darnold in the NFC Championship Game? No thanks. It was the right choice for the long term, by the way. I believed it then; I believe it now.

THE HISTORY OF COMPETITIVE BALANCE

Of course, I’m hedging my bets because I’m often wrong (duh), and the turnover among playoff teams year-to-year is consistently unpredictable.

Over the past 25 years, about 48% of playoff teams failed to qualify the previous season. Since the playoff expansion to 14 teams in 2020, that number has dropped to around 44%. In all, about six new teams make it every season.

Some of this has to do with luck (e.g., key injuries and turnovers that can’t be replicated year-to-year), but it mostly has to do with the parity that comes with a hard salary cap. There are no L.A. Dodgers in the NFL, and that’s a good thing. Teams can go from seven wins to 11 in no time at all. Of course, the reverse can happen, too. You don’t have to tell a Vikings fan how difficult it is, considering we haven’t made the playoffs in back-to-back years since 2008 and 2009. Every time I write that, I get nauseous.

Here are the Vikings’ 2026 opponents (it will be the NFC’s turn to play nine home games):

Home: Bears, Lions, Packers, Falcons, Bills, Panthers, Dolphins, Colts, Commanders

Away: Bears, Lions, Packers, Patriots, Saints, Jets, Buccaneers, 49ers

A lot was made of the Vikings losing out on the “last-place” schedule after beating the Lions on Christmas Day. A reminder: that affects only three of the 17 games; the NFL’s rotating schedule already has the other 14 locked in. So instead of facing the Titans, Giants, and Cardinals, the Vikings will draw the Colts, Commanders, and 49ers.

The glaring difference is the 49ers rather than the Cardinals. Then again, the Giants just hired John Harbaugh and have talent, so it would shock no one if they were better than the Commanders next year. Likewise, who will be the Colts’ QB next season? I can’t say with certainty that they’ll be considerably better than a Titans team with an improving young QB who could likely be paired with the #1 wide receiver in April’s draft. See what I mean?

LOOKING AT THE 2026 SLATE

We all know what they say about assumptions. Still, for this exercise, I believe we’ll have an improved J.J. McCarthy at QB1, with a proven, reliable backup with considerable starting experience. Let’s say a Mac Jones, Geno Smith, or Marcus Mariota type. Let’s really get nuts and suggest maybe even Kirk Cousins is back here. We’ll also embrace the doom that comes so naturally to Vikings fans and say Brian Flores moves on (and it better be for a head coaching position).

Games that will be very difficult (<60% chance of victory): Bills, @49ers, @Bears, @Pats

The Bills are the Bills, and Josh Allen is Josh Allen. This won’t be easy. And with yet another season without a Super Bowl appearance, 2026 will be a season of desperation for Sean McDermott’s bunch. The window could be closing.

Anytime you face Kyle Shanahan, especially on the road, it’s going to be tough sledding.

Under Mike Vrabel and with Drake Maye, the Pats could very well be positioned to be the new Chiefs or, well, the old Pats. They aren’t going anywhere.

I firmly believe the Bears will regress next year as turnovers and lucky bounces dry up. That said, Ben Johnson should finally put them on a sustainable, positive trajectory. Precedent is in play here, too, as nothing is ever easy at Soldier Field, no matter how bad the Bears are.

Games that will be toss-ups (40%-60% chance of victory): Commanders, Falcons, Lions, @Lions, Packers, @Packers, Bears

The Commanders had one of those seasons where nothing went right. We know how that feels, of course. While they may not be back to the NFC Championship Game level, I’d be shocked if they weren’t squarely back in the playoff mix next season.

Our old pal Kevin Stefanski is now the Falcons’ head coach. I do think this improves the odds that Cousins is back as insurance, despite having to fork over the GDP of a small country for someone who will (on paper) be the backup. But as this season showed us, it matters…a lot. They whooped us back in Week 2, so hopefully, we get a McCarthy revenge angle for this one. Still, it won’t be easy.

The Lions’ Super Bowl window may be closing fast. While it initially looked like the loss of both coordinators wouldn’t have much impact, the team faltered considerably in the second half of the season. Jared Goff’s cap hit balloons to $70 million next year, further limiting their ability to do much in free agency. They’ll still be good, however, as the talent level remains.

It looks like both Matt LaFleur and general manager Brian Gutekunst will be back with the Packers, and with them, the usual 8 to 11 wins that have defined the post-prime Aaron Rodgers/Jordan Love era. Both games could go either way.

As noted, I expect the Bears to regress as their insane turnover differential reverts to the mean. A familiar divisional opponent, Ben Johnson, an improved Caleb Williams, and significant roster talent still point to a dogfight. Coin flip.

Games that we should win (>60% chance of victory): Panthers, Colts, Saints, Jets, Dolphins, Buccaneers

This is when it gets tricky, because, as we know, the Vikings rarely find anything even remotely easy. Ever.

The Panthers are a solid team. They “won” the NFC South at 8-9, and Dave Canales appears to be steering them in the right direction. That said, given the talent differential and home-field advantage, the Vikings should win this game.

The Colts game is challenging because we don’t know who the quarterback will be. I didn’t see much of them this season, but the vibe I get is that the first-half run may have been a bit of lightning in a bottle. They’re probably not as good as they looked in the first half of the season, but not as bad as they looked after Daniel Jones went down, either. If we’re making the playoffs, as expected, this is a game we have to win.

Brian Flores was right about Tua Tagovailoa, and the Dolphins could be in dire straits in 2026 because of it. It wouldn’t shock me if they were in contention for a Top 5 draft pick in 2027. If we are a serious playoff contender next season, we have to win this home game.

I have the Saints as a leading candidate for most-improved team in the NFL in 2026. A possible last-place-to-first-place story like this year’s Bears. Except the Bears’ turnaround sucked. But there’s always one of those teams, and the NFC South is always a prime candidate. That said, see the justification for winning the previous two. If we’re to get to 10 or 11 wins, it’s hard to see it without this one. Despite their improvement, we’d better be the superior team.

On the opposite end of the spectrum, I wouldn’t be surprised if the Buccaneers fall back considerably in 2026. They’re a strange mix of aging stars and notable younger talent. The 2024 version (10-7) may have been the best we’ll see of this team as constructed. A regression to 6-11 or worse wouldn’t surprise me at all. And yes, I’m still pissed about that 2023 season-opening loss.

Oregon quarterback Dante Moore, thinking about the prospect of being drafted by the Jets, said, “Yeah, let’s run it back in Eugene, shall we?” If we lose the Jets at home, that could be the KOC version of Zimmer’s 2021 loss to the 0-10-1 Lions. Then the end of the line. The only difference is that the Jets have no potential. It would be very, very, very bad. Please, no. Cue the classic Michael Scott clip.

So how did I do? Agree? Somewhat agree? Disagree? “Shawn, you’re delusional?” Have at it in the comments.

Source: https://www.dailynorseman.com/minnesota-vikings-news/94572/look-at-minnesota-vikings-2026-opponents
 
Minnesota Vikings News and Links: A Case Of The Mondays

gettyimages-2253972881.jpg


A pretty good weekend for football save for the Seahawks vs 49ers game. The Bills choked it away again and now fired their coach. The Patriots look to have an easy path to the Super Bowl with Bo Nix injured. The Rams vs Seahawks game should be good as their two games this season were very close with one going overtime in Seattle.

All that being said, since the Vikings did not get into the dance, it is A Case of the Mondays!

I am not feeling good about keeping Flores. I hope they don’t take too long and see other replacement candidates sign elsewhere.

NFL interview requests tracker: Who are teams targeting as their new head coach, GM and more?


Ranking the NFL head coaching openings, from least to most attractive after Bills fire Sean McDermott
No 8. Miami Dolphins
No 7. Arizona Cardinals
No 6. Cleveland Browns
No 5. Tennessee Titans
No 4. Las Vegas Raiders
No 3. Pittsburgh Steelers
No 2. Buffalo Bills
No 1. Baltimore Ravens

….

I think Flores would be great for any of the top 3 teams with the Ravens being perticularly a good fit IMHO. I do not see him wanting to suffer through the growing pains of a young QB.


Minnesota Vikings News and Links​


Vikings’ Top Coaching Staff Candidate is Off the Board

Our own Trevor Squire provided some reasoning on Kuper being let go by the Vikings.

“The Minnesota Vikings poured major investment into their offensive line last offseason to no avail.

After signing former Indianapolis Colts starters Ryan Kelly and Will Fries to deals worth a combined $105 million and drafting Donovan Jackson in the first round, the Vikings offensive line finished the 2025 season ranked 31st in pass protection.

Injuries were the bane of the team’s struggles on the offensive front as the starting unit played just 89 snaps together all season.”

Squire also pulled up some evidence that led to the divorce from Kuper from Alec Lewis.

“Minnesota’s interior still allowed the highest pressure rate in the NFL this past season, according to Next Gen Stats. Only the Las Vegas Raiders’ interior was dinged for more sacks. The Vikings improved throughout 2025 in the run game, but struggles continued against more physical and respected defensive fronts.”

Lewis also mentioned another nail in Kuper’s coffin. The productivity of former Vikings such as Ezra Cleveland, Dalton Risner, Ed Ingram, and Garrett Bradbury proved that their struggles in Minnesota may have been a coaching issue.

Adam Patrick of The Viking Age had the scoop on the Vikings missing out on Bill Callahan.

“According to NFL Media’s Mike Garafolo on Sunday, Callahan is expected to join the Atlanta Falcons as their new offensive line coach following the team’s announcement on Saturday that former Minnesota offensive coordinator Kevin Stefanski has been hired as the Falcons’ new head coach

Callahan had previously worked with Vikings head coach Kevin O’Connell when both were members of the Washington Commanders‘ coaching staff from 2017 to 2019. But instead of reuniting with O’Connell, the veteran offensive line coach will join Stefanski in Atlanta.”

Patrick points out some potential good news in the situation for Minnesota.

“With Callahan expected to take over as the Falcons’ offensive line coach, that frees up Dwayne Ledford, who had been Atlanta’s offensive line coach and run game coordinator for the last five seasons.

Under Ledford, the Falcons consistently had one of the NFL’s top offensive lines, and he would be a tremendous upgrade over what the Vikings had with Kuper for the last few years, especially if he can help improve Minnesota’s rushing attack as well.”



One notable name to watch for the Vikings’ new OL coach vacancy

Kevin Stefanski was just hired as the Falcons’ new head coach, replacing Raheem Morris. According to reports, veteran offensive line coach Bill Callahan will be joining Stefanski’s staff in that role. That means Ledford, who is a well-respected OL coach, will become a free agent who should receive significant interest around the league. (Shoutout to Alec Lewis of The Athletic for pointing that out).

Ledford, 49, has been with the Falcons since 2021. In addition to serving as their OL coach, he’s been Atlanta’s run game coordinator for the past two seasons. The Falcons have boasted a very strong offensive line and running game in recent years. Right guard Chris Lindstrom has made four straight Pro Bowls, and Atlanta’s other standout offensive linemen include tackles Kaleb McGary and Jake Matthews, guard Matthew Bergeron, and centers Drew Dalman and Ryan Neuzil.



Note: Yore run game does look a lot better with Bijan Robinson. Just sayin.



Vikings Get Bad Jalen Nailor News Amid Jordan Addison Concerns
Appearing in a December interview with Ari Meirov that was released on January 13, Nailor addressed his upcoming free agency.

“Whatever happens after it, happens. I’m just trying to do what I can to put myself and my family in the best situation there is in the near future,” Nailor said, adding that he was focused on the final three games of the regular season to close out his rookie deal in Minnesota.

Nailor’s comments align with an account from Minnesota Star Tribune reporter Emily Leiker, who said Nailor wouldn’t mind returning to Minnesota but appeared content with testing the market first.

Responding to Leikert’s account of Nailor’s comments at locker room cleanout day, colleague Ben Goessling read through the lines, arguing that Nailor is likely to going to force the Vikings’ hand to compete for him in free agency.

“Yeah, there’s a chance to get a payday there for a guy that was a sixth-round pick,” Goessling said on the “Access Vikings” podcast.

“The fact that, if he’s saying, ‘Yeah, we’re going to see how it plays out,’ it’s a nice way of saying, ‘Yeah, I expect to be on the market, and I’m gonna get paid if I can,’ I mean, you know, this is your shot to do that. So, I don’t think that’s an unreasonable approach to this at all.”



Talented cornerback remains a priority while offensive weapon makes his debut in Minnesota Vikings NFL Mock Draft Tracker
Minnesota Vikings NFL mock draft tracker
Kenyon Sadiq, TE, Oregon
The Athletic’s Dane Brugler
Sports Illustrated’s Nick Merriam

“If T.J. Hockenson is a cap casualty this offseason, tight end would move up the Vikings’ needs list.

“Sadiq is a big, freaky athlete with the adjustment skills to make difficult catches look routine and the mentality to be an asset as a blocker. NFL teams believe he has the talent to be a top-10 pick.”- Brugler



Avieon Terrell, CB, Clemson
Pro Football Network’s Jacob Infante
CBS Sports’ Ryan Wilson
USA Today’s Ayrton Ostly
Pro Football Focus’ Max Chadwick
A to Z Sports’ Staff
CBS Sports’ Josh Edwards
Pro Football Focus’ Gordon McGuinness

“Avieon Terrell is a sharp cover man with excellent speed and short-area burst, as well as good route-recognition capabilities. In 2024, he notched 2 interceptions and 12 pass breakups for Clemson, and he’s combined 21 pass deflections over the course of his last two seasons.

“This year, he improved as a tackler, dropping his missed tackle percentage down to 10.4% from 4.1% the year before.”-Infante



Peter Woods, DT, Clemson
Pro Football Network’s Josh Weil

“While the Vikings may be upset to miss out on Love, Clemson’s Peter Woods will help them quickly quell any draft-day blues, as he is a highly physical and high-motor player who excels against both the pass and the run. Adding a player like Woods to an already solid defensive front will create more pressure on opposing offenses and create more havoc in what is becoming one of the best divisions in football.”-Weil

….

Carnell Tate, WR, Ohio State
The Sporting News’ Vinnie Iyer

“The Vikings need to get more explosive in stretching the field with their passing game, as there was too much short-to-intermediate reliance. Tate can take the top off the defense and get open well in single coverage outside away from Justin Jefferson to boost J.J. McCarthy.”-Iyer



Makai Lemon, WR, USC
Sports Illustrated’s Richie Bradshaw

“Jordan Addison’s NFL future is in doubt following his third arrest since entering the league. He was hardly dependable even when he was in the field, and Justin Jefferson suffered from his absence and poor quarterback play. The offense needs another receiver, if for no other reason than to help JJ McCarthy’a development. Lemon is a great route runner who can break off big plays at any given moment. While Jefferson attacks each level of the field, Lemon can work underneath and intermediate to give the passing game a check down option to keep the chains moving. “-Bradshaw



Jeremiyah Love, RB, Notre Dame
Scouting Report

The Draft Network’s Jaime Eisner
“Why Jeremiyah Love here? Aaron Jones could be a cap casualty and Jordan Mason has just one more year left on his deal. The Minnesota Vikings need a strong run game while they figure out their short- and long-term quarterback situation and Love is an elite talent. If he is on the board, he’s too good to pass up.”-Eisner



Vikings Turmoil: Addison, Flores & 2026 Plans


Vikings’ QB addition prediction would be right in Kevin O’Connell’s wheelhouse


Paid site but the story is so very true
Reusse: Vikings have been treading water in 25 years since ‘41-doughnut’



10 takeaways from Divisional Playoff weekend
Sam Darnold going to the NFC Championship game is proof that the QB isn’t always the reason a team succeeds or fails in the playoffs

The ironic thing is that Darnold didn’t have to do much to beat the 49ers. He made a great throw running to his left that resulted in an early touchdown to Jaxon Smith-Njigba that put San Fran on ice but otherwise he could have pulled a Jimmy G and thrown eight passes and still won the game easily. The banged-up 49ers had no shot after losing George Kittle and then Christian McCaffrey.

Oh, I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again: The only take on Darnold from Vikings fans should be that it’s great for him. He handled everything in Minnesota, including his exit, like a pro. He gave them a great season and they made the choice to let him leave by not franchise tagging him.

And if he does win the Super Bowl, it will go down as one of the most colossal mistakes of all time in the NFL to let him walk.

Bo Nix’s success highlights Vikings 2024 draft decision

You won’t find anybody who dislikes the “coulda drafted this guy instead!” analysis in the NFL. Yes, the Vikings could have taken Kyle Hamilton. Yes, they could have picked Michael Thomas other Laquon Treadwell. They had a half dozen shots at Tom Brady, too. What are we supposed to do with that? Every team has a history of missing on great players who were picked later.

However, the Vikings had a choice in the 2024 draft. JJ McCarthy or Bo Nix. They picked the much more raw, inexperienced prospect with college numbers that didn’t even begin to approach those of Nix. They must have felt that Nix’s tools limited his upside or his offense was cartoony or that his flat-top looked too much like Ivan Drago. Who knows what they thought but they thought wrong.

McCarthy may someday become a great quarterback but the Vikings’ timeline required a QB that was ready to play ASAP and that was much more Nix than McCarthy.

Over the last two years, he’s been in the postseason twice and put together an excellent overall performance with a massive clutch deep touchdown to give the Broncos a shot to win the game against Buffalo.



Are we sure Kevin O’Connell deserves the ‘offensive guru’ label?



Pay site
Potential Brian Flores replacements, Jordan Addison’s future and more: Vikings mailbag
Do you have any insight into changes at the college scouting level over the past few years? — Tim F.

There haven’t been many.

Former director of college scouting Jamaal Stephenson remains with the team as a senior personnel executive. Mike Sholiton and Pat Roberts, two longtime scouts who have also been with the Vikings for more than a decade, still head the team’s college scouting staff. Below them, the Vikings have shuffled some of their college-area scouts in the last few years.


Cap Space Work​


2026 Cap : (-$49,183,588)
Trade Hockenson and a 2027 7th to Rams for a 5th
Cut Hargrave, Jones, & Kelly
After these moves the team would still be negative (-$13,258,883)
.
Extend O’Neill 3 yr 72M
Restructure Jefferson (max)
Restructure Greenard (max)
.
Cap now at $29,565,382
.
Extend Wright 2 yr 6M
Extend DePaola 2 yr 3.5M
Extend Redmond 3 yr 37.5M
Give Zavier Scott & Bo Richter the ERFA tender
.
Cap now at $24,070,382
.
Sign CB Alontae Taylor 3 yr 39M
Sign LB Leo Chenal 3 yr 21M
Sign RB Kenneth Gainwell 3 yr 18M
.
Updated 2026 Cap : $17,440,382 (57 players)
2027 Cap : (-$13,784,227)
Probable 2027 moves … Cut Allen & Metellus would take 2027 cap to $12,060,773
Probably could restructure Darrisaw as well.


Yore Mock


Trade Partner: Rams
Sent: T.J. Hockenson TE, 7.234
Received: 5.167

Trade Partner:Jets
Sent: 3.97
Received: 4.103, 5.178

Trade Partner:Chargers
Sent: 5.161, 5.178
Received: 4.123

Pick 18. Kenyon Sadiq TE Oregon 6’3″ 245
Pick 49. Dillon Thieneman S Oregon 6’0″ 205
Pick 82.Keionte Scott CB Miami (FL) 6’0″ 194
Pick 103. Tim Keenan III DL Alabama 6’2″ 320
Pick 123. Logan Jones IOL Iowa 6’3″ 303
Pick 167. Louis Moore S Indiana 5’11” 200
Pick 194. Mike Washington Jr. RB Arkansas 6’2″ 228
Pick 240. Roy Williams EDGE Northern Illinois 6’6″ 257





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

While navigating the open thread, just assume it’s sarcasm

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

Source: https://www.dailynorseman.com/minne...-vikings-news-and-links-a-case-of-the-mondays
 
Vikes Views: Who Do You Want to Watch Super Bowl Sunday?

gettyimages-2256833658.jpg


Championship weekend is upon us! The Seattle Seahawks will host the Los Angeles Rams and the Denver Broncos will host the New England Patriots. All four teams have had relatively recent success, but three of the four with different QBs. There are a few Viking ties on the teams and a few people we like to root against. I prefer a Seahawks and Patriots matchup, but I’m curious if everyone feels the same.

Seattle Seahawks

The Seahawks are led by the QB who led the Vikings to their 2nd most regular seasons wins in a year, Sam Darnold. The Vikings did match that offer to Seattle, but didn’t give him a great feeling about his future with J.J. McCarthy waiting in the wings. Darnold is elevated by one of the best defenses in the league. They will terrorize MatthewStafford on Sunday. They also have ormer Vikings QB Coach/Offensive Coordinator Klint Kubiak is their OC. I can’t see a reason for Vikings fans to root against them other than the little mini rivalry that occured around 10 years ago.

Absolutely insane playoff throw by Sam Darnold

Where are the haters at??? pic.twitter.com/OcnZjvNADZ

— SleeperSeahawks (@SleeperSeahawks) January 18, 2026

Los Angeles Rams

The LA Rams beat the Vikings twice last year. The first cost Christian Darrisaw most of his season and the second knocked the Vikings out of the playoffs in the Wild Card Round. The Rams did Vikings fans a favor knocking the Bears out of the playoffs this year. Other than that, there aren’t that many connections other than KOC. I enjoy watching the Rams play and wouldn’t hate it if they won. I just prefer Darnold get his time to shine in the big game. Stafford already has his ring.

An instant classic to close out the Divisional Round 🎢 pic.twitter.com/MbBT7ynCuz

— NFL (@NFL) January 19, 2026

Denver Broncos

I can’t even think of a single reason to root for this coach. I can’t do it. The only way I would root for a Sean Payton team is if they played the Packers, Bears, or Lions in the Super Bowl. They’re likely on the way out with Bo Nix going down.

New England Patriots

I don’t really want to root for the Patrios either. However, somehow, they are the lesser of two evils. I enjoy Stephon Diggs and appreciate all he gave to the team. I’m also from Maine and all my family are Pats lovers. So I can at least enjoy their joy. Josh Dobbs is the QB 2, Garrett Bradbury is their starting Center, and Khyiris Tonga starts at NT, to round out the former Vikings on the roster.

I’ll be rooting for the Seahawks and Patriots, but who do you want? Sign-up and join the conversation below.

Source: https://www.dailynorseman.com/minne...ws-who-do-you-want-to-watch-super-bowl-sunday
 
Jordan Addison to Face No Charges from Trespassing Incident

gettyimages-2254634785.jpg


A week or so after it looked like it might, potentially, be another rough offseason for Minnesota Vikings reciever Jordan Addison, it appears that things are going to be a lot smoother than anticipated.

Charges will not be filed against #Vikings WR Jordan Addison, according to his agent @YoungerAssoc. Addison was assisted by attorney Brian Pakett. Younger tells me Addison now will prepare for the filing of a civil claim arising from the alleged wrongful arrest. pic.twitter.com/MdRBBraSDv

— Mike Garafolo (@MikeGarafolo) January 20, 2026

Per Mike Garafolo of the NFL Network, charges are not going to be filed against Addison stemming from an incident in a Florida casino last week. Addison will now, apparently, be filing a civil claim arising from what is now being deemed as a wrongful arrest.

Addision was arrested and charged with trespassing at the Seminole Hard Rock Casino just over a week ago. The charge was a first-degree misdemeanor that saw Addison post a $500 bond in Hillsborough County to secure his release.

It would have been Addison’s third offseason arrest in his three seasons with the Vikings and could have, potentially, gotten him in more trouble with the league. He had to serve a three-game suspension to start this past season after agreeing to a plea deal for the incident that saw him fall asleep behind the wheel of his vehicle and block traffic near LAX, and another incident. . .particularly one that could have involved substance abuse. . .could have gotten him significant discipline from the shield. However, it appears that will not be an issue.

With this incident, apparently, no longer an issue, hopefully this will be the last time we have to post anything about Addison until this April, when the team will have to make its decision as to whether or not they will pick up the fifth-year option on his rookie contract. Hopefully Addison will keep himself far away from any sort of situations that could, potentially, have him in any sort of legal hot water going forward.

Source: https://www.dailynorseman.com/minne...harges-trespassing-incident-minnesota-vikings
 
Vikings Part Ways with Chris Kuper: Flores Future & Coaching Candidates

The Vikings coaching carousel is spinning! Chris Kuper is out, Brian Flores might leave, and the DC search hangs in the balance. Tyler Forness dives deep into the data and what it all means for Minnesota's future.


In this episode of The Real Forno Show, hosted by Tyler Forness with producer Dave Stefano on Vikings 1st & SKOL, the duo dissects the Minnesota Vikings’ offseason moves amid the NFL coaching carousel. Forness highlights the team’s decision not to retain offensive line coach Chris Kuper, noting, “They’re not renewing his contract… I think both [positives and question marks] can be true at the same time.” They analyze OL performance data from PFF, revealing starters allowed pressures every 31.5 snaps versus backups’ 24.75, and discuss quarterback responsibility for sacks, with Forness stating, “Quarterbacks were responsible for 18 of those 60 sacks.” Stefano adds context on potential replacements, emphasizing scheme fits like wide-zone experts.

The Vikings still face significant defensive staff uncertainty in the 2026 offseason, as Brian Flores’ contract has expired, leaving him a free agent able to pursue head coaching opportunities (with interviews ongoing for teams like the Steelers, Ravens, and others) or even lateral DC moves, though the team remains confident he’ll return unless a head role materializes. Adding to the concern, Vikings defensive backs coach and pass game coordinator Daronte Jones—a rising star who has contributed heavily to Minnesota’s elite defense—is drawing strong interest for DC positions, with interviews already conducted or requested by the Cowboys, Jets, Giants, and Packers. Should Jones depart, the Vikings would need contingencies to preserve their aggressive scheme, potentially turning to experienced options like Raheem Morris (a former head coach with prior ties to Kevin O’Connell from their Rams days) or Jonathan Gannon (ex-Cardinals HC and former Vikings assistant under Mike Zimmer, with proven play-calling success). Securing continuity on this high-performing unit remains a top priority early in the offseason. Brian Flores’ uncertain future, and NFL coaching ripple effects on this must-listen episode.

Key points include:

  • Kuper’s Exit and OL Analysis: Injuries led to backups playing 1,658 snaps; starters had low sack allowances (10 of 60 total), but stunts and consistency were issues.
  • Replacement Candidates: Names like Dwayne Ledford, Bill Callahan, Frank Smith, Butch Barry, Pat Meyer, and Zak Kromer discussed, with Forness sharing a “hot board” from A to Z Sports that include Kieth Carter, Kevin Carberry, Chris Watt, Ramon Chinyoung, Steve Oliver, Jahri Evans, and Justin Outten.
  • Brian Flores and Staff Uncertainty: Flores lacks a contract; potential DC interviews for Daronte Jones could force contingencies like Raheem Morris or Jonathan Gannon.
  • Broader Carousel Impacts: Stefanski’s Falcons hire might retain Kirk Cousins; other moves affect QB market and Vikings’ defense.
  • Offseason Priorities: Focus on depth over starters; draft class weaknesses at center/tackle noted, with Forness warning, “This offensive line draft class is bad.”

Listen:

View Link

Watch:


Whether you’re tracking Vikings news, NFL coaching changes, or offseason strategies, The Real Forno Show delivers expert insights and unfiltered takes for Minnesota Vikings fans. Catch it on Vikings 1st & SKOL’s YouTube or podcast feeds for more episodes, including upcoming SKOL Search breakdowns on wide receivers and linebackers.

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.

Question:


What do you think the Vikings’ biggest coaching priority should be this offseason—OL fixes or Flores retention? Share in the comments!

Source: https://www.dailynorseman.com/minne...chris-kuper-flores-future-coaching-candidates
 
Vikings Reacts Survey: Call Your Super Bowl Shot

gettyimages-2222826338.jpg


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’ve got another SB Nation Reacts survey for everyone to sound off on, but this one doesn’t have anything to do with our Minnesota Vikings.

That’s because, once again, our favorite team is no longer participating in this NFL season. We’re down to the final four teams with the Conference Championship games taking place on Sunday, and we want to know your thoughts.

As we do (pretty much) every year, we want to know two things: The Super Bowl matchup you think will happen and the Super Bowl matchup you want to happen. They may be the same, or they may be two different things. There are four different potential combinations that can come out of this Sunday’s matchups, so we want to know what everyone’s thoughts are.

As always, we invite you to make your voice heard here by voting in our survey and by sounding off in the comments section.

Have at it, folks! We’ll have the results of this one for you before the Conference Championship games kick off on Sunday afternoon.

Source: https://www.dailynorseman.com/minne...kings-reacts-survey-call-your-super-bowl-shot
 
Brian Flores Signs Contract Extension With Vikings

gettyimages-2190588976.jpg


Ladies and gentlemen, our short, regionally specific nightmare is over. Well, mostly over. For now.

Defensive coordinator Brian Flores has signed a contract extension with the Vikings. If he does not receive a head coaching job this cycle, he will be back as the team’s defensive coordinator.

— Adam Schefter (@AdamSchefter) January 22, 2026

Numerous sources, led by Adam Schefter of ESPN, are reporting that defensive coordinator Brian Flores has signed a contract extension with the Minnesota Vikings to remain the team’s defensive coordinator. That means that, at the very least, he will not be making a lateral move to another team to become their defensive coordinator.

Now, this doesn’t necessarily mean that he won’t be taking a head coaching job if one should be offered to him. He’s had two interviews with the Pittsburgh Steelers for their head coaching vacancy and has interviewed with the Baltimore Ravens as well. But this is a step in the right direction. There are still six head coaching vacancies around the National Football League, but those are the only two he has interviewed for. He also interviewed for the defensive coordinator job with the Washington Commanders, but he’s no longer going to be taking that position, obviously.

Getting Flores back into the fold was one of the top offseason priorities for the Vikings. In the final eight games of the season, the Minnesota defense allowed just one touchdown pass and really started to find its footing against the run after struggling earlier in the season. There are going to be some questions that need to be answered on that side of the ball in terms of personnel this offseason, but nobody is going to be better equipped to get those questions answered in a positive way than Brian Flores.

We’ll still be keeping an eye on the coaching situations in Baltimore and Pittsburgh, but the longer those teams go without hiring someone, the more it seems like they’re waiting on a coach from a team that’s still playing, which is good news for us Vikings fans. For now, however, it seems like a good day to celebrate, because it certainly looks like Brian Flores is going to be back on the sidelines at U.S. Bank Stadium in 2026.

Sound off, ladies and gentlemen, and let us know about what you think of this one!

Source: https://www.dailynorseman.com/minne...es-signs-contract-extension-minnesota-vikings
 
Minnesota Vikings News and Links: What Do You Want To Talk About?

gettyimages-2253325589.jpg


Brian Flores is signed! I do not know if he will eventually get a head coach offer but at least he wont go and be a defensive coordinator for another team. At the very least, the Vikings will get two 3rd round picks if he gets hired away as a head coach. I do not think there will be any dead money.

Now that that is out of the way. What do you want to talk about?

Minnesota Vikings News and Links​


Reporter drops bombshell report regarding the future of Minnesota Vikings WR Jordan Addison, and it raises major questions

What does his future look like? According to Sports Illustrated’s Grant Cohn, the San Francisco 49ers, whom he covers, want to trade for Addison.

“According to a source, the 49ers intend to be quite aggressive this offseason in terms of trades. They want to trade up in the draft, and they want to trade for a wide receiver. And the wide receiver they’re initially targeting in a trade is Jordan Addison of the Minnesota Vikings,” said Cohn.

The why behind a possible trade that Cohn mentions is as fascinating as it seems ridiculous.

“Addison is entering year four in the NFL, and the Vikings apparently don’t want to pick up his fifth-year option,” continued Cohn. “They like Jalen Nailor, who’s going to be a free agent wide receiver on their team. They’d like to keep him, and since they’re not going to pick up Jordan Addison’s fifth-year option, they would be open to trading him.”

That in itself is a bombshell. Not picking up the fifth-year option, even though it’s projected to be just over $17.5 million, would be a major surprise. That’s still a value for what Addison does. Having that kind of player opposite Justin Jefferson is huge to maximize the Vikings’ best player.

He also mentioned the Buffalo Bills as a team that is also interested, which would be history repeating itself. In March of 2020, the Vikings traded Stefon Diggs to the Bills for a hefty haul of a first-round pick and multiple picks on Day 3.

Cohn also mentions potential compensation, which is the biggest thing for Vikings fans.

“They probably could get him for like, maybe a second, maybe a third, maybe Ricky Pearsall, maybe, maybe Ricky Pearsall and a fourth?”



Secret Superstars: The most underrated impact players of the 2025 NFL season

Minnesota Vikings: DI Jalen Redmond
Redmond emerged as one of the Vikings’ most reliable interior defenders in 2025. He earned a 73.5 PFF overall grade, ranking third among Minnesota defenders. He was especially dominant against the run, where his 30 run stops, 1.46-yard average depth of tackle, and 19.4% positively graded play rate all ranked second-best on the defense.



Jalen Redmond: A Light In The Dark For The 2025 Vikings


Minnesota Vikings 2026 free agents: Who stays, who goes?



JJ McCarthy Gets Bad News Amid Vikings, Kevin O’Connell Development

Nearly a third of the NFL has turned over its head coach position this offseason, which has raised the question about whether Minnesota Vikings head coach Kevin O’Connell, the 2024 NFL Coach of the Year, is safe in his seat.

Several Vikings reporters have taken the temperature of the Vikings coach’s seat and agree that next season could be vital in O’Connell keeping his job in Minnesota.

And that puts even more pressure on getting the quarterback position right.

McCarthy’s third season as a pro will be vital in his development and offer a clear picture of whether Minnesota should invest in an extension for the young quarterback or pivot elsewhere.

But whether O’Connell has the runway to see a third season from McCarthy through is a major consideration for the head coach who saw his predecessor, Mike Zimmer, fired after missing the playoffs in back-to-back seasons.

McCarthy will likely be on a short leash if he is named the starter next season.

How Hot is Kevin O’Connell’s Seat?
Just a year removed from winning the NFL Coach of the Year award, O’Connell’s name being subject to firing seems absurd.

However, the award isn’t the greatest indicator of sustained success, but moreso an incredible single-year feat.

JJ McCarthy Cannot Be the Sole Answer at QB for Vikings in 2026, Analyst Argues
When asked about whether O’Connell’s job is at risk next season, Coller argued that while the head coach has a proven track record of success and galvanizing an organization, a playoff berth is needed to keep many decision makers in their seats.

And that will require a major quarterback move to find the right insurance for McCarthy.

“I agree that every single aggressive possible route has to be investigated by the Vikings,” Coller said, outlining all the possible quarterbacks who could land in Minnesota from Mac Jones, Kyler Murray, Aaron Rodgers, Joe Burrow and Lamar Jackson. “There has to be all those possible routes looked into, and you can’t just say we’re going to ride with JJ. It’s a five-year plan. Here we go. Like we’re going to try to develop him over a number of years, like we’re the Packers or something. Probably not. Like, you probably aren’t going to get that much leeway with this decision that was made.

“And, it does matter that Sam Darnold has turned out to be on the team that goes to the NFC Championship. That is a very, very bad look for the decision makers in the Vikings organization, which means you have to save yourself this year more likely than not,” Coller added. “You got to be back in the playoffs. You got to have a winning season. And that could mean something that we don’t even see coming at the quarterback position and could really end up surprising us.”



Kyle Rudolph Critical of Vikings’ Handling of QB Situation

The Vikings’ handling of their quarterback position was frequently questioned throughout the season as J.J. McCarthy struggled. Now, with former Vikings QB Sam Darnold leading the Seahawks to the NFC championship game, that criticism has increased. With the position and what the team will do this offseason to remedy the situation still very much up in the air, a former Vikings star is joining the chorus of criticism

“I think it’s a big mistake that they made last year, kind of, just handing over the reins and not having a veteran to compete with him,” Kyle Rudolph said on Tuesday’s episode of Up And Adams with Kay Adams. “You know, there certainly were a few options, one of which is playing this weekend in the NFC championship game. Another one in Daniel Jones, that was in the locker room last year, who obviously, you know, I’m a huge fan of and absolutely love his game.”

For their part, head coach Kevin O’Connell and general manager Kwesi Adofo-Mensah have been unwilling to commit to McCarthy as the starter going forward. Rudolph wants his former team to “bring in a veteran to compete with J.J.”

“This doesn’t mean that J.J. can’t be your quarterback of the future, but just handing him over a Super Bowl-caliber roster and saying, ‘OK, go for it,'” continued Rudolph. “and not having a veteran that is in that room and competing against him, I ultimately think that you’re not setting him up for success.”

Rudolph pointed to the Vikings’ border rivals, the Packers, who transitioned from Brett Favre to Aaron Rodgers to Jordan Love over the last 30 years.

“We lived it in the NFC North for two straight decades because of the way the Packers transitioned their quarterbacks,” said Rudolph. “I think the Vikings organization realizes that they’re set up to win right now. And J.J. can still be the guy, and ultimately we can see another veteran quarterback, maybe a guy who’s trying to find a home, has played good football, but would be willing to come in on a one-year deal and compete. I think that’s ultimately how you’ll get the best out of J.J. and set the team up for success in 2026.”

or even Arizona’s Kyler Murray could make sense for the Vikings this offseason. Minnesota could also be forced to revisit the Aaron Rodgers speculation that engulfed the team last spring. When asked about who he thinks would fit, Rudolph appeared to agree with the speculation already out there.

“I think you got Mac Jones,” said Rudolph. “To me, if I’m looking at that list, Aaron (Rodgers), if he wants to come back and make a run with an incredibly talented roster in a division that he’s very familiar with, completely agree. … But yeah, bringing somebody in, doesn’t really matter who it is. There’s plenty of high-caliber veteran quarterbacks that could come in, and Kevin (O’Connell) always gets the most out of them. There’s no better quarterback whisperer than KOC, and I think he would be a great spot if you’re a veteran quarterback like a Tua (Tagovailoa), trying to revitalize your career, if he is on the market. Wouldn’t be a bad place to look.”

One name Rudolph doesn’t think is realistic: Kirk Cousins.

“I do think Kirk would be a guy that would make sense back in Minnesota, but I just don’t see him getting out of Atlanta,” Rudolph said. “He’s under contract there, they were willing to pay him $45 million to be the backup, and now you bring in a head coach and a play caller that he’s very familiar with. So I don’t see him getting out of Atlanta.”



If Vikings Don’t Go ‘Lower’ Than Mac Jones, These QBs Would Be Ruled Out

On a recent episode of his podcast, The Athletic’s Alec Lewis speculated that the Vikings have a certain level they won’t go below when targeting a veteran quarterback.

“It’s hard for me to imagine that the Vikings would dip lower, with whoever they target via trade or free agency, than a Mac Jones-type level,” said Lewis.


Yore Mock​


Yore Mock
Trade Partner: Cowboys
Sent: 1.18
Received: 1.20, 5.150, 5.177

Pick 20. Peter Woods DL Clemson
Pick 49. Dillon Thieneman S Oregon
Pick 82. Keionte Scott CB Miami (FL)
Pick 97. Harold Perkins LB LSU
Pick 150. Riley Nowakowski TE Indiana
Pick 161. Bryce Lance WR North Dakota State
Pick 177. Febechi Nwaiwu IOL Oklahoma
Pick 194. Trey Zuhn III OT Texas A&M
Pick 234. Charles Demmings CB Stephen F. Austin
Pick 240. Xavier Nwankpa S Iowa






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

While navigating the open thread, just assume it’s sarcasm

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

Source: https://www.dailynorseman.com/minne...news-and-links-what-do-you-want-to-talk-about
 
Back
Top