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Green Bay Packers at Minnesota Vikings: Final Injury Reports

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Well, here it is, ladies and gentlemen. . .the final injury reports that we’ll bring you for this 2025 Minnesota Vikings season. The Vikings and the Green Bay Packers have both released their last injury reports ahead of Sunday afternoon’s game at U.S. Bank Stadium. Let’s take a look at everyone that’s been given an injury designation ahead of this one.

Green Bay Packers​

  • OL Donovan Jennings – OUT (throat)
  • LB Nick Neimann* – OUT (pectoral)
  • G John Williams* – OUT (knee)
  • WR Savion Williams – OUT (foot/illness)
  • WR Dontayvion Wicks – DOUBTFUL (concussion)
  • OL Zach Tom – QUESTIONABLE (back/knee)
  • QB Malik Willis – QUESTIONABLE (right shoulder/hamstring)

Only one of the top two quarterbacks for the Packers has been given an injury designation for this one, but they’ve already declared that Jordan Love won’t play in this one despite being cleared. Some other big names for the Packers were not given injury designations after being limited for much of the week. Among them are linebacker Edgerrin Cooper, running back Josh Jacobs, and wide receiver Jayden Reed. But, as we’ve said all week, with the Packers not having anything to play for, those guys likely won’t play much if they play at all.

Minnesota Vikings​

  • TE Gavin Bartholomew* – OUT (back)
  • TE T.J. Hockenson – OUT (shoulder)
  • RB Aaron Jones – OUT (hip)
  • WR Myles Price – OUT (ankle)
  • CB Dwight McGlothern – QUESTIONABLE (hip)

McGlothern was just added to the injury report today. The team has added cornerback Zemaiah Vaughn to the active roster from the practice squad, so he’ll be up on Sunday in the event that McGlothern can’t go. The team has also added Taki Taimani to the active roster as well. Bartholomew will, officially, miss his entire rookie season with the back injury he’s been dealing with all year long.

The big news, of course, is that quarterback J.J. McCarthy does not have an injury designation, and Kevin O’Connell has announced that he will, in fact, start on Sunday at U.S. Bank Stadium. We’ll see if he can give himself something positive to build on as the team heads into the offseason.

That wraps up your final injury report of the 2025 Minnesota Vikings season, folks. We’ll bring you more coverage of this Sunday’s game as kickoff approaches.

Source: https://www.dailynorseman.com/minne...ackers-minnesota-vikings-final-injury-reports
 
The Curtain Closes on the 2025 Season

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First and foremost, Happy New Year to everyone in the DN family. I hope 2026 brings health, happiness, and less collective agita from our shared passion: the Minnesota Vikings.

THAT’S A WRAP

The curtain closes on the 2025 season against the Green Bay Packers at U.S. Bank Stadium on Sunday. The fact that this team has shown a lot of heart and fight over the last month and can actually finish with a winning record is important and noteworthy, but, like all things Vikings, the experience is tinged with a tangible degree of frustration over what could have been.

An improving J.J. McCarthy, supported by Brian Flores’ dominant defense, peaking at precisely the right time. Who knows what could have happened – especially this season. This will be the most wide-open tournament in both conferences that I can remember. I mean, would a Jaguars vs. Seahawks Super Bowl shock anyone?

I’ve been over the “what-ifs” with this team so many times this season that there’s no point in getting into it again. Better luck with injuries, or a few breaks here and there on the field, and we would be the team no one would want to draw in the playoffs. This statistic says it all: The Vikings have allowed the fewest points in the NFC North (and the 4th fewest in the conference), yet our –2 point differential is last in the division, over 30 points behind the third-place team, the Chicago Bears. Gross. Ahh, yes, the 2025 Bears. Channeling the Scooby-Doo “let’s see who this really is” meme, I like to refer to them with their mask off: the 2022 Minnesota Vikings.

NOW THE QUESTIONS COME

But alas, we will play only for pride against a Packers team locked into the 7th seed for the third year in a row. They have their own short- and long-term issues to address, but at least they’re in the dance. Again, gross. Finishing 9-8 will be nice – especially if McCarthy shows continued improvement in the finale – but it will not change the fact that, given the expectations, any objective classification of this season must include a folder clearly labeled “disappointment.” It also won’t matter if we win 70-0; the minute the game clock strikes zero, this team will be bombarded by so many question marks to begin the offseason that it would make the Riddler blush.

QB1 FOR 2026 IS…

First and foremost, there will be endless conjecture about the quarterback position. The number of social media posts, blogs, and segments speculating about trades for Joe Burrow, Lamar Jackson, and Justin Herbert has already begun and will only grow over the next three to four months. The underlying justification for this will be the pressure on KAM and KOC heading into Year 5 with no playoff wins. I believe the odds of such a massive trade are unlikely but not inconceivable. That alone is all it takes for the rumor mill to churn aggressively – and it will. The likelihood of each of those options varies widely, from contract structures (and dead cap hits) to how the playoffs unfold to how many teams are in the mix (and the compensation) to what the Vikings would have to do cap-wise to make any trade work—all topics that can and will be discussed, both here and elsewhere, in the coming months.

What do I want? Sign or trade for a top-flight backup as insurance, have McCarthy enjoy a fantastic offseason focused on improving mechanics, hit the ground running in September, stay healthy, continue to improve, become elite, and win five Super Bowls over the next 10 years. This is my preferred narrative, dammit, and I’m sticking to it. But we don’t reside in Fantasyland, either. The injury history is all too real, and if one or more of those names become available, KAM has to make the call(s) at least.

FLORES AS IMMEDIATE PRIORITY A, B, C, 1, 2, 3…

Then there’s the future of Brian Flores. I’ve been on this for a while now. The McCarthy/QB drama sucked all the oxygen out of the room since Labor Day, but this has always been under the radar, with importance second only to who will be under center for us come Week 1 in September. It’s now front-and-center, with Vikings social media accounts dissecting the tense phrasing Flores chose in his presser (e.g., “loved my time here”) as an indication he’s gone. That’s a bit much, folks. Maybe he’s loved his time here up to this point, and that could positively affect his decision to stay, possibly? Then again, we are the Vikings.

Regardless, some things are clear. Making him the highest-paid coordinator in the NFL on either side of the ball is a no-brainer. If he wants additional input on the draft process and personnel decisions on defense, and whatever job title he wants? You got it. These things are so obvious that, barring another well-deserved NFL head coaching gig, any other (essentially) lateral move (which the Vikings can’t stop) would invite serious questions and legit blowback from an already irritable fanbase. If the pressure on KAM and KOC for 2026 was already sky-high, it would turn outright galactic if Flores departs for another non-head-coaching opportunity.

CAN THE 2026 DRAFT DELIVER?

Regardless of what happens with the quarterback position, the Vikings will not be major players in free agency, given budgetary restraints. Multiple current starters could be cut or traded to close an estimated $30+ million deficit, even with some unused 2025 cap space rolled over. Harrison Smith’s possible retirement is also looming. At best, we wait until the first waves of free agency play out to find some value through reworked deals and deferred financial hits on the ledger.

Either way, the Vikings’ current eight picks in the 2026 NFL draft must pay dividends. We can have some hope. Injuries aside, McCarthy’s improvement since the Commanders game has been highly encouraging. We can take heart in the late-season emergence of Dallas Turner. Donovan Jackson has had a solid rookie campaign despite battling injuries. While not a draft pick, Jalen Redmond has been a revelation, and Pro Bowl honors are a legit possibility for 2026 given what we’ve seen this season. Other young players, such as LDR and Theo Jackson, have also performed well.

The momentum must be maintained in April’s draft, with a focus on the secondary and defensive line. Center and WR3 could also be addressed in the mid-rounds. Ryan Kelly’s health concerns and Tai Felton’s readiness to possibly take over for a departing Jalen Nailor will be issues to keep an eye on this spring. Either way, ongoing improvement is a must. We can’t afford to take a step back, and certainly not come within a light year of the 2022 draft nightmare.

BEATING THE PACKERS STILL MATTERS

Which brings us to Sunday. As of this writing, McCarthy looks like he will make the start, while the Packers will go with Clayton Tune and probably a whole bunch of other backups with nothing to play for. In the end, it’s still the Packers, and anytime you can defeat them, regardless of the circumstances, it’s a gratifying experience.

With a chance to finish 9-8 and just ½ game out of the playoffs, my original 12-5 prediction doesn’t look quite as abysmal as it did after the debacle against the Seattle Seahawks in late November. Not ideal, but not embarrassing, either. Let’s be honest, entering December, five wins looked more likely than a winning record. And, of course, those who took the over on the preseason 8.5 over/under will also be watching this one closely.

For one last time, let’s see how badly I botched this one in May:

Week 18: Green Bay Packers: Let’s say we need this one, as do the Packers, for a potential Wild Card berth. The same logic applies here as the week prior – i.e., we’re better later in the season, and won on the road previously. This one will be tough, as most division games are, but we send the Packers home with another loss (and possibly knock them out of the playoffs). That would be an ideal end to the regular season, right?

Minnesota Vikings: 30

Green Bay Packers: 26

OK, not terrible either. A single break here or there, and this game very well could have been for the final playoff spot and a chance to send the Packers home. We need to enter this potentially chaotic offseason with some positive vibes. I think we will. Justin Jefferson also reaches 1,000 yards. Too little, too late, but five in a row to end the season.

Minnesota Vikings: 27

Green Bay Packers: 10

Oh, what could have been…

Source: https://www.dailynorseman.com/minne.../curtain-closes-2025-season-minnesota-vikings
 
Vikings-Packers Finale: Flores Future & Jefferson 1K Chase

One final game: Will Flores stay? Can Jefferson hit 1,000 yards? Vikings seek revenge and a 9-8 finish vs. Packers backups – the drama is real!


Vikings-Packers finale preview: Flores’ future looms, Jefferson chases 1,000 yards – will Minnesota end 2025 strong? In this gripping episode of Two Old Bloggers, hosts Darren Campbell and Dave Stefano, joined by Drew Bunting, unpack the Minnesota Vikings’ Week 18 clash against a resting Green Bay Packers squad. As the Vikings aim for a fifth straight win and a 9-8 finish, the discussion heats up on defensive coordinator Brian Flores’ contract uncertainty and potential successors.

Delving deeper, the trio explores the implications of Flores possibly departing after mid-January 2026, highlighting internal candidates like Daronte Jones and Mike Siravo, alongside external options such as Jim Leonhard and college innovators like Alex Grinch. They also celebrate Kevin Williams’ Hall of Fame finalist status, ponder safety Jay Ward’s emergence amid Harrison Smith’s potential retirement, and debate the quarterback conundrum—with Darren regretting Sam Darnold’s departure while eyeing J.J. McCarthy’s long-term potential.

With the Packers benching stars like Jordan Love and Josh Jacobs, the focus shifts to revenge and milestones. Drew Bunting emphasizes getting Justin Jefferson those crucial 53 yards to tie Randy Moss’ Vikings record for consecutive 1,000-yard seasons to start a career. Amid predictions of a 24-13 or 31-13 Vikings victory, this episode captures the resilience of a team that turned a 4-8 start into a late-season surge, setting the stage for an intriguing 2026 offseason.

Key points from the episode:

  • Brian Flores’ Future and Successors: Flores’ contract ends mid-January 2026; hosts discuss his stellar four-game defensive heater (shutouts, stifling Cowboys and Lions), O’Connell’s desire to retain him, and potential replacements like internal picks Daronte Jones and Mike Siravo, NFL assistants Aubrey Pleasant and Jim Leonhard, or college DCs Alex Grinch, Zach Arnett, and Pete Kwiatkowski.
  • Kevin Williams Hall of Fame Bid: First-time finalist with five All-Pro nods and superior stats to recent inductees; faces tough competition from Drew Brees, Larry Fitzgerald, and others, hindered by limited national exposure during Vikings’ mediocre 2003-2013 era.
  • Youth on Defense: Aging unit needs infusions; Jay Ward impresses in starter snaps (11 tackles, versatile coverage/blitzing), positioning as potential 2026 starter opposite Josh Metellus if Harrison Smith retires.
  • Quarterback Reflections: Regret over letting Sam Darnold go (now 13-3 with Seahawks), but his recent seven-game slump (equal TDs/INTs, dropped ratings) validates the move; J.J. McCarthy, at 22, has upside despite inconsistencies, needing competition and development.
  • Game Preview with Drew Bunting: Vikings (8-8) vs. Packers (9-6-1, clinched playoffs, resting Love, Jacobs, Watson, Doubs); historical rivalry (131 meetings, Vikings won last finale in 2015); sole key: Jefferson needs 53 yards for sixth straight 1,000-yard season (tying Moss’ Vikings record); prediction: 24-13 or 31-13 Vikings win, avoiding sweep since 2019.

Listen:

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Watch:


Whether you’re a die-hard Minnesota Vikings fan or tracking NFL Week 18 previews, this Two Old Bloggers episode packs gold with in-depth Vikings news, Packers matchup breakdowns, and offseason teases. From Flores’ aggressive schemes to Jefferson’s milestone chase, it’s essential listening for SKOL nation. Catch it on Vikings 1st & SKOL, partnered with Fans First Sports Network, and join the conversation—subscribe now for more unfiltered Vikings podcast content that keeps you ahead of the curve!

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:


What do you think happens if Brian Flores leaves the Vikings—does the defense stay elite, or is a rebuild inevitable? Share your take below!

Source: https://www.dailynorseman.com/minne...ckers-finale-flores-future-jefferson-1k-chase
 
Green Bay Packers at Minnesota Vikings: Game Time, Broadcast Info, Radio and More

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It’s the final game day of the 2025 NFL season for our Minnesota Vikings, as they’ll be hosting the Green Bay Packers this afternoon in the regular season finale. We want everyone to be able to follow along with all of the action from U.S. Bank Stadium by whichever means they’d like, so we’re going to put all of that info here in one place for you.

Television Info​


Because this is a low-stakes contest in the grand scheme of things this week in the NFL, we get to kick things off at the best possible time for NFL action to get underway, that being noon Central time on Sunday. This game will be covered by the CBS family of networks, including WCCO-4 in the Twin Cities, with Spero Dedes and Adam Archuleta on the call. If you’re wondering whether or not you’re in the local broadcast area for this one, here’s this week’s map from the folks at 506 Sports, with the Packers/Vikings game represented by the blue area.

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If you’re not in the local broadcast area, you’ll have to rely on YouTube TV NFL Sunday Ticket.

For our men and women in uniform serving overseas, the American Forces Network will. . .surprisingly enough. . .be bring you this one LIVE on AFN Sports. Kickoff is slated for 1800Z, which works out to 1900L for viewers in Central Europe, 2100L for everyone in Iraq and Kuwait, and 0300L on Monday morning 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 folks from Football Zebras, the officiating crew for this week’s game will be led by John Hussey. This will be the first time that the Vikings have seen his crew since last season. . .it was his crew that officiated the Vikings’ loss to the Los Angeles Rams in last year’s Wild Card round.

Weather Info​


Yep, the weather isn’t going to affect this one, folks, since it’s going to be played indoors at U.S. Bank Stadium. If you’re going to be headed out to one last tailgate. . .well, according to our friends at WeatherNation, it’s going to be a bit unpleasant. Temperatures will get into the mid-20s by kickoff, but there’s going to be some freezing rain starting around 11 AM, changing to snow in the early afternoon, which should make for an absolutely delightful trip home for everyone in attendance at today’s game. Drive carefully, folks.

Betting Info​


The line for this one has changed significantly since things opened up earlier in the week. The Vikings opened the week as a 5.5-point favorite, but as news has come in through the week, that number has ballooned to the point where the Vikings are now a whopping 10.5-point favorite over the Packers, according to FanDuel. The over/under on the game has not changed, as that number still rests at 36.5 points.

Streaming Info​


I believe if you have NFL+ and you live in the local area, you can stream the game on one of your devices. Otherwise, NFL Sunday Ticket is your lone legal streaming option, as far as I can tell. I don’t care about illegal streaming options.

That should be everything you need to be able to follow along with all of the action of today’s 2025 regular season finale for our Minnesota Vikings, folks. As always, we will have our first Open Thread of the day dropping about half an hour before kickoff at 11:30 AM Central time, and we hope to see a lot of you there as we wrap up this 2025 season.

Source: https://www.dailynorseman.com/minne...nesota-vikings-game-time-broadcast-info-radio
 
Letting Sam Darnold Go Was a Big Mistake by the Vikings

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It may be the most obvious and defining statement about the Minnesota Vikings’ 2025 season, but it’s worth saying loud and clear: letting Sam Darnold go was a massive blunder by Kevin O’Connell and the Vikings’ Front Office. Yes, it’s a whole lot easier to make that assessment with the benefit of hindsight, but looking back on the decision, not knowing how McCarthy would fare, was there not a strong case for extending Darnold that the Vikings either ignored or downplayed based on their faith in McCarthy?

Let’s take a closer look.

A Bird in Hand​


The Vikings knew what they had in Sam Darnold after a season in Minnesota. Darnold’s jump start of his career as a starter while surprising to many, was not fluky. It wasn’t perfect either. Darnold struggled when facing pressure, but he did pretty much everything else well and with some consistency. It wouldn’t have been surprising either if Darnold benefitted by another year in Minnesota, with greater rapport with receivers and better command of the scheme. And if the Vikings were able to plug some of the holes in their interior offensive line and get Christian Darrisaw back, so much the better.

The Vikings also could have afforded the same contract Darnold signed with Seattle. Indeed, the Vikings are said to have offered Darnold a similar contract, but Darnold was also told that McCarthy was their quarterback of the future. And so he signed with the Seahawks. That contract has salary cap hits of $13.4 million in 2025, $33.9 million in 2026, and $41.9 million in 2027. Had the Vikings told Darnold he’s their guy going forward, it would’ve been an easy decision for Darnold to extend with the Vikings.

Darnold led the Seahawks and their top defense to the top seed in the NFC this season. Had the Vikings pushed their chips in on Darnold, the Vikings may well have been in the same position as the Seahawks and a legitimate contender to win it all.

What Was the Basis for the Vikings Faith in McCarthy?​


When the Vikings decided Sam Darnold wasn’t the future, resulting in Darnold signing with the Seahawks, J.J. McCarthy had one half of a preseason game of experience and one season-ending injury. The Vikings’ coaching staff had worked with McCarthy to improve his fundamentals during the 2024 offseason and Kevin O’Connell said several times that he had a detailed development plan for McCarthy. That plan included development milestones McCarthy needed to complete before he would be considered ready to start an NFL game.

Shortly before it was known McCarthy would be out for the season, Kevin O’Connell said McCarthy would get some first team reps for the remainder of training camp following McCarthy’s preseason game. That didn’t happen as McCarthy suffered a season-ending meniscus tear in light duty against the Raiders. McCarthy’s injury prevented his gaining practice reps over the course of the season, effectively ending his rookie year development.

It would seem unlikely that the Vikings felt that McCarthy was ready to replace Darnold as the starter given that Kevin O’Connell was still talking about McCarthy’s fundamental problems a season later, and McCarthy hadn’t shown the ability to layer the ball, in addition to the normal lack of experience young quarterbacks have. We never really heard where McCarthy was vis-a-vis the development milestones O’Connell had established for him his rookie year.

Apparently there was enough doubt about McCarthy’s development for the Vikings to make competitive offers to both Darnold and Daniel Jones, but they also made it clear to both that McCarthy was the future in Minnesota.

Bottom line, there was nothing substantial enough about where McCarthy was prior to his meniscus injury to suggest McCarthy was ready to be the quality starter the Vikings obviously thought he would be given their win-now approach to free agency. The Vikings spent the second-most of any team in free agency.

So why the faith in McCarthy? Was it simply because McCarthy was a first-round pick? What else could it be? Did McCarthy regress in his year two development? Was it simply the belief that O’Connell would make McCarthy great just as he did with Darnold? O’Connell has gotten more from veteran quarterbacks he’s worked with, but has yet to get anything from rookie quarterbacks under his wing. In fact, at this point neither Jaren Hall, J.J. McCarthy, or Max Brosmer have been remotely close to being a quality starter. There were some rumors from inside the Vikings organization that Brosmer could be another Brock Purdy, but those rumors proved to be completely off the mark.

Whatever the case, the assessments made by the Vikings were clearly optimistic at best and lacking in substance. That has proven costly for the Vikings franchise, whatever the future of J.J. McCarthy at this point.

What was the Vikings’ Assessment of Sam Darnold?​


Sam Darnold had a career-altering season with the Vikings and finished a top-ten quarterback in the league. He struggled at times under pressure, particularly in the playoff game against the Rams, but clearly the Vikings felt the interior offensive line needed to be upgraded otherwise they would not have paid Ryan Kelly and Will Fries and spent their top draft pick on Donovan Jackson.

Wouldn’t Darnold improve with better pass protection? Might Darnold improve in big game situations with more experience? Darnold had not been involved in any meaningful playoff-deciding game before his year with the Vikings. Was there something else the Vikings didn’t like about Darnold? There really wasn’t much to critique about Darnold’s game outside of his performance at times under pressure, and he was also an excellent fit for O’Connell’s scheme- much better than McCarthy turned out to be so far.

And at just over $30 million/year AAV, Darnold would’ve been an excellent value relative to other veteran quarterbacks at his performance level. The Vikings could’ve upgraded the offensive line as they did, but would’ve had to pass on a Jonathan Allen, if they had extended Darnold. I doubt Allen’s absence would’ve had a big impact on the Vikings defense this season.

Big Missed Opportunity​


The Vikings could’ve simply came to the obvious conclusion: that Sam Darnold was everything they hoped he’d be and more, and earned the starting job and extension as a franchise quarterback. It was unexpected and it puts J.J. McCarthy on an extended development program- potentially with a new QB-needy team. Things happen.

Having a top ten quarterback with many prime years remaining is worth a lot more than an unproven first-round pick. And the Vikings could’ve have extended Darnold at a discount as other teams questioned how well Darnold would perform outside of Minnesota.

The Vikings could have signed Darnold to the same three-year deal he signed with Seattle and still have the option to trade either Darnold or McCarthy at some point depending on performance. Ultimately the opportunity cost would’ve been maybe a Jonathan Bullard instead of Jonathan Allen and no Javon Hargrave or Ryan Kelly next year.

Vikings Face a More Uncertain Future at Quarterback​


J.J. McCarthy’s poor performance this season combined with his injury history pretty much require the Vikings to sign a bona fide starter next season. It would be irresponsible not to. Someone like Malik Willis or trade for Mac Jones, neither of whom will come cheap and neither of which are guaranteed to be as good as Darnold and could easily be worse. Signing a decent free agent will also likely require at least an open competition for the starting job or perhaps being named the starter. Given everything McCarthy needs to work on this offseason, it would seem unlikely that McCarthy would be in pole position for the starting job.

Best case, the Vikings hope for another 2024 Sam Darnold type they hope can be a quality starter and a top ten quarterback. But they could find that a Mac Jones or Malik Willis has a lower ceiling and so does McCarthy. And they could find themselves outbid for Willis and the 49ers unwilling to trade Jones for anything reasonable.

We’ll see.

But had the Vikings extended Sam Darnold, they’d likely be hosting a playoff game next week and maybe even have the top seed. They’d also have the quarterback position figured out for at least the next couple seasons.

That needs to be part of the assessment of Kevin O’Connell and Kwesi Adolfo-Mensah going forward.

Source: https://www.dailynorseman.com/minne...m-darnold-go-was-a-big-mistake-by-the-vikings
 
Vikes Views: Nincompoop of the Year

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The Minnesota Vikings season has come to an end. It’s a season that ended on a five-game win streak that feels a little superficial. The results weren’t what the team wanted. Coming off a 14-3 season, a 5 win drop is always going to be disappointing. J.J. McCarthy missed more games and the QB position was a mess all year. The defense really came on strong in December, but it was too late. When the team wins, we do a player of the week and when they lose, we do a Nincompoop of the Week. Missing the playoffs is an L, so we’ll start here.

Also, it’s the Nincompoop of the Week. We’re talking about adults that get paid a lot to do a very public job. Only a Nincompoop would actually take offense.

Kwesi Adofo-Mensah

Kwesi made several big moves this offseason, with the most impactful being at quarterback. Rumor has it that Kwesi’s team tried to re-sign both Daniel Jones and Sam Darnold. The prices were too high, the situation wasn’t right, or whatever reason we may never know the full truth. The fact is the team ended up with J.J. McCarthy coming off an injury, Carson Wentz, and undrafted Max Brosmer. Vikings fans were forced to watch Darnold lead Seattle to the #1 seed in the NFC. Daniel Jones never joined the Vikings, so it’s hard to fault Kwesi for that. He was leading a run first offense in Indianapolis well until his injury. Kwesi tried to revamp the OL with veterans Will Fries and Ryan Kelly, with limited results. The same could be said for the veteran pair of DL Jonathan Allen and Javon Hargrave. Those additions leave the Vikings over the cap heading into the offseason. The team spent a lot of money and the results didn’t match that investment. First round pick Donovan Jackson has shown some promise and looks to be a decent pick. (OG in the 1st round is expensive if it doesn’t hit.) Tai Felton wasn’t a good pick based on rookie season production and others picked around him. His 3 receptions for 25 yards were less than desirable considering Jordan Addison missed time early. I haven’t even mentioned the wasted pick sent for Adam Thielen. The 5 win drop is always going to call for a lot of criticism. With Kwesi, his job is also to look at the next 2-3 seasons as well. He appears to have failed the 2025 Vikings and set himself up in a precarious position for 2026 and beyond. For all of those reasons, and a few I am sure I forgot, Kwesi is a good candidate for Nincompoop of the Year.

Kevin O’Connell

KOC came into the season confident. It’s easy to see why considering the results he had squeezed out of the team his first 3 seasons (not considering the playoffs). O’Connell collectively with Kwesi allowed/decided to move on at the QB position to J.J. McCarthy. The comments outward to the media were all positive, but they always are in the offseason. KOC is the QB ‘whisperer’ and the team had to put their faith in his input. That decision isn’t the only reason for the team’s failure. The play calling on 3rd and 4th and short is abysmal and the execution is even worse. There seems to be very little progress in getting that issue resolved. O’Connell is also one of the most conservative coaches on 4th down decisions. He has been left behind in today’s analytical world. The failure to adapt on short yardage, situation/clock management, and his input on the QB make him a solid candidate for Nincompoop of the Year.

J.J. McCarthy

McCarthy saw his first real action in the NFL this season. It wasn’t all bad, but it got almost as bad as it gets mid season. J.J. Two Picks was a rough patch to watch after he returned from injury. McCarthy’s mechanics cause him to be wildly inaccurate far too often. He has all the ‘arm talent’ to play the position. The rest of it, is still uncertain. The ‘Nine’ personality he adapted to show his intensity, can sometimes come off as performative. Not his fault, but he also missed significant amounts of time. He couldn’t finish Sunday’s Week 18 game because of his hand fracture. He missed a few open receivers, as most young QBs do. So I can give him a pass on not reading a defense perfectly yet. However, when all the others come into play, it’s hard to feel confident about McCarthy being your franchise QB. Because of that, he’ll likely see some competition come in this offseason.

J.J. McCarthy tries to hit Justin Jefferson but gets picked off — his fifth interception in just four starts.

Ravens rookie Malaki Starks comes up with his second interception of the season. pic.twitter.com/WdawokLGeF

— Preme Football (@premefootball) November 9, 2025

Justin Jefferson

Jefferson got over the 1,000 yard tally on Sunday with just his 3rd 100 yard game of the season. The team finished 1/2 a game out of the final playoff spot. The mid-season struggles of J.J. McCarthy were exaggerated by the drops from Jefferson, Addison, Hockenson, and several veteran pass catchers. Jefferson is the star and needs to make plays to elevate his teammates. The drops when McCarthy was struggling to keep drives moving were devastating. I can’t help but wonder what could’ve been for a few of those games if they were able to continue to move the ball and build confidence. Jefferson disappeared when he was needed. I have to give him some grace with how he handled the limited statistics and targets, but it’s a lot to do with how poorly he and the receivers caught the ball. Jefferson is the best player on this team, there is no doubt, but this will not be a season he wants to remember when it is all said and done.

Justin Jefferson was making faces and shrugging his shoulders when JJ McCarthy was struggling

Now a HUGE play

GREAT throw in traffic by McCarthy

And Jefferson DROPS it in the clutch

JJettas has been struggling all day long
pic.twitter.com/TlX4AY8Wgj

— John Frascella (Football) (@NFLFrascella) November 9, 2025

Matt Daniels

I am surprised Daniels made it through to season. There was a period of time where you expected a penalty on every kick return and a huge return on every kick off. Not that the Vikings kicked off a lot. The penalties always seemed to come at the worst timing. Myles Price fumbled back to back kickoffs against the Ravens. Later in that same game, the team had a holding penalty on a punt return that backed them up inside the 10, down by once score in the 4th quarter. Daniels’ unit cost them at least one game this season. His saving grace is the superb kicking of Will Reichard. He has been a beast. I don’t know how much Daniels gets credit for his success, but he’s one of the best kickers in the game.

That Ravens game stunk. Sign-Up and join the conversation below!

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Source: https://www.dailynorseman.com/minne...oard/94407/vikes-views-nincompoop-of-the-year
 
Minnesota Vikings News and Links: Another Offseason QB Debate

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Well, it looks like this offseason will be another fantastic debate about the QB position. It has already started with folks settling into their respective camps and very very few willing to change their position (er., mind). I’m not sure what the team is actually going to do but if the people in charge want to keep their jobs then they had better have a viable alternative to JJ McCarthy. It will be very tough sell to the owners and fans if they try to run it back with JJ, Wentz, and Brosmer. That is the definition of insanity although each player could and should be better with another year in the KOC offense.

I am onboard for any move or no moves at all. It doesn’t really matter to me because this season has been a disappointment. Any time the team misses the playoffs is a disappointment. Not really looking forward to watching any playoff games to be honest. I will watch the Bears, Steelers, and Seahawks this weekend.


Minnesota Vikings News and Links​


Injured J.J. McCarthy made tough but ‘right’ call to exit game

McCarthy had been attempting to play with a hairline fracture in the hand, one of three significant injuries that has cost him playing time this season and the fourth since the Vikings made him the No. 10 pick in the 2024 draft. Sunday, he completed 14 of 23 passes for 188 yards before walking to the sideline after the first play of the second half and summoning backup Max Brosmer, who played the rest of the game.

McCarthy called it “one of the hardest choices I’ve had to make in my life so far,” but said he was heeding a lesson he learned after ignoring pain in that hand in Week 16 against the New York Giants. On that day, McCarthy didn’t inform the Vikings until after he dropped the ball on an aborted screen pass. In subsequent conversations, coach Kevin O’Connell implored McCarthy to be more forthcoming in real time.

“I was happy I made the right decision,” McCarthy said. “I learned from something from the prior week, feeling the momentum of the game, how well the defense is playing. When it gets to a point where you feel like your body is going to say, ‘No, you can’t do that. You’ve got to put your ego aside and understand you’ve got to do what’s best for the team.’ And it’s a similar situation that came up today, and it killed me to pull myself out. Never done that before, but I got to do what’s best for my team.”

NFL players rarely take themselves out of games, and McCarthy said he had to make a “grown-man decision.”

He added: “I got one person on my shoulder saying, ‘Go in there, you got this, it’ll be fine.’ And then another person [on the other shoulder saying], ‘Hey, maybe this is a test, that you’re being tested to make the right choice.’ So I listened to the one that was on my right shoulder and went from there.”

McCarthy missed five games earlier this season because of a high right ankle sprain and one because of a concussion. Sunday was his 10th NFL start, but he has failed to finish two and has missed a total of 25 games, including playoffs, because of injuries in his career. All four injuries have occurred when he was attempting to extend a play beyond its original design, either inside or outside the pocket, and he said Sunday that he thinks he can minimize them by improving his overall performance.

“I feel like just playing allowed me to gain the experiences, metaphorically and literally, in terms of the pain I would feel,” he said, “getting a little too close to the pocket. Not getting the ball out on time. Being bad with my eyes. Having the defense disguise something and not react instinctively. There’s all these things that happen before the injury that could be the difference in you not being in that vulnerable position. So I just need to continue to work on everything that it is to be a good quarterback in this league, and I feel like the injuries will slowly fade away with just more situational awareness and presence.”

McCarthy played 52% of the Vikings’ snaps this season and attempted only 243 passes, a relatively small sample size for the Vikings to evaluate him and craft a plan for the position in 2026. Sources have told ESPN that the Vikings are unlikely to replace him entirely but almost certainly will acquire a quarterback, via free agency or trade, who can credibly start for them in 2026 if McCarthy fails to make significant improvement.



O’Connell avoids question about J.J. McCarthy’s future as Vikings’ QB1

“I think every year, you’re coming back to build a team throughout the offseason, throughout the draft, leading into training camp,” O’Connell said. “I think he’s improved throughout the season. I think he’s grown, like a lot of young quarterbacks do. Today was his tenth start. I can’t wait to work with him in the offseason and absolutely look forward to the continued development and improvement.

“I’m excited about where he’s ending the season and know that there’s some things we can really dive into as a group, J.J. and myself. I look forward to the challenge of being the best version of myself for not only J.J., but this entire team.”

That non-answer, while perhaps not surprising, feels at least somewhat notable. O’Connell could’ve said something along the lines of “we’re going to take things day by day this offseason but yes, I would be comfortable with J.J. as our starter in 2026.” How much we should read into the specific way he answered the question is open to interpretation.

McCarthy said he believes he’s earned the trust of the Vikings’ decision-makers, but he also realizes the future is now out of his hands to some degree.

“In my opinion, I feel like I have, but at the end of the day, they have their own opinion, they have their own perspective,” McCarthy said. “I just feel confident going into this offseason and content with where I’m at, because I feel like they know who I am as an individual and the potential and capability that this offense could have with me at the helm.

“But at the end of the day, it’s all about the guys (on the team). And from here on out, if I’m here, if I’m not, I love every single one of those guys and had a frickin’ blast playing for them.”



Justin Jefferson ‘would love’ for J.J. McCarthy to return as Vikings’ starting QB in 2026

“That’s not my job,” Jefferson said Thursday, speaking of player personnel decisions, via ESPN. “[But] of course I would love for him to be here. Of course I would love for him to be the quarterback. Especially off this year. I feel like he needs to show everybody and prove to everybody that he is that top-tier quarterback. So I would love to have him. I would love to work with him and show everybody that he is that No. 1 guy.”

Still, once the Vikings were eliminated from playoff contention in December, the only remaining value in the 2025 season could be found in remaining reps shared and the lessons learned from the trying campaign.

“I had to learn myself how to be patient, how to not really show my emotions, to lead as a captain of this team,” Jefferson said. “And there are definitely things I can take from this year going forward. But I would say going forward, requiring more for everybody. Having this type of season, we ain’t trying to have this type of season again.”



Why Vikings’ plan for J.J. McCarthy failed — and what’s next

Internal concerns about McCarthy’s style of play, accuracy, mechanics and even his personality spilled into public. But no hands were left clean.

Coach Kevin O’Connell’s pass-heavy scheme was picked apart by NFL pundits, most notably Hall of Fame quarterback and NFL Network analyst Kurt Warner, and the coach eventually geared it down for McCarthy. General manager Kwesi Adofo-Mensah committed nearly $350 million to the Vikings’ 2025 roster but missed on some key bets while trying to build a team that could support the NFL’s youngest Week 1 starting quarterback.

What made the Vikings think McCarthy was prepared to lead a playoff team? Why did they spend $350 million on the 2025 roster but end up with a thin quarterback room after having veterans Sam Darnold and Daniel Jones on their roster and receiving interest from Aaron Rodgers? Why did McCarthy play so poorly earlier this season — and what will become of him in 2026?

ESPN has tracked the transition since it began last spring and spoke to league and team sources about it. One of the clear takeaways is that Jones’ decision to sign with the Indianapolis Colts upended the Vikings’ plan far more than previously known. There is also widespread agreement that the Vikings overestimated McCarthy’s floor as a first-year starter.

The most optimistic spin, Warner said, is that McCarthy needs more time before a full judgment can be made.

“He hasn’t shown me that he’s going to be great at this point,” Warner recently told ESPN. “But I didn’t expect that. It’s fun when a guy can do that early in his career and show you, ‘Oh man, I’ve got the potential to be great.’ But that’s unique. It doesn’t happen very often.

“And he hasn’t really gotten a fair shake, from them being expected to be a Super Bowl team, and with comparisons to Sam Darnold and Daniel Jones or Aaron Rodgers. It was never going to be that good this season. With J.J., there are some lumps being taken. … I don’t see enough to have a real good feel on what he’s going to be.”

The Vikings could have used the franchise tag to keep Darnold for one more season — and another year to develop McCarthy — but they thought Jones provided a more efficient path.

As they did with Darnold, the Vikings envisioned Jones as a starting-caliber hedge against McCarthy’s inexperience and health. Team officials sensed strong positive vibes from Jones throughout the fall and winter, and they believed he would sign their offer, which was competitive with the $14 million deal he ultimately signed with the Colts.

But the Vikings had misread Jones’ level of interest in their scheme and culture. He liked the organization and the people in it, but business was business. A league source said the Colts offered the best “fit.” In other words, Jones wanted to be on the field in 2025 and thought he had a better chance of overtaking the Colts’ young quarterback — third-year pro Anthony Richardson Sr. — than McCarthy.

The Vikings then turned their deliberations to Rodgers, who was a free agent and had contacted O’Connell to express interest in signing with them. There were multiple reasons why the Vikings passed, sources said, but one of them was the front office’s internal assessment that at 41, he was no longer likely to play at a Super Bowl level. Making the playoffs with Rodgers, but not winning the Super Bowl, wasn’t an equitable trade-off for delaying McCarthy’s ascension, they concluded.

Another was the off-schedule nature of Rodgers’ playing style, at times assigning routes to receivers at the line of scrimmage by using hand signals or other means. McCarthy wouldn’t benefit from watching an offense that he would not be asked to run in future years.

At that point, the Vikings had run out of starting-caliber options and viewed most of the remaining available quarterbacks in similar ways. Given that assessment, sources said, they delayed acquiring a QB until after the post-draft deadline for free agents to count against the 2025 compensatory pick formula.

That represented a significant shift down from pairing McCarthy with a player of Jones’ caliber, but the market had spoken. By default, the Vikings had made McCarthy their unquestioned starter. When the Seahawks made veteran backup Sam Howell available via trade on the final day of the draft, Adofo-Mensah took the deal.

McCarthy had his worst game of the season in Week 2. Playing through a high right ankle sprain, he threw two interceptions and was sacked six times. Based on QBR, McCarthy’s performance ranks 501st out of 512 starts made by quarterbacks through Week 17. His floor had proved much lower than the Vikings anticipated.

Internally, the Vikings assessed the damage. McCarthy’s still-forming mechanics had fallen apart, especially after the ankle injury, exacerbating accuracy issues that had surfaced during training camp. He had also failed to develop variation in velocity on his passes, in part because he was still in the beginning stages of learning the Vikings’ “pure progression” style of deciding where to throw the ball.

During McCarthy’s five-game layoff when he was injured, and in the ensuing weeks after his return, O’Connell began detailing the mechanical issues in public. He said the Vikings were working to put McCarthy in a consistent “posture” at the top of his drop, to align his “feet and eyes” for proper base and balance and to minimize a leg kick that McCarthy often uses when firing passes downfield.

All of it contributed to the biggest issue McCarthy faced: far too many off-target throws. The Vikings thought they had surrounded him with receivers talented enough to overcome those imperfect throws, but if anything, the inconsistency of his passes seemed to have the opposite effect.

Receiver Justin Jefferson’s drop rate this season is a career-high 3.2%, nearly twice his previous career average. Tight end T.J. Hockenson’s drop rate (7.6%) more than quadrupled, as did receiver Jordan Addison’s (9.3%).

The Vikings tied for No. 30 in the NFL in completion percentage above expected (-3.5%). McCarthy and his receivers share responsibility for those numbers, but Warner said it demonstrates his view that McCarthy isn’t a “natural thrower.”

McCarthy’s arm strength is NFL-caliber, Warner said, but his tendency to throw maximum-velocity passes decreases the time that receivers can adjust to inaccurate throws in the air. And Warner said it is a “very hard and very rare thing” for a player to dramatically improve accuracy at the pro level.

Buffalo Bills quarterback Josh Allen is the “poster boy” for doing so, Warner acknowledged, but he is the exception to the rule. Allen completed 52.8% of his passes as a rookie in 2018 but improved that to 69.2% by his third season after polishing his mechanics.

“The beautiful thing about Josh is, yeah, he’s got a big arm, but he doesn’t overthrow it very often,” Warner said. “He does a great job of taking something off, of throwing what I call a firm but soft ball, a nice little arc on it, easy for his guys to adjust to and catch the ball.

“That’s another factor when you engage your body and not your arm, that shows itself in something that J.J. struggles with right now. And so I’m not a proponent that believes a lot of guys get dramatically better with accuracy over time because it takes so much work, and it’s understanding those little nuances.”

OF THE 71 quarterbacks whose careers began with at least six starts over the past decade, McCarthy ranks No. 67 in QBR (25.6) when comparing their first six starts.

But by Week 14, he had taken a clear step forward. In wins over the Washington Commanders, Dallas Cowboys and New York Giants, he completed 65.6% of his passes, dropped his off-target rate from 20.6% to 13.1% and accounted for six touchdowns. He also cut his turnover rate nearly in half, committing three during that stretch after totaling 11 in his first six starts.

It’s fair to question those trends because of the poor defenses he faced. They rank No. 28, 31 and 32, respectively, in the NFL based on EPA per play. But it infused energy throughout the locker room. Right tackle Brian O’Neill said multiple players pushed through injuries in the second half of the season “because we want to be out with him.”

In sum, though, O’Connell said that McCarthy’s 250-yard, three-touchdown performance against the Cowboys “just felt like the guy that he can be for us.”

“It felt like it was repeatable,” O’Connell said.

THERE IS DANGER in overreacting to the poor play of young quarterbacks and being fooled by incremental growth. Hall of Fame receiver Cris Carter said last month on the “Up and Adams Show” that the Vikings’ community has “lowered our standards so much to accommodate” McCarthy.

“I still believe he can be the franchise quarterback,” Carter said, “but let me tell you something. Right now, today, we don’t know.”

McCarthy endured many of the struggles most young quarterbacks face. It was the biggest reason the Vikings will miss the playoffs, but he indisputably played better at the end of the season than he did at the beginning.

Is that enough to merit another season atop the Vikings’ depth chart? Can Adofo-Mensah and O’Connell commit another season to his development?



Vikings will reportedly ‘explore established options’ at quarterback

According to Dianna Russini, who connected with Vikings fans last offseason during Minnesota’s alleged interest in Aaron Rodgers, the Vikings plan to “explore established options via trade or free agency to strengthen its quarterback room.”

At the same time, Russini says the Vikings have “no plans to move on” from J.J. McCarthy, who will start his 10th game of the season in Minnesota’s Week 18 game against the Green Bay Packers on Sunday.



Potential Vikings Defensive Fit Was Fired Sunday Night

Why Raheem Morris Fits if Minnesota Loses Brian Flores
Morris is out in Atlanta, and that means something to the Vikings.

The Kevin O’Connell + Raheem Moriss Connection

O’Connell worked for Sean McVay’s Los Angeles Rams in 2020 and 2021, winning a Super Bowl with Matthew Stafford and friends in 2021. That championship paved the way for the Vikings to hire O’Connell, a relationship that has now lasted for four seasons.

Guessed who coordinated the Rams’ Super Bowl-winning defense in 2021? Raheem Morris.

If not Morris — Then Who?

The would-be list for Flores’ replacements is obviously subject to change, but here’s how the candidates might look in addition to Morris:

Daronte Jones (Vikings Def. Passing Game)
Jonathan Gannon (Cardinals HC — if fired)
Patrick Graham (Raiders DC)
Jim Schwartz (Browns DC)
Jerod Mayo (Former Patriots HC)
Todd Bowles (Buccaneers HC — if fired)
Jeff Ulbrich (Falcons DC)
Wink Martindale (Former Michigan DC)



Vikings QB Options Soon to Gain Several New Players

3 QB Trade Ideas if the Vikings Go Deep Sea Fishing



Cap Space Work
2026 Cap : (-$38,288,060)
Cut or Trade Hockenson
Cut Jones
Cut Hargrave
Cut Kelly
Extend O’Neill 3 yr 66M
Restructure Jefferson (max)
Restructure Greenard (max)
Extend Ryan Wright 2 yr 6M
Give Zavier Scott, Taki Taimani, & Bo Richter the ERFA tender


Updated 2026 Cap : $35,554,440 (43 players under contract only)
2027 Cap : $30,095,773

Possible 2027 moves … Cut Allen & Metellus would take 2027 cap to $55,940,773

What free agents would you target with about 35M in cap space?



Yore Mock

Trade Partner: Titans
Sent: 3.97, 7.234
Received: 4.101, 6.184


Pick 18. Peter Woods DL Clemson 6’3″ 310
Pick 49. Dillon Thieneman S Oregon 6’0″ 205
Pick 82. Deontae Lawson LB Alabama 6’2″ 228
Pick 101. Davison Igbinosun CB Ohio State 6’2″ 195
Pick 161. Nick Singleton RB Penn State 6’0″ 224
Pick 184. Justin Joly TE NC State 6’3″ 263
Pick 196. Pat Coogan IOL Indiana 6’5″ 311
Pick 244. McKale Boley OT Virginia 6’5″ 316




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

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If you can’t disagree in a civil manner, feel free to go away

Source: https://www.dailynorseman.com/minne...gs-news-and-links-another-offseason-qb-debate
 
Vikings 2026 Offseason Kickoff: McCarthy Struggles, Turner Emerges & First Mock Draft

Hosts dissect McCarthy's broken hand game, Turner's edge rusher leap, draft tracker basics, and a PFF-simulated mock with picks like Mansoor Delane. Plus, Flores rumors and QB bold takes—Vikings future unpacked!


Vikings enter 2026 offseason—key talks on McCarthy, Turner, mocks. In this episode of The Real Forno Show, hosts Tyler Forness and Dave Stefano dissect the Minnesota Vikings’ 9-8 season wrap-up, focusing on quarterback J.J. McCarthy’s challenges, edge rusher Dallas Turner’s rapid growth, and an early dive into the 2026 NFL Draft with a simulated mock. As a Vikings 1st & SKOL production, this Minnesota Vikings podcast offers fans an in-depth offseason primer, blending analysis, bold predictions, and draft strategy to fuel SKOL Nation’s excitement.

Delving deeper, Forness reflects on McCarthy’s Week 18 exit due to a broken hand, noting, “His ball placement was bad. It was all over the place,” while questioning injury impacts and suggesting veteran competition like Anthony Richardson: “My bold prediction is that the Vikings are gonna end up with Anthony Richardson.” On Turner, Forness praises his evolution, stating, “Turner over the last few weeks… grew so much as a baseline player,” highlighting stats like 8 sacks and 15% pressure rate, and potential trades like Jonathan Greenard. The episode introduces mock draft trackers and simulates picks using PFF’s tool, with Forness explaining, “Mock drafts are to explore scenarios,” selecting players like Mansoor Delane (CB) at 18 and emphasizing secondary needs. Stefano adds production notes, teasing upcoming SKOL Search episodes for scouting reports.

Key points include:

  • JJ McCarthy Analysis: Final start stats (14/23, 188 yards); accuracy and injury concerns; calls for mechanics work and contingency like Richardson or Kirk Cousins as backup.
  • Dallas Turner’s Growth: From criticized pick to standout (8 sacks, 42 pressures); impacts offseason with versatility under Flores, potential 12-sack 2026.
  • Mock Draft Tracker Intro: Aggregates from PFF, ESPN; Vikings at No. 18, focusing CB/RB/S needs; explores scenarios without forcing positions.
  • First 2026 Mock: Picks include Delane (CB, LSU) Rd1, Kamari Ramsey (S, USC) Rd2, D’Angelo Ponds (CB, FSU) Rd3; youth focus on secondary, DT, TE; avoids overreaching trenches.
TRFS-Mock-01-20260105.png

Listen:

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Watch:


SKOL fans, tune into The Real Forno Show for unfiltered Minnesota Vikings podcast episodes packed with expert breakdowns, live mocks, and community vibes on Vikings 1st & SKOL via Fans First Sports Network—perfect for offseason hype. Subscribe now for SKOL Search drops starting Wednesday, featuring prospects like Caleb Downs and Jermod McCoy.

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’s your bold Vikings offseason prediction—McCarthy rebound or major trade? Drop it in the comments!

Source: https://www.dailynorseman.com/minne...thy-struggles-turner-emerges-first-mock-draft
 
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