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Minnesota Vikings News and Links: The Wagon Is Off The Trail

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The competitve part of the season is pretty much over and was over before the Seahawks game. Nothing that happened in that game is that big of a deal to me including the 4th down play that resulted in the pick six. The team would only have a 11% chance of making the playoffs if they had somehow won the game.

The season has been a disaster. Injury to offensive linemen and a couple of key defenders (for a little bit) really have hurt. But the play of the Quarterbacks has been the main reason why the offense is abysmal. You really could not have expected too much better either. I did expect to see JJ play decently though. His high ankle sprain that kept him out of 6 games certainly has not helped his development.

I see all of the chatter about KAM and KOC being on the hot seat and even some folks calling for one or the other or both getting fired. I do not believe they will or should be fired. Yes, the QB decision is on them and now they have to fix it. I am not sure what that will be right now. These next five games will be critical for JJ. First, he simply must remain healthy. Second, he has to be more accurate. I am hoping he does these two things and gives the team (and us fans) something to be hopeful about for 2026. It is going to be tough though. The Cowboys, Giants, Lions, and Packers will all likely have something to play for.

So, why do I think KAM should keep his job. First, the Wilfs just extended him. That should be enough reason right there.

Most fans think his drafting is terrible. 2022 was bad for sure. But he is not that bad since then compared to other teams. A lot of teams only have 2 to 3 players from their 2022 draft class remaining or likely to be retained.


All he has left from the 2022 class is Nailor and Chandler both of whom can be gone next offseason.
In 2023, he has Addison, Hockenson (have to count the trade), and Ward.
In 2024, he has JJ, Turner, Rouse, Reichard, Jurgens, and Rodriguez. This was a very strong draft as long as JJ and Turner pan out.

He should get better though. He missed out on trading down last year with the Falcons which would have given him two first round picks this year. If he did that though, who would be the left guard? Brandel?

I do not think his free agent pickups have been bad either. Hargrave and Kelly got 2 year deals with significant cap savings in 2026 if they are let go. Allen got a 3 year deal and they would save 18.34M if they let him go in 2027. Rodgers only got a two year deal. Fries is the only one to get a 5 year deal. I would have preferred for him to try and sign Drew Dalman for 14M per year rather than Kelly for 9M per year.

I think they can have a strong draft and decent free agency with a handful of moves.

I do not think it is worth discussing KOC. Plenty of folks were shooting down the thought of trading him away to another team before the season started. Others are questioning his QB whispering abilities. I am not even sure where that onikor came from. Probably some doofus like myself wrote about it and then it took off. As usual, the sheep gobbled it up.

He is in his fourth year as a head coach and has had very good results when he did not have injuries to his QBs. Can he get better? You betcha. Will he get better? I would bet on it.

I seriously doubt either one of these two will be going anywhere this offseason. Thus, I am not going to write about it any more.

What can the team do next offseason and especially at the QB position. It all depends on JJ these next 5 games. The free agent QBs next year do not look very promosing. I have to believe that Indy will offer Jones and decent enough deal to keep him. That leave Rodgers, Russell Wilson, Marcus Mariota, Zach Wilson, Tyrod Taylor, Joe Flacco, and some others that are not very interesting. I doubt the 49ers will trade Mac Jones either. They need him in case something happens to Purdy. They will have massive leverage too. I do not think the Giants will trade Jameis Winston (some of you would not want him anyway). They need him to backup Dart. I think Mariota will stay in Washington but he might come here especially if he thinks JJ might struggle.

I cannot see drafting another QB early either. The pickings look very slim. It would not surprise me to see a lot of players remain in school.

We really need JJ to pan out. If they cannot trade for any QB then I could live with Rodgers or Russell Wilson.

It is interesting to read all the comments from people who believe the team needs to tear it down and build it back up with a different contractor. I think many fans got caught up in the McCarthy hype and believed the season would be successful. The comments now reveal that most fans are not patient and do not want to wait a young QB to develop or not. Cant blame them for that because winning games is all that is important.


Minnesota Vikings News and Links​


Kevin O’Connell: Offensive Adjustments & Early Injury Updates for Week 14



The harsh truth about J.J. McCarthy’s first six starts — and whether the Vikings can still fix him

And soon, O’Connell and general manager Kwesi Adofo-Mensah will have to decide: Can the 22-year-old quarterback, six starts into his NFL career, be fixed, or is it already time to hit the reset button and move on?

The complication: O’Connell’s words before the season.

“I’ve thought a lot about this,” O’Connell told The Athletic back in early September. “And I’ve realized the most important part of a quarterback’s development is when it doesn’t go right. When there are growing pains, when there are struggles, that’s when you have to buckle up and put on your big-boy pants as a coach. You have to have a clear-cut plan on how you’re going to improve: what film to watch, what drills to do, how to measure progress, even if it’s really small.

“It’s our job as coaches to look inward first and exhaust every resource possible to get these guys to play like the best versions of themselves.”

Eye test aside, the data is even harsher — and it puts McCarthy in a category reserved for the NFL’s biggest quarterback misfires.

Stacked against every first-round QB since 2016 who saw consistent playing time in their first two seasons, McCarthy’s first six starts paint a stark picture. He ranks 34th out of 35 QBs in EPA per dropback (-0.34), 32nd in completion percentage (54.2%), 34th in turnover-worthy throws (7.5%), and dead last in interceptions (10) and passer rating (57.9).

(In its simplest form, EPA per dropback is the average number of points a quarterback creates [or loses] for his team every time he drops back.)

There’s more: while McCarthy has the best time-to–pressure numbers (2.73 seconds), he has one of the worst sack rates of all 35 QBs (11.2%, which ranks 31st), and his sacks-per-pressure rate of 25.3% is seventh worst. Without even watching a single snap, these metrics tell us that McCarthy holds the ball too long, drifts in the pocket, and when pressure finally gets home, he melts. He’s basically creating his own sacks. The protection is good; the decision-making isn’t.

If you’re looking for a glimmer of hope in the table above, Jared Goff might be it. He is the only quarterback in the past 10 drafts to get off to a slower start over his first six games than McCarthy, according to EPA per dropback. And like McCarthy, Goff struggled with completion percentage (53.5%), interceptions (seven) and passer rating (61.7).

To understand how first-round quarterbacks overcome early struggles, I compared their first six starts to their next 11 — which works out to a full 17-game season.

Goff didn’t truly become “Jared Goff, one of the NFL’s best quarterbacks,” until his 2021 breakout in Detroit, his sixth year in the league. But even in starts 7-17, he showed significant progress compared to his rocky first six outings.

Across those next 11 starts, Goff posted the largest EPA per dropback improvement of any of the 35 quarterbacks studied — nearly a half-point jump. Only Lamar Jackson (+0.35), Bo Nix (+0.33) and Baker Mayfield (+0.24) were even close. His completion percentage climbed from 53.5% to 61.5%, his TD-INT ratio improved from 5-7 to 16-4, and his passer rating skyrocketed from 61.7 to 97.9.

The McVay Factor: Improvement by design
Goff deserves credit for the quick improvement, but Sean McVay’s contribution was arguably more important. (Goff’s first seven starts came during his rookie season with head coach Jeff Fisher; starts 8-17 came in Year 2 with McVay, when the Rams went 11-5 and Goff made the Pro Bowl.) Essentially, McVay made it a priority to simplify the offense for Goff, never giving him more than he could handle. In fact, the first-year coach would err on the side of being too conservative over putting too much on the second-year quarterback’s plate.

If this sounds familiar it’s because it’s the same strategy Patriots offensive coordinator Josh McDaniels has used for young quarterbacks — most recently, Drake Maye, the No. 3 pick in the 2024 NFL Draft. (He went seven spots ahead of McCarthy.)

“I always talk about it … you guys all had a bucket,” McDaniels told Julian Edelman last offseason. “And yours was a big bucket at the end like you could handle whatever we gave you. Well, when you take a young quarterback, it’s more like a cup. …

Most QBs in this hole never climb out
The answers to all these questions, based on what we’ve seen through six games from McCarthy, are not encouraging — not even a little bit. Goff is the only modern quarterback who climbed out of a hole deeper than McCarthy’s. Everyone else in this range — from Zach Wilson to Justin Fields to Paxton Lynch — stayed stuck.

Even Darnold, who won 14 games a season ago, and Daniel Jones, who spent the final six weeks of 2024 with the Vikings, had much better starts to their careers.

Neither quarterback improved over their next 11 starts — but they didn’t get worse, either. And sometimes just navigating your way through the growing pains of a full NFL season is reason enough to remain hopeful about a young quarterback’s prospects for success. And even then — and as O’Connell made clear in his comments before the season — you have to be patient enough to let that quarterback develop.

Sometimes that happens immediately (see Jayden Daniels, who balled out as a rookie but has struggled to stay healthy in 2025), sometimes it all comes together in Year 2 (Drake Maye is a legit MVP candidate), sometimes it takes several years and several teams for it to all come together (Mayfield, Darnold, Goff). And more often than not, it never works.

Let’s revisit the first table above and again look at those QBs with the lowest EPA per dropback over their first six starts.

Of the 12 names — all drafted between 2016 and 2025 — only four are with their original teams. All four were drafted in 2023 or later and are still on their rookie deals. (Bryce Young, Bo Nix, J.J. McCarthy and Cam Ward, and Young was benched two weeks into his second season before regaining the job several weeks later, and he’s remained the starter ever since)

The seven others not named Goff?

Mayfield lasted four seasons in Cleveland; Fields and Wilson lasted three seasons in Chicago and New York; Pickett and Lynch lasted two seasons in Pittsburgh and Denver; Haskins (who passed away in April 2022), didn’t last two full seasons in Washington; and Rosen lasted exactly one season in Arizona.

“I believe organizations fail young quarterbacks before young quarterbacks fail organizations,” O’Connell said last fall on “The Rich Eisen Show.”

There is a lot of truth to O’Connell’s words — and patience can save a young quarterback. But it can also sink a franchise. The Vikings have to decide which future they’re willing to bet on.



NFL Insider Gives Strong Take on Justin Jefferson’s Vikings Future

During the December 1 edition of “Get Up,” ESPN NFL insider Adam Schefter weighed in on the possibility of Jefferson being fed up with the Vikings’ quarterback situation and demanding a trade.

“They’re going to speak to him, I’m sure, at some point in time and get some feedback and input as to the player that he would want,” Schefter said. “It’s hard to imagine that they would trade Justin Jefferson, but then again, a year ago, I would have said it’s hard to imagine the Dallas Cowboys would have traded Micah Parsons, and they did.

“I still don’t think they’re trading Justin Jefferson. I think he’s clearly miffed, disappointed, and bewildered by the way this entire season and offseason, losing Sam Darnold and Daniel Jones is gone. But I don’t think it’s going to change as much and I don’t think they’re going to be moving off Justin Jefferson this offseason.”



Dejected Justin Jefferson among 5 storylines from Vikings’ shutout loss to Seahawks



Vikings radio analyst and ex-player calls Minnesota’s offense ‘broken’

“I know this is gonna sound bold, but I think our offense is broken,” Leber said. “I think systemically, our offense is broken, and I’m not sure what it’s gonna take to fix it.”

“You know that line in Dumb & Dumber when one of them says ‘Just when I thought you couldn’t get any dumber, you go and do something like this?’ This is how I feel about this Vikings offense right now,” he said. “After last week to this week, just when I thought the offense couldn’t get any worse, they go out and have a performance like they did today.”

“Our offensive line is beat up, we’re injured, we missed the left side of our offensive line, we missed Ryan Kelly again in this game because of a hip injury, so we had three backups playing on our offensive line against maybe the best defensive front that we’ve played this whole season,” Leber said. “It’s not gonna work. Midway through the fourth quarter, we had 11 yards rushing. Awful. I know that we want to run the football, but it’s hard to when our offensive line can’t block anybody. They had seven guys in coverage most of the time, didn’t have to blitz. Brosmer’s out there running for his life, and then when he wasn’t he was throwing to guys that were covered.”



Vikings release of Adam Thielen could end up giving them a positive benefit thanks to smart structuring

Normally, a team wouldn’t end up getting anything positive out of cutting a player with a $4 million cap hit before per-game roster bonuses, with a $1 million signing bonus and $3 million in base salary fully guaranteed.

When the NFL released the transaction wire, it wasn’t just a normal release, the Vikings released him with a non-injury settlement. What does that mean? Well, the Vikings could end up getting a reprieve on the salary cap.

With a non-injury settlement, it can mean several different things, including potential offset language that will allow the Vikings to recoup salary cap space. With five games to go, that number would be close to $1 million, and that will go a long way toward fixing the salary cap next year.




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...ngs-news-and-links-the-wagon-is-off-the-trail
 
Vikes Views: Rooting for Wins or Better Picks?

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The Minnesota Vikings are no longer in the playoff hunt. The team is breaking in their new QBs and it’s not gone as planned. We’ve reached the point where the age-old argument starts. Do you root for the team to win over the next five weeks, or do you actually want to see the Vikings lose out? There are plenty of people that will tell you what makes one view better or worse or what makes you a true fan. I’m not worried about that and I’m not passing judgement either way.

Why root for a win?

Winning “culture” is hard to establish. Even if the coaches and GM are secure in their position with the team, it helps to build a winning culture. Also, it’s more fun to win. If you don’t enjoy the Vikings winning, are you even a fan? My fantasy team also would like some points from Justin Jefferson, Jordan Addison, and Aaron Jones.

Why root for a loss?

The most obvious is a higher draft pick. The more they lose, the better the pick will be in the Spring. There’s also a more sinister reason: you’re hoping someone gets fired. KOC, Kwesi, someone else. Maybe a more subtle change of play calling duties being passed on could land you here too.

Let us know what you’re rooting for the remainder of the season. Join the conversation in the comments below.

Source: https://www.dailynorseman.com/minne.../vikes-views-rooting-for-wins-or-better-picks
 
Minnesota Vikings Reacts Survey Week 14: Will We Win Again This Year?

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

Well, folks, it’s time for this week’s installment of our SB Nation Reacts survey about our Minnesota Vikings. We’ve got a second question for you to answer this week, so let’s get to it, shall we?

Our first question this week is the standard question about whether or not you think the Vikings are going in the right direction. We were sitting at 11% before last week’s loss to Seattle, and I’m going to go way out on a limb and bet that we’re going to find ourselves in the single digits this week. We won’t know for sure until the survey closes out, thought.

The second question for this week has to do with the team’s remaining schedule. More specifically, it asks how many more victories you think this team is going to get the rest of the season. There are five games left on the schedule:

  • vs Washington
  • at Dallas (still scheduled for Sunday Night Football. . .for now)
  • at New York Football Giants
  • vs Detroit (Christmas Day)
  • vs Green Bay

It’s worth noting that, in the entire history of the Minnesota Vikings franchise, they’ve never had a losing streak longer than seven games. The number now currently sits at four and. . .well, I’m not going to sugarcoat it, folks. . .I think there’s a better chance of the number hitting nine than there is of the number not hitting nine at this point.

As always, we invite you to participate in this wek’s survey by both voting in the poll below and by sounding off in the comments section.

With that, go ahead and have at it, ladies and gentlemen! We’ll have the results for you sometime before kickoff of Sunday’s game at U.S. Bank Stadium.

Source: https://www.dailynorseman.com/minne...ngs-reacts-survey-week-14-win-again-this-year
 
Commanders at Vikings: First Injury Report

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The Washington Commanders and Minnesota Vikings issued their first injury reports ahead of their Sunday matchup at US Bank stadium. Here they are:

Minnesota Vikings​

  • LG Donovan Jackson, Ankle, DNP
  • DT Levi Drake Rodriguez, Neck, DNP
  • S Josh Metellus, Shoulder, Limited
  • DT Jalen Redmond, Hip, Limited
  • DT Jonathan Allen, NIR-Rest, Limited
  • OL Blake Brandel, Concussion, Limited
  • RB Ty Chandler, Knee, Limited
  • OLB Jonathan Greenard, Shoulder, Limited
  • DT Javon Hargrave, NIR-Rest, Limited
  • RB Aaron Jones, Shoulder, Limited
  • C Ryan Kelly, Hip, Limited
  • S Harrison Smith, NIR-Rest, Limited
  • S Theo Jackson, Neck, Limited
  • LT Christian Darrisaw, Knee, Full
  • QB J.J. McCarthy, Concussion, Full

For the Vikings, Donovan Jackson remains a non-participant, which makes his availability on Sunday questionable at this point. Levi Drake-Rodriguez missing Wednesday’s practice with a neck injury also casts some doubt on his availability this weekend.

All those that are limited seem likely to be active on Sunday but are playing through minor injuries. The exception is Ty Chandler who had his 21-day window opened to return from IR. He might need more time however before being activated.

J.J. McCarthy was symptom-free and participating in a full practice was the last thing he needed to complete successfully to clear concussion protocol, which he did today- assuming it went well- clearly the way for him to play on Sunday. Blake Brandel was symptom-free already too, but was limited in practice, so maybe he isn’t set to clear concussion protocol just yet, but maybe in time for the game on Sunday.

Washington Commanders​

  • TE Zach Ertz, NIR-Rest, DNP
  • DE Drake Jackson, Knee/Groin, DNP
  • DT Javon Kinlaw, Back, DNP
  • OLB Von Miller, NIR-Rest, DNP
  • LT Laremy Tunsil, NIR-Rest, DNP
  • LB Bobby Wagner, NIR-Rest, DNP
  • QB Jayden Daniels, Left Elbow, Limited
  • LB Frankie Luvu, Shoulder, Limited
  • WR Noah Brown, Groin/Knee, Full
  • LS Tyler Ott, Back, Full

For the Commanders, lots of veteran rest days on Wednesday. Drake Jackson and Noah Brown are both in their 21-day window to return from IR, but Brown appears to be ahead of Jackson on the road to returning.

The key injury of course is to quarterback Jayden Daniels, who was limited on Wednesday after missing several weeks with an elbow injury. It is thought that he will be able to play this weekend, but we’ll have to see how things go the rest of the week.

We’ll have a couple more updates tomorrow and Friday.

Follow me on X/Bluesky @wludford

Source: https://www.dailynorseman.com/minne...456/commanders-at-vikings-first-injury-report
 
2025 NFL Week 14: Washington Commanders at Minnesota Vikings

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Two of the NFL’s most disappointing teams in this 2025 season are set to meet this Sunday at U.S. Bank Stadium as the Minnesota Vikings will play host to the Washington Commanders in Week 14 NFL action.

These two teams combined for 26 regular season victories in 2024, and the Commanders advanced to the NFC Championship Game before losing to the eventual Super Bowl champions. This season, through the first thirteen weeks of the season, they’ve combined for just seven victories. The Vikings have lost their last four games in a row and are coming off of their first shutout loss in eighteen years, having fallen to Seattle last Sunday by a score of 26-0. The Commanders have dropped their last seven contests in a row, with their last two defeats coming in overtime.

Minnesota could be welcoming back quarterback J.J. McCarthy in this one. McCarthy, whose struggles this season have been well-documented, missed the loss to Seattle because he was in the league’s concussion protocol. The Commanders may or may not have the services of their young star quarterback, Jayden Daniels, in this one. Daniels suffered a dislocated elbow back in Week 9 and has been out of action since then.

Kickoff for this week’s game is scheduled for noon Central time, with coverage being provided by the FOX family of networks, including KMSP-9 in the Twin Cities. We’ll be putting all of our coverage of this one in this stream for you, so keep checking back for the latest updates.


Source: https://www.dailynorseman.com/minne...14-washington-commanders-at-minnesota-vikings
 
Minnesota Vikings News and Links: Are You Looking Forward To The Game This Week?

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It seems like there is at least half the people that visit here who want to see KAM and KOC fired based on my rudimentary perusal of the comments in the 12/02 News and Links post. I said in that post that I did not think it is going to happen. I still feel that way but am OK if others want change. I will debate it though.

The latest “nugget” comes from KOC’s presser in which he basically said he just want JJ to focus on playing instead of fundamentals. If you have been watching any former players talk about JJ’s play this year you would have heard them say that fixing fundamentals is very hard to during the season. Some folks are asking why didn’t je do that to start the season?

Aaron Jones was talking about KOC trying to simplify the offense here.

He said “you don’t want it to vanilla” and that they kind of “dumbed it down” (he did not really want to use those words).

Some folks will ask why wasn’t this done before. Who knows really?

I think that KOC had too much confidence in JJ heading into the season is what it comes down to. I mean, the reports from training camp practices and the two practices against the Patriots were stellar. Why wouldn’t he beleve JJ is ready to run the offense?

Some ask why didn’t JJ play more in the preseason. KOC explained it in the preseason. He said he wanted him to play with the starters and if the other starters were going to be out then it he did not want JJ out there. Reasonable IMO.

I do not know what is going on in KOC’s head but I assume he thought JJ was ready for a lot more than he has shown. Is there a disconnect from what JJ shows on the practice field to what he shows in the games? He has had some really good moments where he threw some nice nice passes and led some come backs. How is JJ going to harness that kind of play so that it can be on display more often? That is the key.

It does suck to be out of the playoffs but if JJ turns the corner and becomes more consistent then the future is very bright.

I am going to go out on a limb and predict that JJ will start to be more consistent and ease a lot of fears!


Minnesota Vikings News and Links​


Kevin O’Connell has a clear directive for J.J. McCarthy this weekend



One Last Hurdle for Vikings JJ McCarthy



J.J. McCarthy gets grim update on future with Minnesota Vikings amid struggles

McCarthy has been so bad that The Athletic’s Alec Lewis believes that it’s pretty much a certainty that the Michigan product will be competing for his job with a veteran quarterback in 2026.

“At this point, though, it’s doubtful that even the most optimistic outcome of the five-game sample will sway the Vikings from shopping in that all-too-familiar aisle,” he wrote. “With O’Connell and general manager Kwesi Adofo-Mensah entering their fifth season without a playoff win, and with superstar receiver Justin Jefferson’s frustrations increasing, the Vikings are going to need insurance at quarterback — someone to compete with McCarthy, at the bare minimum.”

Lewis adds that one NFC scout told him that 2026 won’t be “a good year to be needing a quarterback,” so that’s not great for the Vikings.



Vikings HC Reveals Some Good O-Line News, Some Bad

“Donovan is not quite there yet from a standpoint of participating in practice, but he’s rapidly recovering and doing everything in his power to be on the field. It’s been awesome to see, and we’ll see how that works towards the end of the week. He’s proven, coming off the wrist surgery earlier this year, he can go out there and play at a pretty high level if he can get to that place where he’s stable and has the power and change of direction. Like I said Monday, the plan for Christian is to have his normal work week and flow and play in the football game.”

Kevin O’Connell



Vikings make a pair of roster moves, including a wide receiver addition

Who is Joaquin Davis?
Listed at 6’4″ and 195 pounds, Davis is a rookie out of North Carolina Central with some intriguing tools. He signed with the Broncos as an undrafted free agent and reportedly generated some buzz during training camp before being cut. Davis apparently ran a 4.36 40-yard dash and recorded a 42-inch vertical leap at the HBCU pro day, which are remarkable numbers. He caught 92 passes for 1,211 yards and 12 touchdowns over the past three seasons at NC Central.

Davis will look to show the Vikings enough in practice to earn a futures deal after the season and make the 90-man offseason roster.



Three Bad Decisions That Sank the Vikings’ Chances to Contend in 2025



The 4 Offseason Trades the Vikings Absolutely Botched



In this putrid mess of a Vikings season, no one is absolved from blame



Justin Jefferson is NOT happy; What can Minnesota Vikings do about it?



https://sports.yahoo.com/articles/one-last-hurdle-vikings-jj-002408497.html



https://thevikingage.com/3-minnesota-vikings-starters-playing-way-out-2026



Adam Schefter sparks Justin Jefferson trade talk — should Vikings fans worry?

“It’s an obvious question to ask today after a game like that, and today I’m sure that is the way that he feels. Is he going to feel that way this offseason when they go out and add to that quarterback room?” Schefter said.

“They’re going to speak to him, I’m sure, at some point in time, and get some feedback and input as to the player that he would want. It’s hard to imagine that they would trade Justin Jefferson, but then again, a year ago, I would’ve said it’s hard to imagine the Dallas Cowboys would trade Micah Parsons, and they did.”

How realistic is a Jefferson trade? Schefter doesn’t think the odds are high.

“I still don’t think they’re trading Justin Jefferson. I think he’s clearly miffed and disappointed and bewildered by the way this entire season — and offseason losing Sam Darnold and Daniel Jones — has gone. But I don’t think it’s going to change much, and I don’t think they’re going to be moving off Justin Jefferson this offseason,” Schefter reasoned.



Could 49ers flip Brandon Aiyuk for $140 million WR in a trade?

The San Francisco 49ers will undoubtedly explore every possible avenue to replace wide receiver Brandon Aiyuk, who appears to be on his way out of San Francisco.

With the potential for a lengthy QB search ahead, it doesn’t seem impossible that the Vikings would look to move Jefferson for the right price.

Vikings Wire’s Andrew Harbaugh reached out to NFL Wire editors asking what they might be willing to offer for Justin Jefferson.

Here’s what we offered in a hypothetical trade:

49ers get: Justin Jefferson
Vikings get: Brandon Aiyuk, 2026 first-round pick, 2026 third-round pick, 2027 second-round pick

Here’s what Harbaugh had to say about our offer:

The Vikings are not likely to trade away Justin Jefferson, but they may have their hand forced. They have Jordan Addison on the depth chart, so they can sort of afford it. That being said, getting this type of package isn’t ideal, but if they move on from current general manager Kwesi Adofo-Mensah, then the new one may want to get some extra picks to make up for the loss.



Vikings Nominate C.J. Ham for 2025 Walter Payton Man of the Year Award

Vikings Head Coach Kevin O’Connell annually asks the locker room to vote for that season’s WPMOY Club Winner; he emphasized the significance of peer selection.

“For C.J. to be nominated two years in a row by his teammates says a lot about the impact he has in our locker room,” O’Connell said. “Every time we introduce our starting fullback at U.S. Bank Stadium, you can feel how much our fans love and appreciate him. My hope is that people fully understand the type of human being and leader he is — someone who is committed to serving others and brings his teammates along with him. C.J. Ham is truly one of one.”

Vikings right tackle Brian O’Neill pointed to his teammate’s blue-collar work ethic as one of the reasons he easily garners so much respect throughout the locker room and beyond.

“I think a lot of people can appreciate that he doesn’t have a glamorous job, but he’s willing to do whatever job it is,” O’Neill said. “There aren’t many 32-year-olds that play all four special teams phases in the NFL. There aren’t many people who, in year 10 in the NFL, are willing to be on the punt protection team every single day of OTAs and training camp.

“That exemplifies his team-first attitude. Wherever he can possibly help, he’s going to,” O’Neill added. “He sets a great example for young guys who might be a starter, but they see a guy who finds different ways to help the team no matter what. I think people can relate to that and appreciate that … and it’s cool when people who do the dirty work are able to be recognized and appreciated.”

Ham’s teammates may not have known him for the same length of time, but they daily see the same character and care. It’s why for the past two years, his name has risen to the top in Vikings WPMOY voting.

“Because the things he does in the community, people can tell it comes from a genuine place. It’s not for show. Not for credit,” O’Neill said. “We know how much playing here means to him, and the things he does come from truly a place of appreciation for where he came from and wanting to help the community who helped him get to where he is now.”



Cap Space Work
Carry over cap space : $16,211,221
Starting 2026 Cap space : ($35,983,572) note: carry over cap space not included here

Redo/Extend O’Neill with a 2 yr 40M (20M signing bonus an 3 void years) – saves 12.5M in cap space
Restructure 12M of Hockenson’s salary – saves 8M in cap space
Release Jones saves 7.2M in cap space – 31 years old on Dec 2, 2025
Release Hargrave saves 11M in cap space – 33 years old on Feb 7, 2026
Release Kelly saves 12.1M in cap space – 33 years old on May 30, 2026
Smith retires or is cut post June 1 saves 1.3M in cap space – 37 years old on Feb 2, 2026
Exercise ERFA tender on Redomnd costs 1.005M in cap space

After these moves the team should have 30M in cap space (including the current carry over amount) and the only free agent they might consider giving an extension to is Redmond. In 2027, the cap space is only 18.6M after these moves. Cutting allen would get the team to 37.9M in cap space for 2027 but this is before any free agents signed in 2026 and the rookies are signed.

The free agents I like are …

Travis Etienne RB – 8M
Luke Fortner C – 8M
Eric Stokes CB – 9M
Alohi Gilman S – 5M


Yore Mock​


Trade Partner: Steelers
Sent: 2.42
Received: 2.45, 4.133

Trade Partner: Giants
Sent: 3.97
Received: 4.104, 6.196

Trade Partner: Cowboys
Sent: 4.102
Received: 4.116, 5.178

Trade Partner: Saints
Sent: 5.161, 6.201
Received: 5.143

Trade Partner: Commandos
Sent: 6.196, 7.241
Received: 6.185



Pick 11. Caleb Downs S Ohio State 6’0″ 205
Pick 45. Chris Brazell WR Tennessee 6’5″ 200
Pick 73. Deontae Lawson LB Alabama 6’2″ 228
Pick 116. Kelley Jones CB Mississippi State 6’3″ 195
Pick 133. Emmett Johnson RB Nebraska 5’11” 200
Pick 143. Lee Hunter DL Texas Tech 6’4″ 330
Pick 178. Logan Jones IOL Iowa 6’3″ 303
Pick 185. Kenyatta Jackson EDGE Ohio State 6’6″ 265
Pick 226. Bud Clark S TCU 6’2″ 190





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...are-you-looking-forward-to-the-game-this-week
 
Norse Code Podcast Episode 591: Structurally Capable

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View Link

*****Download Link Here*****

Episode Notes:


Misery Cohort:

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Follow us on Twitter / Bluesky


To listen to more, this is the link to that iTunes feed. If you can’t for whatever reason subscribe via iTunes, subscribe to via our RSS feed, which should support the RSS reader or podcast organizer of your choice. You can still leave a review even if you can’t subscribe via iTunes because it’s easy to create an AppleID. We also have a YouTube channel. Our podcasts are automatically uploaded there.

You can visit our shop here. Buy a onesie? Maybe a wiggler sticker?

But we also have a Patreon and that should make it even easier to support the best podcast for your Minnesota Vikings. We have a discord just for our Patreon supporters, along with special edition episodes. Check it out here. If you wanted to donate via Paypal instead of Patreon, head to this link.

And if you want something to show off your support of the show, buy our merch! We have multiple designs. Please do not buy a shower curtain.

Once again, contact me at arifmhasan (at) gmail dot com or the podcast at NorseCodePodcast (at) gmail dot com. Follow us on twitter at @NorseCodeDN or just me @ArifHasanNFL

Source: https://www.dailynorseman.com/minne...code-podcast-episode-591-structurally-capable
 
Commanders-Vikings: J.J. McCarthy, Simplification & Managing Expectations

In this episode of The Real Forno Show, Tyler Forness and Dave Stefano discuss the Vikings-Commanders matchup, J.J. McCarthy's return emphasizing instinctive play over mechanics, O'Connell's platitude-filled communication, Dallas Turner's improved fundamentals and sack records, defensive tactics against quick passes, and how the game impacts draft position.


Minnesota Vikings face Commanders: Draft stakes, QB drama, and future outlook. In this episode of The Real Forno Show, hosts Tyler Forness and Dave Stefano dive deep into the Minnesota Vikings’ upcoming matchup against the Washington Commanders. They focus on quarterback J.J. McCarthy’s post-concussion performance, Kevin O’Connell’s coaching style, rising star Dallas Turner’s development, draft implications, and what the future holds for both franchises. If you’re searching for Vikings analysis, NFL draft talk, and expert takes on the team’s direction, this episode is a must-listen or watch.

Tyler and Dave break down the current state of the Vikings, highlighting the challenges both teams face as they enter the game with disappointing records. Deliver a candid breakdown of the Minnesota Vikings’ upcoming clash with the Washington Commanders, a game that’s lost its playoff buzz but gained intrigue with QBs J.J. McCarthy and Jayden Daniels both returning from injuries. The discussion centers on McCarthy’s progress, the coaching staff’s communication style, and how injuries and inconsistent play have shaped the season. Forness emphasizes the need for McCarthy to play freely without overthinking mechanics, while highlighting the broader implications for the Vikings’ future amid a disappointing 4-8 season. The hosts also analyze the impact of the game on draft positioning, the importance of player development, and what fans should watch for as the season winds down. With insights into both the Vikings’ and Commanders’ strategies, this episode offers a comprehensive look at the key storylines shaping the NFC.

Key points from the episode include:

  • J.J. McCarthy’s Return and Development: McCarthy has cleared concussion protocol and is set to start; the focus shifts from mechanics to instinctive play to avoid overthinking, drawing comparisons to high-variance QBs like Josh Allen.
  • Kevin O’Connell’s Communication and Coaching: Critique of O’Connell’s platitude-heavy press conferences and reactive approach to QB development, contrasting with successes like elevating Kirk Cousins and Sam Darnold.
  • Dallas Turner’s Impressive Growth: The rookie EDGE has a three-game sack streak, tying Vikings records, with improved strength and fundamentals praised by DC Brian Flores for “little things” beyond splash plays.
  • Game Preview and Draft Implications: Vikings defense must counter Commanders’ short-pass concepts; a loss could boost draft position to as high as 5th, impacting tiebreakers with teams like the Bengals and Falcons.

Listen:

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Watch:


Whether you’re a die-hard Purple faithful or just craving insightful NFL analysis, tune into The Real Forno Show for unfiltered Vikings news, game previews, and expert takes that go beyond the headlines. This Minnesota Vikings podcast, available on platforms like YouTube, iTunes and Spotify, is your go-to for building community around SKOL Nation—subscribe now and join the conversation!

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 J.J. McCarthy needs most to turn his season around? Share your thoughts in the comments below!

Source: https://www.dailynorseman.com/minne...mccarthy-simplification-managing-expectations
 
Autopsy the Vikings’ Lost 2025 Season + Commanders Preview

The Two Old Bloggers dissect the Minnesota Vikings’ lost season—quarterback struggles, coaching debates, and a preview of the Commanders matchup. Can the Vikings salvage hope, or is it time for a rebuild? Tune in for analysis and predictions.


Vikings 4-8 nightmare: QB disaster worse than 2007, KOC/Kwesi hot-seat debate, Jefferson trade fear, & Commanders preview. The raw truth fans need right now.

What started as Super Bowl hype has turned into a full-blown autopsy. Darren Campbell and Dave Stefano, the Two Old Bloggers (Vikings 1st & SKOL), just delivered their most brutal episode yet after the 26-0 shutout in Seattle — the first blanking since 2007. With special guest Drew Bunting breaking down the numbers for Sunday’s clash with the 3-9 Washington Commanders, this is the no-sugar-coating Vikings podcast episode every Purple die-hard has to watch or listen to this week.

The electricity of 14 wins in 2024 is gone. In its place: a 4-8 record, a quarterback room that makes Tarvaris Jackson look like peak Kirk Cousins, and serious questions about whether Kevin O’Connell, Kwesi Adofo-Mensah, and even Justin Jefferson have a future together in Minnesota.

Episode Summary – Key Points​

  • The real reason the Vikings are 4-8 (and possibly headed to 4-13): quarterback play is the worst since the 2007 Tarvaris Jackson/Kelly Holcomb/Brooks Bollinger disaster (60.2% completion, 173 yds/gm, 19 INT vs 11 TD).
  • Why firing KOC or Kwesi right now would be a panic move — comparing the Patriots’ identical roster-building strategy that’s 11-2 with Drake Maye thriving.
  • The nightmare scenario nobody wants to say out loud: if QB play stays this bad in 2026, trading Justin Jefferson (while his value is still sky-high) becomes a real conversation.
  • J.J. McCarthy is back vs. Washington — KOC finally ditching the mechanics obsession: “Just go play ball.”
  • Eric Wilson’s breakout year (team leader in TFL, FF, total tackles) — but at 31, don’t break the bank to re-sign him.
  • Adam Thielen released — another failed “bring back the legend” trade (see: Randy Moss 2010).
  • Inside The Numbers with Drew Bunting: Vikings 1.5-point dogs, O/U 44 (lean under), keys = finally score TDs, stop the Commanders’ #3-ranked run game, fast start at home.
  • Drew’s bold call: Vikings drop 28-30 on Washington’s 31st-ranked defense or the season is effectively over.

Listen:​

View Link

Watch:


This episode is vintage Two Old Bloggers: zero fluff, historical context, brutal honesty, and actual football insight you won’t find on the national shows. Darren and Dave lay out exactly why the season flatlined and whether there’s any realistic path back in 2026 — while Drew’s preview gives you the stats and matchups you need before kickoff.

If you’re tired of the same recycled hot takes and want the deepest, most authentic Vikings conversation on the internet, hit play on this episode right now. You’ll laugh, you’ll probably yell at your screen, but you’ll come away understanding this mess better than 99% of Purple Twitter.

Fan With Us!


We have your Minnesota Vikings talk amongst the Two Old Bloggers, Darren @KickassblogVike, and Dave @Luft_Krigare along with our numbers guy, Drew Bunting. Join the conversation! Fan with us at Vikings 1st & SKOL @Vikings1stSKOL and with our podcast partner Fans First Sports Network @FansFirstSN.

Question for the comments:


If the Vikings lose to a 3-9 Commanders team Sunday, is the 2025 season officially the biggest collapse in franchise history? Let us know below — SKOL!

Source: https://www.dailynorseman.com/minne...e-vikings-lost-2025-season-commanders-preview
 
Washington Commanders at Minnesota Vikings: Game Time, Radio, Streaming and More

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Welcome to game day, folks! In just a few hours, the Minnesota Vikings will return to the field as they face the Washington Commanders at U.S. Bank Stadium. We want everyone to be able to follow along with this one through whatever means they prefer, so we’re going to give you all of the information you need to do that here in one convenient place.

Television Info​


We are back to things getting underway at the best possible time for NFL action to kick off, that being noon Central time on Sunday afternoon. This game will be shown on the FOX family of networks, including KMSP-9 in the Twin Cities, with Adam Amin and Drew Brees on the call. If you’re wondering if you’re in the local broadcast area for this one, here is this week’s map provided by the folks from 506 Sports. The Commanders/Vikings game is represented by the blue area.

Week-14-FOX.png

If you’re outside of the local area, you’ll have to rely on YouTube NFL Sunday Ticket.

For our men and women serving in uniform overseas, this one will not be shown live on the American Forces Network. It will, however, be shown on a replay on AFN Sports. The start time for the replay is Monday at 1100Z, which works out to 1200L for viewers in Central Europe, 1400L for those on Arabian Standard time, and 2000L for fans in Japan and Korea.

Radio Info​


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

If you have satellite radio, you can catch the Vikings feed on Channel 229. If you’re utilizing the SiriusXM app, you can listen on the Vikings’ permanent home there, which is Channel 820.

Referee Info​


According to the gang from Football Zebras, the officiating crew for this one will be headed up by Brad Allen. This will be the second time the Vikings have seen Allen’s crew this season, and they’ll be hoping for a better result. The first time was their trip to Dublin back in September when they lost to the Pittsburgh Steelers.

Weather Info​


Obviously, the game itself won’t be affected by the weather, as it will be played inside of U.S. Bank Stadium. If you’re planning on traveling to the game or taking part in any pre-game activities, you’re going to want to bundle up. According to our friends at WeatherNation, temperatures on Sunday morning are going to be below zero but should warm up into the single digits by kickoff. But, hey, at least there won’t be any wind!

Betting Info​


The line for this one has changed a lot since it was first announced. The Commanders started the week as a 1.5-point favorite, but then the line shifted to the Vikings being favored by that same 1.5-point margin. Later in the week, after the Commanders announced that Jayden Daniels would start at quarterback, the line moved back to the Commanders being 1.5-point favorites, which is where it rests right now. The over/under for this one currently sits at 43.5 points.

Streaming Info​


This is a FOX game, so I don’t believe there are any other legal streaming means outside of YouTube NFL Sunday Ticket. I don’t care about illegal streams, but if you happen to share them here you’re going to get banned, so keep that in mind.

That should be everything you need to know to be caught up before kickoff today, ladies and gentlemen. We’ll have our first discussion thread of the day dropping about half an hour before kickoff, at around 11:30 AM Central time, and we hope that you’ll join us there for this one.

Source: https://www.dailynorseman.com/minne...s-minnesota-vikings-game-time-radio-streaming
 
Vikings Accomplish Feat That Hadn’t Been Done In 33 Years

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I mentioned this in my post-game recap of the Minnesota Vikings’ 31-0 victory over the Washington Commanders in Week 14 action, but I figured it was significant enough to warrant its own highlight.

By pitching a shutout on Sunday afternoon, this Vikings team became the first team in 33 years to follow up getting shut out by pitching a shutout of their own.

To find the last time this happened, you have to go back to the 1992 season. That year, the Denver Broncos lost to the Philadelphia Eagles in Week 3 of that season by a score of 30-0 at Philadelphia, a game that saw them only pick up four first downs and gain just 82 total yards of offense. (Yes, John Elway did play in that game, he was just bad.) Then, they traveled to Cleveland in Week 4 and defeated the Browns by a score of 12-0 in a game where they did not score a touchdown.

This shutout for the Vikings’ defense came almost two years to the day from the last time they shut out an opponent. I’m sure we all remember that epic, amazing, incredible battle with the Las Vegas Raiders in 2023 that the Vikings won 3-0 in Vegas, right? Well, if you’d forgotten that one until just now, I’m sure you could be forgiven.

It was a pretty drastic turnaround from last week for the Vikings, to say the least. Will it give them any sort of momentum for the final four weeks of this 2025 season? We’ll have to see, but it certainly would be nice if it did.

Source: https://www.dailynorseman.com/minne...ish-feat-33-years-shutout-denver-broncos-1992
 
Accelerated Reader and J.J. McCarthy’s 2025 Season: A Comparison

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I’ve never played the sport of football at a high level. I’ve never really played the sport of football at what you’d consider a medium level. Like a lot of folks, I’ve spent a lot of time watching football over the course of my life and would like to think that I’ve learned a few things along the way. So, when I see things regarding our Minnesota Vikings that I find confusing, I do what I can to try to relate them back to my own life experiences in an effort to understand them.

Yesterday, as the Vikings were thumping the Washington Commanders 31-0 just a week after being the thumpees against the Seattle Seahawks, we saw much-maligned second-year quarterback J.J. McCarthy have what was, by far, the best game of his young career. He was making good decisions, getting the football out quickly and accurately, and had the first game of his career where he didn’t turn the ball over at least once. He only had two completions of 20 yards or longer and only had 163 yards passing, but three of his completions went for touchdowns and he played a big role in engineering a 19-play, 98-yard touchdown drive that ate up twelve minutes of game time.

When the news broke earlier in the week that McCarthy had cleared concussion protocol and would get the start against the Commanders, the word was circulating that the Vikings were going to “simplify” the offense in order to get McCarthy more comfortable. Perhaps that’s why things looked the way they did on Sunday, and if that’s the case, the question that everyone should be asking is. . .why did it take so long?

Back in the late 20th Century when I was in high school, our English classes took part in something called “Accelerated Reader.” I think it still exists today, and I’m not sure if it works in the same way it did then, but the gist of it was that you would read books and take multiple choice tests on them in order to accumulate points. Longer, more complex books were worth more points, and the better you scored on the test, the more points you got. If you failed the test for whatever reason, you got no points and you couldn’t go back and redo the test for that particular book.

Our English teacher mandated that we needed to have a certain number of Accelerated Reader points by the end of the year, or else we’d fail the class. Now, my sophomore year, I slacked off a bit and had to go through a bit of a rush at the end of the year to get all of my points. I did it, but it was awful, and I didn’t want to do that again. When my junior year started, I thought I’d be super slick and try to get things done early. So, I decided I was going to read a terrible, awful book called Wuthering Heights by Emily Bronte. And not only was I going to do it, I was going to do it in a week. Then, once I got that out of the way, I could relax a little bit and not have to stress the rest of the year.

So, I devoted every spare minute I had over the course of a week to reading this book. Just marathon sessions, page after page, cramming that thing into my brain. I finished the book on a Sunday afternoon, went in on Monday morning, sat down at the computer, and took the exam.

I absolutely bombed the hell out of that test. Seriously, it was the 2000 NFC Championship Game of reading comprehension exams. Had the Apple IIe computer I took that test on been capable of mockery, it would have sounded like a Comedy Central roast. If the Accelerated Reader software had been able to give me negative points, I absolutely would have been in the hole.

Now. . .the fact that I failed in this endeavor didn’t mean that I couldn’t read. It didn’t mean that I didn’t enjoy reading. It didn’t mean that I couldn’t comprehend what I was reading.

What it meant was that my approach to the task at hand was faulty and that it needed to be changed.

So, I did what I probably should have done all along and read books that were shorter and easier to manage. Sure, they were worth fewer points, but they were easier to absorb and, when I took the test, I actually got points for taking them rather than getting nothing. It gave me something to build on rather than getting nothing and being frustrated. At the end of the day, I could have saved myself a lot of stress and other issues if I had just done that in the first place.

This is what the Vikings and Kevin O’Connell should have been doing with J.J. McCarthy all along. They spent the offseason investing in the run game by bringing in Jordan Mason and attempting to invest in the offensive line, and then they let McCarthy (and Max Brosmer, to some extent) hang back and run an offense that’s based on long-developing routes while the injuries on that offensive line made it difficult to keep them protected.

What we saw on Sunday against the Commanders is what we should have been seeing all season long, and I don’t know why it took until Week 14 to make this shift. Let the young quarterback get the basics of an NFL offense down first, let him adjust to the speed of the game, and then add some of the more complex things in to it as the season progresses. Then, maybe, over the summer you can add a bigger project to work on so that when you get to Training Camp next year, you can start adding that to your repitoire.

(Not Wuthering Heights, though. Never subject anyone to that. Ever.)

And, no, I don’t care that it was “just the Commanders.” It was just a week ago that the Denver Broncos, who would be the #1 seed in the AFC playoffs if the season ended today, needed overtime to defeat that same Commanders team at home (without Jayden Daniels), and would have lost to those Commanders if Marcus Mariota’s two-point conversion pass in overtime would have been a little better. So, no, the “just the Commanders” argument doesn’t hold any water here.

Games like what we saw on Sunday are why I’ve been saying all along, both here and on social media, that it’s way too early to be completely “out” on J.J. McCarthy. Between the injuries and the flaws in the way his development has been handled thus far, nobody really knows what the Vikings have in him at this point. I’m hoping that Sunday is the start of the upward swing for McCarthy, but we won’t know for sure until we see him start stacking a couple of consistent, solid starts together.

Source: https://www.dailynorseman.com/minne...er-j-j-mccarthy-2025-season-minnesota-vikings
 
Vikings/Cowboys Game to Remain on Sunday Night Football

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In a bit of a mild surprise, the National Football League has decided to keep a game that has just about no playoff implications in a prime time slot this week.

The Sunday Night Football matchup at Jerryworld between our Minnesota Vikings and the Dallas Cowboys will remain in the Sunday Night spot on NBC, despite there potentially being more attractive matchups available.

Per the NFL’s flex scheduling rules, between Weeks 14 and 17 the league only has to give six days notice before moving games from the Sunday afternoon spots into the Sunday night position. But, since NBC was advertising the Vikings/Cowboys matchup last night during the Texans/Chiefs game, and because the league would rather repeatedly punch themselves in the groin than take the Cowboys out of a prime time slot, the game stays where it is.

The Vikings are still, mathematically. . .barely. . .alive for a postseason berth, according to the latest calculations from NFL.com. It would require the Vikings to win out and get help from about half a dozen other sources, but it’s still a remote possibility. The Cowboys have about a 6% chance at the postseason, a number that dropped dramatically after their loss to Detroit this past Thursday night.

But, despite that, the entire country is going to get a good look at the Vikings and the Cowboys in Week 15, as we’ll be waiting all day for Sunday Night. We’ll be bringing you all of the news leading up to this one as we always do, so be sure to keep checking back with us for all of the latest.

Source: https://www.dailynorseman.com/minne...-vikings-dallas-cowboys-sunday-night-football
 
J.J. McCarthy’s 3-TD Game: Real Progress or Just Vibes?

The Real Forno Show dives deep into J.J. McCarthy’s best NFL start (16/23, 3 TD, 0 INT) in the Vikings’ 31-0 rout. Tyler Forness praises improved accuracy and patience while highlighting ongoing mechanical flaws, missed opportunities, and tempered expectations.


In the latest episode of The Real Forno Show, Tyler Forness and producer Dave Stefano deliver a balanced, film-heavy breakdown of J.J. McCarthy’s standout performance in the Minnesota Vikings’ dominant 31-0 shutout of the Washington Commanders. While the box score (16/23, 163 yards, 3 TDs, zero turnovers) sparked excitement and a much-needed vibe shift for the 5-8 Vikings, Forness cautions against overreaction—emphasizing this was McCarthy’s cleanest start yet but against one of the NFL’s worst defenses. The hosts dig into what actually improved, what still needs work, and whether this signals a true turning point for the rookie quarterback.

Key discussion points from the episode:

  • Accuracy and decision-making markedly better: quickest time to throw this season, zero turnover-worthy plays
  • Mechanics remain inconsistent: wide base, leg whip, and lower-body control still rob power and consistency
  • Positive growth shown in pocket patience, progressing through reads, and exploiting tight ends (all 3 TDs to Josh Oliver and T.J. Hockenson)
  • Missed opportunities: failing to look off linebackers on dig routes and bailing on a wide-open deep shot to Justin Jefferson
  • Play-calling context: Kevin O’Connell leaned on patience in the run game and short-to-intermediate throws to keep McCarthy comfortable

Listen:

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Watch:


For Vikings fans craving honest, nuanced analysis over hot takes, The Real Forno Show on the 1st & SKOL network (partnered with Fans First Sports Network) is essential listening. Tyler Forness combines film study with realistic expectations, making it one of the top Minnesota Vikings podcasts for those tracking J.J. McCarthy’s development and the team’s late-season trajectory. Catch the full episode on YouTube and subscribe 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:


Do you think McCarthy has finally turned the corner after this performance, or was it just one good game against a bad defense? Let us know in the comments!

Source: https://www.dailynorseman.com/minne...carthys-3-td-game-real-progress-or-just-vibes
 
Week 14 POSTGAME Roundtable: Vikings See Red, Down the Commies

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The future is now for the Vikings and J.J. McCarthy(Photo by Kara Durrette/Getty Images)

Hello everyone, and welcome to the Week 14 Minnesota Vikings postgame roundtable here at Daily Norseman. The Vikes are coming off a surprising shutout win over the Washington Commanders, with J.J. McCarthy looking better than he had before in any full game.

Can the Vikings turn this into a streak? Before we look ahead to that, and next weekend’s matchup with the Cowboys, how about we ask the boys a few questions about the game that just happened this weekend?

Let’s talk to it:

Question 1: On a scale of 1-100, how surprised were you with how Sunday’s game went?​


Brandon Warne: I’d say about a 75. This is obviously not how Washington planned for things to go, but I thought an emotional game with the return of their leader/quarterback would lead to a little more resistance than they showed. It was a good win, all things considered. The team’s draft position is basically tied to how J.J. McCarthy plays from here out, which feels about right.

Christopher Gates: A solid 80, honestly. I picked the Vikings to lose, but I thought there was a chance they could beat the Commanders. I did not expect them to come in and blow their doors off. The Commanders took the Broncos, who would be the #1 seed in the AFC if the season ended today, to overtime in Denver last week and would have won with a better two-point play call in overtime and got Jayden Daniels back this week, so I thought everything was rolling in their favor, particularly with how bad the Vikings looked in Seattle. But, to their credit, the Vikings circled the proverbial wagons and got themselves a victory by simplifying things on offense and putting together their best defensive performance of the season when they needed it the most. Kudos to everyone who got this team ready to play on Sunday afternoon.

Craig Williams: Shocked by the Vikings winning? 20/100. Shocked by the 31-0 final score? 99/100.

Warren Ludford: About 70. I didn’t expect a blowout, but on further review the Commanders were on the road with nothing to play for except maybe maintaining a top draft pick slot.

Sam Buegler: 85. I was expecting it to be a rough game, but for the Vikings to come out on top. For it to be utter domination was quite surprising. We have seen them do this before to bad teams – Bengals – but I didn’t think we would see that kind of performance again.

—————

Question 2: On a scale of 1-100, how did your perception of J.J. McCarthy change after Sunday?​


BW: My heart grew three sizes that day. OK, so I was never The Grinch when it came to JJM, but I was starting to wonder. Still, I felt like a year off, and then prolonged gaps between games meant he was going to be rusty for sure. Was it rust? Is he just bad? Or like most things, is the truth somewhere in the middle? I think he’s going to be a good quarterback in this league, but I think he needs to start processing things from short to deep rather than the other way around. With that, the shorter throws should help him learn to put more touch on the ball. At least this is what I’m hoping.

CG: 1. My perception of McCarthy or “Nine” or whatever we’re calling him this week has been the same all along. It’s way too early to be completely “out” on him at this point, and the sort of offense the team had going on Sunday is the sort of offense they should have been running all season. The routes were significantly shorter, McCarthy was getting the ball out quicker and making better decisions, and the offense was moving the ball on the ground as well. I’m not sure why it took 14 weeks to shift to this style of offense, but this is what we should see for the rest of the season going forward and then, maybe next season, we can move the young quarterback along to something a little more complex.

CW: Perception changed a little, 5%. It’s consistency the team desires and we’ll need to see if for 4 quarters in a competitive game.

WL: 30. It was progress that I hoped would have come sooner, but progress nevertheless. McCarthy made mostly routine throws with good accuracy overall and no interceptions for the first time in his young career. And he didn’t get hurt. But it came against a poor defense with nothing to play for, in favorable game circumstances, and in a simplified, run-heavy offense. Still, he needs to walk before he can run, so to speak, and showing he can play a clean game and move the offense is a step in the right direction.

SB: 40. Seeing that he was able to make improvements over the week, and come in with a good performance. I have been on the side of sticking with him, so this just further helps to reinforce that. He showed that he can be better, and now we need to see some consistency next week.

—————

Question 3: What do you think about Adam Thielen’s “found my passion for football” comments?​


BW: Not worth the paper they’re written on. He caught one ball on Sunday. They put a microphone in front of him. What else was he supposed to say? This is right up there with “I’m just happy to be here.” This will be as forgettable as the Randy Moss tenure with the Titans.

CG: Whatever. Guy should have brought his passion for football with him from Carolina. The Adam Thielen story was a nice one, but he didn’t exactly cover himself with glory on his way out of Minnesota either time he was with the team. He can finish out this season, sign his one-day contract to retire as a Viking, and come back for his Ring of Honor induction in a couple of years. I don’t know if he’ll make the playoffs in Pittsburgh, and at this point I’m not sure if I care, either.

CW: Thielen is irrelevant now. He dropped almost as many passes as he caught this year. He was a really good player for the Vikings in the past.

WL: Adam Thielen can always be counted on to say the “right thing” in his press conferences and has always been a company man in that respect. Of course, it feels better to win and be in the playoff mix, but whether Thielen’s newfound passion translates into fewer drops and consequential play over the last four games of the season in Pittsburgh remains to be seen.

SB: Man. What are you doing? Like, I get the idea of it, but to come back and say that, then have a game where you had one catch for four yards is annoying. It definitely burns some of the goodwill you had left from MN fans and makes all your talk of how excited you were to be back feel a little hollow.

—————

Question 4: @DAL, @NYG, vs. DET, vs. GB — the Vikings are 5-8 right now; they will finish X-X? (solve for both X)​


BW: I think they’ll finish 7-10, then everyone will split. But seriously, I think it’s a win over the Giants and an upset in one, but only one, of the other three. I think they can hang with Dallas. If they do and take care of business against the GMen, the last two weeks could be a lot more fun than they have any business being for a team that’ll almost certainly finish under .500.

CG: 6-11. I didn’t think they would win another game all year, honestly. Now, I think they get a win over the Giants in a couple of weeks and that’s it. I’d really, really love to see them potentially knock Detroit out of the playoff picture and/or keep Green Bay from potentially locking up the #1 seed in the conference, but those hills might be too steep to climb for this team at this point. I’ve never gotten the concept of cheering for your favorite team to lose, to be honest. I’ll be cheering for them to go 4-0 the rest of the way, but I’ll be expecting 1-3.

CW: 7-10, going to predict some fun games and some not so fun games. Dallas, Detroit, and GB will be fighting for their playoff spots.

WL: I’ll go with 7-10. One more win over the Giants would seem to be the worst-case scenario, but there is a possibility that the Vikings finish strong if McCarthy can be a good game manager and the defense continues to play well and produce some turnovers. They could also win out; none of the teams remaining on their schedule are juggernauts this year, but I doubt they will be consistent enough to finish with more than two more wins.

SB: 7-9. I think we will win two games, but I honestly don’t know which two it will be (editor’s note: that would be 7-10). It could be any of them. It wouldn’t shock me if we lose or win out either way; this team has just been so strange and inconsistent, but I can see us splitting the final four.

—————

Question 5: Besides the Vikings, what’s the most surprising storyline for you as a football fan this season?​


BW: Well I was going to go with the Chiefs when I sent this out, but as you’ll see, that’s a pretty popular thought. I guess…..I have to go with the Bears. Yes, it’s probably me coping by pointing out their record in close games and their point differential, but if I had to listen to how fake the Vikings were last year and early in KOC’s tenure, they’ll have to listen to me do the same for the Bears. Still, it’s been a season to remember in Chitown, no matter how they fare the rest of the way.

CG: Gotta go with the fall of the Chiefs. The AFC West will have a new champion for the first time in about a decade, and it really feels like the Mahomes/Reid dynasty is coming to an end or, at the very least, is going to have a significant pause. Of course, now the Patriots are back, and it looks like they’re going to be good for a while again, but none of their players are dating Taylor Swift. I mean, not yet, anyway.

CW: The fall of Kansas City. They don’t look nearly as good as the team that has been to five (and won three) of the last six Super Bowls.

WL: The collapse of the Chiefs and Ravens and kind of the changing of the guard in the AFC to some extent. High-priced quarterbacks are beginning to really cut into the rest of the roster in many cases.

SB: Drake “Drake Maye” Maye. I liked him a lot pre-draft and after last year, but he has taken such a leap this year that I don’t know if anyone saw coming. They have an easy schedule, sure, but the way he has been playing is lights out.

Source: https://www.dailynorseman.com/gener...e-roundtable-vikings-see-red-down-the-commies
 
Vikes Views: Viking of the Week

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The Minnesota Vikings shut out the Washington Commanders 31-0 on Sunday. It was the first time a team was shut out the week prior to a shutout victory since 1992. The defense was dominant and the offense was efficient. It was a beatdown from the start. It’s a rare treat to enjoy an easy win. Let’s take a peek at whose fault it is…

J.J. McCarthy

The team opened the game with a long 7-play, 61-yard drive and followed that up with a 19 play 98 yard drive. You can’t do that without execution from the QB. He was decisive from the start. They dominated possession with accurate passing and quick decision-making from McCarthy. The 21 yard pass to Jordan Addison on 3rd and 8 drew applause from Justin Jefferson on the field. A few plays later, McCarthy hit Jefferson for a 1st down on 3rd and 12 to get into the Red Zone. The Vikings had 7 possessions: 4 touchdowns, 1 field goal, 1 punt, and a 12-play drive to end the game.

J.J. McCarthy playing quickly and decisively led to the best game of his career against the Commanders pic.twitter.com/UiSaHuq1ia

— Will Ragatz (@WillRagatz) December 8, 2025

Andrew Van Ginkel

Van Ginkel has one of his famous batted ball interceptions this week. He nearly took it to the house if it wasn’t for a great hustle play by Scary Terry. It came as the Commanders were driving down the field their opening drive in the 2nd half. He also assisted on the Hargrave fumble recovery to end Washington’s last drive of the game.

Andrew Van Ginkel bats it in the air and picks off Jayden Daniels!

WASvsMIN on FOX/FOX Onehttps://t.co/HkKw7uXVnt pic.twitter.com/1JUufVQtxW

— NFL (@NFL) December 7, 2025

Harrison Smith

It was a vintage game for Harrison Smith. He looked like he turned the clock back a few years. He got his 1st interception on the year, right after Van Ginkel got his. He was also credited with 3 pressures by PFF. I loved seeing the aggressive utilization of Smith.

Harrison Smith the veteran safety picks off Mariota!

WASvsMIN on FOX/FOX Onehttps://t.co/HkKw7uXVnt pic.twitter.com/drHRLR9QEU

— NFL (@NFL) December 7, 2025

Kevin O’Connell

KOC has rightfully been criticized by the fan base after a rough few weeks. He didn’t panic and came back with a solid game plan. McCarthy’s development is more important than wins at this point. If he can turn what looked like the worst QB ever, to a functioning QB like this past week, he deserves a ton of credit. It’s one week, but it was a great step in the right direction.

Javon Hargrave

Hargrave is on here for his fumble recovery. So often you see that ball bounce out of bounds. He had the spatial awareness to ensure he recovered the ball in bounds. A shutout is a huge emotional win for the entire team. That likely doesn’t happen without Hargrave making a smart hustle play at the end. Van Ginkel set Mariota up and Hargrave finished him and the Commanders off.

Join the conversation below.

Follow me on X @GA_Skol

Source: https://www.dailynorseman.com/minne...ge-board/93626/vikes-views-viking-of-the-week
 
Vikings at Cowboys: First Injury Report

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The Minnesota Vikings and Dallas Cowboys issued their first injury reports of the week leading up to their matchup on Sunday Night Football in Jerry World. Here they are:

Minnesota Vikings​

  • WR Jordan Addison, Achilles, Limited
  • DT Jonathan Allen, NIR- Rest, Limited
  • RB Ty Chandler, Knee, Full
  • LT Christian Darrisaw, Knee, DNP
  • DT Javon Hargrave, NIR-Rest, Limited
  • TE T.J. Hockenson, Shin, DNP
  • LG Donovan Jackson, Ankle, Limited
  • S Theo Jackson, Neck, Limited
  • WR Justin Jefferson, NIR-Rest, Limited
  • RB Aaron Jones Sr., Shoulder, Limited
  • C Ryan Kelly, NIR-Rest, Limited
  • S Josh Metellus, Shoulder, Limited
  • RT Brian O’Neill, NIR-Rest, Limited
  • DT Levi Drake Rodriquez, Neck, Limited
  • S Harrison Smith, NIR-Rest, Limited

For the Vikings, lots of veteran rest days. But also lots of players working through minor injuries as we get closer to the end of the demolition derby that is the NFL season.

Ty Chandler is eligible to come off of IR and probably will this week, given he was a full participant in today’s practice. Among the others listed, Jordan Addison with an Achilles injury jumps out, along with TJ Hockenson missing practice with a shin injury. Hopefully nothing serious in both cases.

Dallas Cowboys​

  • T Tyler Guyton, Ankle, DNP
  • S Malik Hooker, NIR-Personal, DNP
  • DE Jadeveon Clowney, Hamstring, Limited
  • CB Trevon Diggs, Knee, Limited
  • TE Jake Ferguson, Calf, Limited
  • WR CeeDee Lamb, Concussion, Limited
  • FB Hunter Luepke, Hip, Limited
  • CB Shavon Ravel, Knee, Limited
  • S Donovan Wilson, Knee, Limited
  • T Hakeem Adeniji, Knee, Full

For the Cowboys, CeeDee Lamb in in concussion protocol so we’ll have to wait and see if he clears it in time to play on Sunday night. That would be a significant loss for the Cowboys’ offense. Trevon Diggs is in his 21-day window to return from IR and they had been targeting him to return this weekend. We’ll have to see if that plan holds. Tyler Guyton missing practice with an ankle injury is something to watch the rest of the week. The others seem like more of the play-through them type of injuries that aren’t likely to keep the players out on Sunday night.

We’ll have updates later in the week so stay tuned!

Source: https://www.dailynorseman.com/minne.../93656/vikings-at-cowboys-first-injury-report
 
Minnesota Vikings Reacts Survey Week 15: Momentum Shift?

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

It is once again time to check the pulse of you, the readers of the best Minnesota Vikings website on these vast internets of ours, as we have our latest SB Nation Reacts survey for this week.

We have just the one question for you this week because. . .well, because I couldn’t formulate another one in my brain for this week before the deadline, and I apologize for that. So, the only question we have for you this week is our question about whether or not you think the Vikings are going in the right direction. I would like to believe that a 31-0 victory would move the needle in a particular direction, but I’ll be interested to see just how far that needle will move.

As always, we invite you to participate in our survey by casting your vote in the poll as well as making your voice heard in the comments section. Have at it, folks, and we’ll have the results of this one before kickoff of Sunday night’s clash with the Dallas Cowboys.

Source: https://www.dailynorseman.com/minne...-vikings-reacts-survey-week-15-momentum-shift
 
Minnesota Vikings News and Links: It’s Gonna Be A Fun Ride!

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We fans are an interesting bunch. Everyone does it their own way too. There are a lot of emotions involved which often times leads to heated discussions. Before this season began, I would say that the majority of fans were expecting better results in terms of wins and losses. The same would be true for the play from our young QB. There were some fans who believed the season would not be as successful due to the inexperience of our QB. Not a lot though (correct me if I am wrong). We are now in the throes of debating if our young QB will be the long term answer. I think that is normal for any team that is relying on a rookie QB and our QB should be considered a rookie as far as play on the field. He does have an advantage in that he got to study the playbook and offense while sidelined last year.

I think the results may have been better had our young QB not missed 7 games this season. There are a lot of comparisons made to past rookie QBs and where they were at after X number of starts. It is only natural but, to me, seems like a bit of a waste of time. It just is not the same for all QBs. They have different backs, receivers, blockers, play callers, etc. That right away dismisses the comparisons for me.

A very good article here that says “NFL quarterbacks do not take any semblance of final shape, on average, until 250-300 drop backs”. It includes a lot of super nerd stats and a comparison to Jared Goff and Josh Allen to support the theory that by the Giants game we should be seeing the real version of JJ.

The Sneaky Reason to Be Excited about J.J. McCarthy


I have said repeatedly and maybe I should put it in my “byline” …

The team needs to see about two years worth of starts from our young QB before truly making a will informed decision about his long term prospects. The problem with that is that the people in charge might not have the time to absorb unsuccessful seasons while the young QB develops. To me that is the rub.

It’s gonna be a fun ride!


Minnesota Vikings News and Links​


Vikings Announce Bad News Ahead of Cowboys Game
For the practice session on December 10, the Vikings published their latest injury report, revealing that T.J. Hockenson and Christian Darrisaw are the team’s latest injuries as it begins preparations for the Cowboys game.

When it comes to Hockenson, the veteran tight end didn’t practice due to a shin injury. Meanwhile, Darrisaw, who returned to the Vikings’ offensive line in the Week 14 win over the Washington Commanders, didn’t practice due to a knee issue.

Ahead of the Cowboys game, former NFL player Kurt Warner stated what he wants to see from the second-year quarterback in these last four games, regardless of whether the Vikings make the playoffs, to show he can be the No. 1 guy.

“I think you want to continue to see steady growth,” Warner said on the latest “One on One” published on December 10. “The biggest thing is that you want to try to use these last four games to build into next year. And, you know, that doesn’t mean you’re giving up on this year and you’re not saying, ‘Hey, let’s try to win them all and see if we can get in the playoffs.’

“But the idea is simply, let’s keep getting better. Let’s keep building. Let’s go into the offseason with everybody feeling really good about where we’re at, or in this specific case, let’s get everybody feeling really good about the quarterback that’s in our room and what he can be for us…

“We want him going into the offseason feeling really good that we’re putting him in a position to play his best football and to help us win. And so that, to me, is kind of the underlying thing that you’re trying to accomplish in these last four games: play good football, be competitive.”



Vikings Expected to Cut Ties With $11 Million Starter After Demotion
Kevin Seifert of ESPN on Wednesday, December 10 detailed the recent demotion of Rodgers from starting cornerback to a hybrid role, in which he plays mostly in nickel sets (five defensive backs on the field).

“It has been in the past two games where Rodgers has given way to Jay Ward, who is a cornerback but also mostly a safety in their base defenses,” Seifert reported. “And Rodgers is coming in on the nickel.”

“Rodgers was a big-time free agent pickup for the Vikings last offseason. … They were very excited about his playmaking ability,” Seifert continued. “But as the season wore on, he really struggled making tackles in the open field specifically. His coverage was OK, but the tackling really struggled, and Jay Ward is better at that.”

“I don’t think Jay Ward projects as a longterm cornerback for this team in future seasons, but you also wonder if Isaiah Rodgers does, either,” Seifert said.

Field Yates of ESPN on Wednesday projected in his first mock draft of the season that the Vikings will select Mansoor Delane out of LSU with the No. 11 overall pick.

“He has excellent size for the position (6-foot, 190 pounds) and thrives using force at the catch point to disrupt the ball,” Yates wrote. “Delane is at his best playing off coverage and reading the quarterback, though he is also a willing run defender who could thrive in Brian Flores’ aggressive system. When targeted as the primary coverage player this season, he surrendered the third-lowest completion percentage in the FBS (27.8%).”



Vikings’ JJ McCarthy reveals biggest challenge of reading NFL defenses
Rookie quarterback JJ McCarthy says the hardest part of stepping up to NFL speed isn’t the play call or the pre-snap read, it’s when the rush and back-end disguises collide after the snap. “I think it’s the rush. That rush, it gets to you quick. And they’re doing so many things on the back end that, yeah, you could figure out it’s Cover 2, but by the time you figure out it’s Cover 2, you’re on your back,” McCarthy told reporters, summing up why processing quickly after the snap matters more than ever.

The physical rush shows up in other ways, too. McCarthy’s passes have been batted at a high rate this season, evidence that slow decision-making or late drops of the ball put his throws in harm’s way. Removing that hesitation helps reduce pressure-induced mistakes.



Lunchbreak: Deeper Dives on Vikings Offense vs. Commanders
Streamlining the offense Sunday was key to Minnesota’s largest shutout win in 45 seasons.

“You have to have a pretty unique plan,” Vikings Head Coach Kevin O’Connell told reporters Monday.

Alec Lewis of The Athletic on Tuesday gathered that O’Connell toggled between two worlds against the Commanders: one that leaned on heavy personnel and rushes, and another, spread-out mode of attack.

Lewis pinpointed that Minnesota opted for bigger bodies on early downs in order to move the line of scrimmage, and then shifted to the shotgun on more than 80 percent of its third downs so QB J.J. McCarthy could have a clearer sense of where to go with the football. The strategy, obviously, worked.

On plays under center, Minnesota picked up 101 rush yards — out of 165 total (162 if you include the 3 yards lost on kneel downs at the end of the game) — on 23 attempts, according to Next Gen Stats. Backfield buddies Aaron Jones, Sr., and Jordan Mason were in peak shape, averaging 5.4 and 4.7 yards. And the forward lean on Washington’s defensive front succeeded in opening up concepts for McCarthy.

Overall, in his seventh start, the 22-year-old generated the week’s third-highest passer rating (129.2), behind Bills QB and reigning MVP Josh Allen (139.7) and Rams QB and MVP favorite Matthew Stafford (131.3). When he absolutely had to have it (on third downs), McCarthy aced 4 of 6 attempts for 51 yards.

In all fairness, Lewis reminded that Washington’s defense is “porous.” The Commanders have allowed 135.5 yards per game on the ground, 29th in the NFL, and their pass defense is even leakier (246.9, 30th).

But … there were factors that finally and tremendously worked in Minnesota’s favor. Lewis shared them:

The Vikings starting o-line, from left to right of Christian Darrisaw, Donovan Jackson, Ryan Kelly, Will Fries and Brian O’Neill, managed 49 snaps together after playing 35 snaps through Week 13.

The Vikings defense had three takeaways — four, really, thanks to a goal-line stand and turnover on downs — which matched its total from the previous five games. In complementary fashion, the offense scored 10 points off those turnovers and held a TOP advantage of about 10 minutes.

The Vikings started fast, choosing to receive the ball after winning the coin toss and scoring a TD on a simple but pretty seven-play drive. That let them play with a lead for 54 offensive snaps and therefore commit to a run-focused offense. Before Week 14, they played 128 snaps with a lead.

And last but not least, the Vikings benefited from McCarthy’s accuracy. Releasing the ball in 2.56 seconds on average, more than a quarter of a second quicker than his old best (2.84 against the Bears in Week 11), McCarthy finished with his lowest off-target rate (4.3%) in a game so far and he did not commit a single turnover-worthy play for the first time in 2025 per Pro Football Focus.

Diving even deeper

The lowest point of Minnesota’s 2025 slate likely was the lackluster effort on Thursday Night Football.

In that 37-10 loss to the Chargers, which followed a near win over the Super Bowl champion Eagles, the Vikings passed for 130 yards and ran for 34. An early deficit resulted in a sky-high 76.6 percent pass rate.

That was the hardest O’Connell has leaned on the passing game this year.

Conversely, Sunday against Washington was the “softest” — and the most frequently he’s run it since his debut 2022 season. Minnesota ran the rock on 55.7% of its offensive plays; the prior highwater mark in a game under O’Connell was 53.5%, which produced 141 yards in a 29-13 Week 18 win at Chicago in 2022; the Vikings rotated from starters to reserves in that game, with a spot in the playoffs already guaranteed.

That switch in strategy prefaces Ben Goessling’s analysis for the Minnesota Star Tribune this week, basically, that Minnesota’s offense looked closer to what McCarthy directed in his final year at Michigan.

Goessling wrote the following:

The conditions for the Vikings on Sunday were as pristine as they’ve been all season. General Manager Kwesi Adofo-Mensah talked before the season about building a team that could win “any type of fight”; the Vikings’ 31-0 win over the Commanders didn’t demand a great deal of resourcefulness.

But the Vikings, who had lost their last four games and scored six points in their last two before Sunday, weren’t in a position to quibble with how they secured this victory. And while a win over Washington might not earn them many style points, it came in a manner that has been rare for them under O’Connell but might actually work for them at this point in McCarthy’s tenure.



Vikings Sign Former Seahawks LB, Work Out 3,700-Yard RB
Minnesota hosted several players on Tuesday, December 9, mostly on the defensive side of the football. However, the team also gave a look to a wildly successful FCS running back out of South Dakota.

NFL reporter Aaron Wilson noted on X that the Vikings worked out safety Tysheem Johnson, linebacker Jacob Roberts, cornerback Trey Vaval, linebacker Josh Ross and running back Travis Theis.

Theis rushed for 3,668 yards and 40 TDs as a member of the Coyotes, boasting a career clip of 5.0 yards per carry. He rushed for 365 yards on 70 carries (5.21 yards per attempt) across 12 games, including four starts, for the Montreal Alouettes in 2025

Currently a member of the Canadian Football League, the 24-year-old Theis is a player of particular note given the potential that the Vikings could part ways with Aaron Jones next offseason in the interest of salary cap savings. Minnesota is facing a $36 million cap deficit in 2026 and cutting Jones would save the team $7.2 million against the cap, which is 20 percent of the debt the Vikings must make up.

Josh Ross Has Been Regular Special Teams Contributor Over 3-Year NFL Career

But it wasn’t Theis the Vikings signed Tuesday, but rather Ross as an addition to the linebacking corps. He inked a deal with the Baltimore Ravens in 2022 as an undrafted rookie before joining the Seattle Seahawks via the waiver wire in October 2024.

Now 26 years old, Ross has appeared in 22 games across three NFL seasons. He has played solely as a special teams player to this point in his career, registering 1,047 snaps in the game’s third phase during his time as a pro.


Q&D Cap Space Work​


Carry over cap space : $15,502,889
Starting 2026 Cap space : ($35,983,572) note: carry over cap space not included here



Extend O’Neill – 3 yr 60M
Extend Hargrave – 3yr 24M
Extend Kelly – 2 yr 15M
Cut Jones
Trade Hock



Ending 2026 Cap space: $8,166,928
Add carry over : $23,669,817
2027 Cap space: $27,593,273



Post June 1 moves
Smith Retires



2026 Additonal Cap space: $1,300,000
2027 Cap space: $28,993,273



What can you do with 24M in cap space during free agency?
Free agency needs? Center, Safety, Cornerback, Running back, Tight End (maybe), Defensive Tackle (maybe).

Seems to me that a safety, cornerback, and running back. I like Jeremiah Love but do not want to spend a first round pick on a running back who may or may not get a second contract. The hope would be he will but then you have to ask if KOC is going to utilize him enough. I would love to get the center, Tyler Linderbaumfrom the Ravens who declined his fifth year option but I doubt they just let him hit free agency. Lamar Jackson has a 74M cap hit which they could restructure some of his 51M salary or extend him a few more years. Worst case is they tag and trade Linderbaum.

I like these free agents

Eric Stokes CB Raiders 7M
Jaylin Hawkins S Patriots 7M
Travis Etienne RB Jaguars 7M
Noah Fant TE Bengals 5M
Leo Chenal LB Chiefs 5M


Yore Mock​


Trade Partner: Panthers
Sent: 1.11
Received: 1.16, 3.80


Trade Partner: Colts
Sent: 2.43
Received: 2.49, 4.117


Pick 16. Peter Woods DL Clemson 6’3″ 310
Pick 49. A.J. Harris CB Penn State 6’1″ 186
Pick 75. A.J. Haulcy S LSU 6’0″ 222
Pick 80. Connor Lew IOL Auburn 6’3″ 303
Pick 97. Deontae Lawson LB Alabama 6’2″ 228
Pick 117. Derrick Moore EDGE Michigan 6’3″ 260
Pick 161. Zakee Wheatley S Penn State 6’2″ 202
Pick 197. Justin Joly TE NC State 6’3″ 263
Pick 226. Ted Hurst WR Georgia State 6’3″ 185
Pick 242. Taylen Green QB Arkansas 6’6″ 224





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...ikings-news-and-links-its-gonna-be-a-fun-ride
 
Vikes Views: Who Ya Got? Vikings at Cowboys

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The Minnesota Vikings hit the road to take on the Dallas Cowboys for Sunday Night Football. If the team on the opposing sideline didn’t have a star on its helmet, this game might have been flexed out by the NFL. The Cowboys are clinging to their playoff hopes with their 6-6-1 record.

Series Record: 15-19

Road Record: 8-6

Streak: L3

It sounds like CeeDee Lamb plans to play after a concussion last week. The team left him in the game, and Lamb complained about symptoms postgame. The Cowboys will have a litany of receiving options between Lamb, Pickens, and TE Jake Ferguson. However, the Vikings boast the fourth-best passing defense in the league. It will be strength against strength on that side of the ball.

On the other side, the NFL’s fourth-worst defense will face an inconsistent Vikings offense. J.J. McCarthy looked the part last week, but wasn’t asked to do a lot after a blazing hot start to the game. McCarthy should get another confidence booster this week against the Cowboys.

I’m oddly confident heading into this game. The Vikings might have just figured something out last week. The Cowboys defense is weak enough to allow McCarthy some room for error.

I’m taking the Vikings, 27 – 26.

Source: https://www.dailynorseman.com/minne...672/vikes-views-who-ya-got-vikings-at-cowboys
 
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