Spaulding!No!
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Eric Hipple
FWIW -
Miami GM said in a presser that they’re definitely going to sign Tua to a long-term deal and will not be selecting a QB in the draft - so one less QB suitor.
Peter Schrager of NFL Network was on Dan Patrick today. He thinks the top 3 go Williams, Daniels, May and that Arizona won't want to go down to 11 and will trade with Giants. Also that either the Rams or Raiders will take Nix if available. So the Vikings might have to take Nix at 11 if they want him or settle for Penix at 23.
Apparently the Patriots are pretty set on staying and picking a QB. I'm afraid the price we'd have to pay would be appalling.That's why if the Vikings do trade up, it will likely be to 3 to take either Maye or JJ if NE is willing to part with that pick. If that happened, I think the Vikings would take Maye.
Vikings will deffo have to trade up imo if Maye is the guy they want to go with. Personally, I just see them taking McCarthy though though personally I would take Penix over him(Sure in the minority in that haha).That's why if the Vikings do trade up, it will likely be to 3 to take either Maye or JJ if NE is willing to part with that pick. If that happened, I think the Vikings would take Maye.
I'd stay put with our first-round draft picks. Focus on CB, DL and/or interior OL with our two first-round picks (whichever position/player falls to us) as we'd get the top one or two players in those areas, vs the fourth-best QB. Then trade up into the third round to select Pratt (QB from Tulane).
If the Vikings can't trade up with their two 2024 First Rounders, and if Maye or McCarthy doesn't drop to 11, then the Vikings should trade down from 11 to the late teens or 20s. They can get 2 DTs, or 1 DT plus a DE or CB in Round 1. They'll presumably get a 2nd Rounder this year for trading down, which they can then use on a QB a another position of need.
Reaching for players is how you fail long-term. If you can't get the right QB, then fortify the rest of the team.
Truth. If you have a chance to take a blue chipper, you don't mess aroundUnless a top defensive player is available, then you take him. Trading back sounds nice until you pass on Kyle Hamilton to draft Lewis Cine.
Let me get this straight. The Vikings might trade 3 1st rounders for JJ McCarthy when they can probably sit at 11 (and maybe 23) and get Michael Penix, Jr.
Give me Penix.
Penix has good size, a strong and accurate arm, huge hands, and 4.6 speed. He's extremely experienced as a college player and has been very successful at multiple mid-P5 stops. In his college career, Penix has:
- Nearly taken Indiana to the Big Ten championship (in football)
- Took Washington to 14-0 and NC game
- Got his coach promoted from Indiana OC to Alabama HC
- Got his WR1 to the top of this year's draft board
And people are talking about taking someone else? The guys who turned in a bunch of 8-5 seasons with tons of talent around them? The guy who barely threw and leaned on a spectacular OL and running game? Penix is at least the QB2 for me in this draft and I hope the Vikings don't chase.
He will go long before the 3rd round. A lot of mocks have him going no later than 16, some in top 10. But few seem to have the Vikings just staying at 11 and taking him. Media is obsessed with them chasing and trading up.The talent evaluators in the NFL, the guys with each franchise who get paid to evaluate these players, will tell you what you should think of Penix by where he gets drafted. It won't be very high.
If the Vikings could get him in the 3rd round, it would be worth considering. If not, I'd rather roll with Darnold.
Absolutely. Picking QBs has been nothing more than a crap shoot. Us message board dwellers are probably as good at picking QBs to draft. For example I did not want Ponder. Thank you. You're welcome.He will go long before the 3rd round. A lot of mocks have him going no later than 16, some in top 10. But few seem to have the Vikings just staying at 11 and taking him. Media is obsessed with them chasing and trading up.
NFL talent evaluators thought Josh Rosen and Sam Darnold were better prospects than Lamar Jackson.
And I wanted Jalen Hurts.Absolutely. Picking QBs has been nothing more than a crap shoot. Us message board dwellers are probably as good at picking QBs to draft. For example I did not want Ponder. Thank you. You're welcome.
great call.And I wanted Jalen Hurts.
Because that’s what gets people to click on the Tweet and then (they hope) the site!!Media is obsessed with them chasing and trading up.
That’s right after Tom P came on and used 5000 words to say basically nothing.‘The draft is meatsauce’s Super Bowl. He is geeked out.’ - C. Cove
Say it loud, say it proud, Gopher_In_NYC! Not just a double but a triple paste!They are running out on content quickly,
FWIW - This article lists the best landing spot for rookie QBs and we were first, with a perplexing A- grade for our D.
1. Minnesota Vikings
Pass blocking: B
Run game: B
Weapons: A
Play-caller: A-
Defense: A-
What more can you ask for as a signal-caller? Justin Jefferson is the best receiver in the game. Jordan Addison can be one of the better No. 2 receivers in the league. Tight end T.J. Hockenson won’t be ready at the beginning of the season because he tore his ACL late last season, but he’ll be back.
The Vikings could use interior offensive line upgrades, but they already have one of the league’s best tackle duos with left tackle Christian Darrisaw and right tackle Brian O’Neill. They finished 13th in offensive rushing success last season despite defenses being able to focus on the run more with Jefferson and Kirk Cousins missing significant time. Jefferson’s presence makes it hard for teams to put that extra defender in the box no matter who is playing quarterback.
Head coach Kevin O’Connell is a strong play-caller who can get his best weapons the ball, schemes up ways that make it difficult to double Jefferson and takes advantage of the extra attention Jefferson gets. Minnesota still finished 10th in yards per play last season despite Jefferson missing eight games and Cousins missing 10.
Ultimately, the potential for a long-term partnership with O’Connell and Jefferson makes the Vikings the top destination for a young quarterback. The Vikings also play indoors, which is conducive to passing.
1. Minnesota Vikings
Pass blocking: B
Run game: B
Weapons: A
Play-caller: A-
Defense: A-
What more can you ask for as a signal-caller? Justin Jefferson is the best receiver in the game. Jordan Addison can be one of the better No. 2 receivers in the league. Tight end T.J. Hockenson won’t be ready at the beginning of the season because he tore his ACL late last season, but he’ll be back.
The Vikings could use interior offensive line upgrades, but they already have one of the league’s best tackle duos with left tackle Christian Darrisaw and right tackle Brian O’Neill. They finished 13th in offensive rushing success last season despite defenses being able to focus on the run more with Jefferson and Kirk Cousins missing significant time. Jefferson’s presence makes it hard for teams to put that extra defender in the box no matter who is playing quarterback.
Head coach Kevin O’Connell is a strong play-caller who can get his best weapons the ball, schemes up ways that make it difficult to double Jefferson and takes advantage of the extra attention Jefferson gets. Minnesota still finished 10th in yards per play last season despite Jefferson missing eight games and Cousins missing 10.
Ultimately, the potential for a long-term partnership with O’Connell and Jefferson makes the Vikings the top destination for a young quarterback. The Vikings also play indoors, which is conducive to passing.
1. Minnesota Vikings
Pass blocking: B
Run game: B
Weapons: A
Play-caller: A-
Defense: A-
What more can you ask for as a signal-caller? Justin Jefferson is the best receiver in the game. Jordan Addison can be one of the better No. 2 receivers in the league. Tight end T.J. Hockenson won’t be ready at the beginning of the season because he tore his ACL late last season, but he’ll be back.
The Vikings could use interior offensive line upgrades, but they already have one of the league’s best tackle duos with left tackle Christian Darrisaw and right tackle Brian O’Neill. They finished 13th in offensive rushing success last season despite defenses being able to focus on the run more with Jefferson and Kirk Cousins missing significant time. Jefferson’s presence makes it hard for teams to put that extra defender in the box no matter who is playing quarterback.
Head coach Kevin O’Connell is a strong play-caller who can get his best weapons the ball, schemes up ways that make it difficult to double Jefferson and takes advantage of the extra attention Jefferson gets. Minnesota still finished 10th in yards per play last season despite Jefferson missing eight games and Cousins missing 10.
Ultimately, the potential for a long-term partnership with O’Connell and Jefferson makes the Vikings the top destination for a young quarterback. The Vikings also play indoors, which is conducive to passing.
Ranking the most to least ideal QB-needy teams for NFL Draft's top passers to land
Seven teams likely need new signal-callers but some offer a more QB-friendly situation for a newcomer to succeed.theathletic.com
1. Minnesota Vikings
Pass blocking: B
Run game: B
Weapons: A
Play-caller: A-
Defense: A-
What more can you ask for as a signal-caller? Justin Jefferson is the best receiver in the game. Jordan Addison can be one of the better No. 2 receivers in the league. Tight end T.J. Hockenson won’t be ready at the beginning of the season because he tore his ACL late last season, but he’ll be back.
The Vikings could use interior offensive line upgrades, but they already have one of the league’s best tackle duos with left tackle Christian Darrisaw and right tackle Brian O’Neill. They finished 13th in offensive rushing success last season despite defenses being able to focus on the run more with Jefferson and Kirk Cousins missing significant time. Jefferson’s presence makes it hard for teams to put that extra defender in the box no matter who is playing quarterback.
Head coach Kevin O’Connell is a strong play-caller who can get his best weapons the ball, schemes up ways that make it difficult to double Jefferson and takes advantage of the extra attention Jefferson gets. Minnesota still finished 10th in yards per play last season despite Jefferson missing eight games and Cousins missing 10.
Ultimately, the potential for a long-term partnership with O’Connell and Jefferson makes the Vikings the top destination for a young quarterback. The Vikings also play indoors, which is conducive to passing.
I’d love to see Drake Maye fall to No. 4 and for the Vikings to trade up to get him. Despite some accuracy issues, Maye would be in a much better situation with talent relative to his competition than he was at North Carolina. He’ll take chances and give his playmakers chances to make plays. There might be some misfires but there would be plenty of fireworks.
Say it loud, say it proud, Gopher_In_NYC! Not just a double but a triple paste!