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All signs point to Wentz
#1
JJM is not 100%.
Neither is Wentz and his sore left shoulder, but it's not his throwing arm.
Sorry Sticky...KOC is not going to throw JJM out there if he's not 100%
From the Strib:
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The Vikings quarterback predicament has been debated and guesstimated so intensely it’s as if we’re all playing the board game Clue. Who will start Sunday against the Eagles? Will it be Professor Wentz or Colonel McCarthy in the bank with a dagger?

The head coach isn’t revealing his answer yet. The affable Kevin O’Connell was uncharacteristically terse Wednesday when asked where things stand with his quarterback decision.

“They stand in the same place they did Monday when I answered that question,” he said.

Alrighty then.

I began the week predicting that J.J. McCarthy would return to the starter’s role after missing three games because of a high ankle sprain.

I would like to retract that guess. Eyes, ears and gut tell me that Carson Wentz will remain the starter for at least one more game and quite possibly longer.

Let’s read the tea leaves, shall we?

Start with McCarthy’s answer when asked how his ankle is feeling.

“Ankle is getting there,” he said. “I wouldn’t say it’s 100 percent right now.”

That doesn’t sound like a guy who will be ready to play an NFL game on Sunday. He also called it a “really annoying injury.” He was listed as limited in practice on Wednesday.

The organization is not going to send McCarthy back onto the field until there is 100% confidence that he has no physical limitations. McCarthy’s mobility is an important part of his skill set, so “getting there” physically does not meet the threshold of being ready to run the offense.

O’Connell’s answers in media sessions both Monday and Wednesday were equally enlightening.

Unprompted, he called McCarthy’s high ankle sprain a “a unique, real injury,” which likely was intended to shoot down conspiracy theories about whether McCarthy’s absence was a soft benching disguised as an injury.

O’Connell’s openness about what has been taking place behind the scenes was especially illuminating. He went into extensive detail about the work he and McCarthy have done since returning from Europe on refining his fundamentals. O’Connell’s descriptions made it sound like a pupil going through quarterback school to drill down on footwork principles.

O’Connell noted that several negative factors came into play in McCarthy’s tough outing against the Falcons in his second start — injuries along the offensive line, his ankle injury, a lack of practice time after the birth of his child — but the coach’s willingness to discuss his bye week sessions with McCarthy on footwork fundamentals didn’t come across as random. That part didn’t sound like a quarterback ready to start Sunday, either.

“He’s an accurate passer,” O’Connell said. “What I have learned about him is when he plays with that ideal base, balance and body position, you’re going to see the ball come out with a lot of revolutions and it’s going to go where he wants it to go.”

O’Connell has wisely — and likely purposely — not given concrete timelines and assessments publicly so that he doesn’t box himself in on deciding how the situation unfolds.

This season began under a complicated premise: A first-year starting quarterback on a veteran team built to win now and become relevant in the playoffs. The picture became muddier with McCarthy’s shaky start and injury.

The organization drafted McCarthy to be a franchise quarterback and the only true way for him to work through growing pains is to gain experience in games. That was the basis for my theory that he would return as the starter this week. A wise friend reminded me that Wentz went 9-for-9 passing with a touchdown on the final drive against one of the NFL’s best defenses to pull off a win against the Cleveland Browns in the most recent game. How do you tell him to take a seat after doing that?

Realistically, O’Connell has a two-week buffer before McCarthy’s status becomes a larger story. Assuming Wentz starts Sunday, a quarterback change seems unlikely next week considering the Vikings will have only one practice day before playing Thursday night in Los Angeles against the Chargers.

That puts a spotlight on the Nov. 2 game in Detroit. McCarthy’s ankle should be fully healthy by then. Two weeks in an NFL season can feel like an eternity because so much can change. It’s the Vikings, though, so questions about the quarterback situation are evergreen.
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#2
Until some person watches JJ doing something in real life, it’s not a report and we don’t know anything more than whatever gamesmanship the Vikings want to play. Can he walk normally? Can he jog normally? Can he run in a straight line normally? Can he plant his foot and throw the ball normally?

At this point, I’d be more interested in knowing how adept JJMcarthy looked walking to the podium than I am at any words he said while standing motionless at the podium. The one guy on Reddit, who had a friend, who saw JJ and his family at an apple orchard and stated that there’s no way he’s close to starting because of how he hobbled up the hill is closer to the information that we need. We don’t need reports from desk jockeys speculating from their home office. We can already do that.

Aren't these guys supposed to watch the players warm up and do position drills or something?
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#3
Yes, at this point, it would be a pretty massive surprise if JJ starts against Philly. In fact, I'd say if Wentz aggravates that shoulder and has to come out, it would be Brosmer who goes in. 

Thought this was interesting:
“He’s an accurate passer,” O’Connell said. “What I have learned about him is when he plays with that ideal base, balance and body position, you’re going to see the ball come out with a lot of revolutions and it’s going to go where he wants it to go.”

Even though he wasn't great in his two starts, you could see that inherent accuracy on those throws where he did have time to set up to throw properly. There was a throw JJ made late in the Atlanta game where he had time, but rushed it a bit, and overthrew a wide-open Nailor on a go route. I think the constant duress prior to that play had an impact on his internal clock and his footwork. That's the problem with pressure. I think it can force QBs into bad habits even on the rare occasions when they do get time. He was also playing on a high ankle sprain at the time.
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