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Big-armed QB, big-play receivers and aggressive coach
#1
Vikings offense showing synergy of big-armed QB, big-play receivers and aggressive coach

Sam Darnold sits back in the pocket, surveying the field and buying time as Justin Jefferson and Jordan Addison maneuver through their routes. If they are deep down the field, even better. Ready, aim, fire.

“Just don’t miss,” Darnold said. “That’s the biggest thing.”

He doesn’t miss often, which has given the Vikings offense a dimension that is both highly productive and wildly entertaining.

The deep passing game that has become a real asset for the Vikings is the product of a perfect marriage between a quarterback with a bazooka for an arm, a pair of receivers who stretch the field vertically and a head coach in Kevin O’Connell who excels at designing and calling aggressive pass plays.

“Long foul balls” is how former Vikings coach Brad Childress described deep passes that weren’t completed. Darnold is hitting a lot of home runs.

Darnold leads the NFL in completions of 20-plus yards. He twisted the Atlanta Falcons secondary into human pretzels last week on long pass plays, including three that gained 40 yards or more.

“The biggest thing for me as a quarterback is understanding: When is it there? When is it not there? Should I check it down?” Darnold said. 

“Just having clarity in those moments where I don’t necessarily feel comfortable cutting it loose.” The risk-reward factor is high when rifling the ball downfield, but Darnold seems to be at his best in those situations.

“Arm talent” has become a cliché in evaluating quarterbacks, but if we’ve learned anything about Darnold this season, it’s that he ranks in the highest percentile in the ability to sling it.

Analytics confirm the eye test.

Pro Football Focus measures quarterbacks on passes that travel 20-plus yards. Darnold ranks second in the league in completion percentage (52.9%) on those throws and first in yards, touchdowns and, yes, interceptions.

The website also includes a category called BTT — big time throws — that is described as a “pass with excellent ball location and timing, generally thrown further down the field and/or into a tighter window.”

Darnold is second in the NFL in BTT, behind Buffalo’s Josh Allen.

The origin of his success starts with dialogue.

O’Connell meets with Darnold before every game to discuss the menu of plays he might call. Only a few times has Darnold taken a red pen and crossed out a play he’s uncomfortable using in the game.

“I never want to call a play that a quarterback doesn’t feel really excited about when it comes into their headset,” O’Connell said. “It’s bad enough they have to hear my voice the whole game, but to hear my voice with a play they don’t like, that doesn’t sound very fun.”

Throwing the ball to Jefferson or Addison never sounds like a bad idea. Not only are both fast and slippery tacticians as route runners, but their skill at tracking the ball in the air is masterful.

Addison’s 49-yard touchdown catch last Sunday served as a tracking training video. Pressure in Darnold’s face forced him to throw a high-arching pass. Addison tracked the trajectory and adjusted his route as Falcons defenders ran themselves out of position. Addison jogged into the end zone after making the catch.

“I think ball tracking from a receiver, especially down the field, that is a natural gifted thing,” O’Connell said. “Things are happening so fast. I mean, they’re tracking the laces of the ball, the revolution.”

As a young assistant coach, O’Connell always admired former Pro Bowl receiver DeSean Jackson’s ability to track passes while running full speed wearing a helmet.

“I just remember being, like, ‘That’s the trait,’ ” he said. “Not only a guy that can fly, but a guy that can track the ball and really effortlessly make something that’s very, very difficult look easy. There’s been great examples of it, but I think we got two of them right here in our building for sure.”

Something else to consider: No NFL team has racked up more free yards from pass interference penalties this season than the Vikings at 273. Jefferson has drawn the most pass interferences in the league with eight.

Atlanta cornerback Mike Hughes tackled Addison on a deep pass in the second quarter, resulting in a 47-yard pass interference penalty. The outcome was the same as a long completion.

Postgame, O’Connell praised Darnold’s entire performance, saying he showed “big-field vision and putting the ball exactly where it needs to go. Incredibly calm. Total ownership, command.”

His best moment came when he dodged a sack, then threw on the run deep downfield to Jefferson, who had his arm raised in a universal sign of “I’m open!”

Darnold had clarity in that moment. He knew to cut it loose. He didn’t miss, and Jefferson backpedaled into the end zone for a touchdown.

Source: Startribune

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#2
Sam's athleticism continues to surprise me, he can move. I know he's a shade under 6'4" but he plays tall in the pocket. Its been really fun watching him make throws I haven't seen a Viking QB make in some time.
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#3
Sam definitely has an arm, and he has confidence in making tight throws. Been an enjoyable season so far watching him and our receivers.
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#4
Here's what's crazy...

If you take Favre off the list (09) you'd probably have to go back to 1999/2000 to find a qb here that had the arm, accuracy and athleticism of Darnold.

That would be George and Culpepper. Trust me, its weird for me to be even typing that.

This is why the Vikings have to be incredibly careful, smart and lucky on the decisions they make at QB this off-season. You better be damn sure what you got b4 you let Darnold leave the bldg.
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#5
(6 hours ago)purplefaithful Wrote: This is why the Vikings have to be incredibly careful, smart and lucky on the decisions they make at QB this off-season. You better be damn sure what you got b4 you let Darnold leave the bldg.

100%. I agree. I leave it to KOC and the staff. They know what they have in Darnold, JJM, etc. Whatever direction they decide to go in, I trust in it. I don't get locked into my fan ideal of what I think they should do, when they make that decision, I'm ready to watch and be excited. We all have our opinions as fans and they are all justified, but I haven't trusted a purple braintrust like I do this one. I think regardless of the player, the direction and strategy is going to take this team to a place they've never been. So please.....sometime before dirt nap time. Thanks.

[Image: 200w.gif?cid=6c09b9521tme1gr5f2zx14fbpc3...w.gif&ct=g]
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#6
The craziest thing is that a year ago, every Viking fan on the planet would’ve given their first-born to have one of those young, strong-armed, 1st-round franchise QBs like Justin Herbert, Joe Burrow or Josh Allen. Kwesi even called Harbaugh to see if he was willing to part with Herbert.

Well now we do. Darnold is roughly the same age as those guys, a full year younger than both Allen and Burrow, and right now it can be argued he’s playing as well or better than all of them. In 13 games, he has TWO games where his passer rating fell below 100. Herbert has 7, Burrow has 4 and Allen has 5. Darnold’s completions over 20 yards leads the NFL and no one is particularly close. Darnold also plays in a tougher division and has probably played a tougher schedule than all of them.

….and we’re likely to just watch him leave….and be happy about it….sorta.
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#7
(5 hours ago)MaroonBells Wrote: The craziest thing is that a year ago, every Viking fan on the planet would’ve given their first-born to have one of those young, strong-armed, 1st-round franchise QBs like Justin Herbert, Joe Burrow or Josh Allen. Kwesi even called Harbaugh to see if he was willing to part with Herbert.
Well now we do. Darnold is roughly the same age as those guys, a full year younger than both Allen and Burrow, and right now it can be argued he’s playing as well or better than all of them. In 13 games, he has TWO games where his passer rating fell below 100. Herbert has 7, Burrow has 4 and Allen has 5. Darnold’s completions over 20 yards leads the NFL and no one is particularly close. Darnold also plays in a tougher division and has probably played a tougher schedule than all of them.
….and we’re likely to just watch him leave….and be happy about it….sorta.

Well f**k that...

There has to be a scenario where my fandom is rewarded...

To Sticky's point, you gotta trust in KOC (which I do more than KAM). But the stakes are incredibly high. I honestly think they'll tag him if his play continues at this level. What choice will they really have? If he regresses a bunch (doubtful) then I think they let him walk.

I am glad there is still 4 games left this season, that's a lot of football to be played. 

What we have to avoid is a situation like 99 where they re-signed Cunningham when they shouldn't have. 

Hindsight is 20/20 aint it? 

On the NFL Insider: Bills quarterback Josh Allen is the frontrunner for Most Valuable Player, but Darnold is having MVP-caliber moments of his own.

O’Connell’s choice when asked for his MVP heading into Week 15 was Bills quarterback Josh Allen.

“He’s making so many things happen,” O’Connell said.

But …So is Darnold, O’Connell said. MVP case in point: Last week’s 52-yard touchdown pass to Justin Jefferson, which came after Darnold escaped heavy pressure from two defenders straight up the middle.

“That’s a sack, so that’s nothing I did or called,” O’Connell said. “Had he just thrown the ball away there, that would have been a positive play. But he overcomes all that adversity to throw a 52-yard touchdown to the best receiver in football. And, yeah, we won by 21 points, but it was a one-point game late in the third quarter when Sam did that.

O’Connell traces Darnold’s current hot streak to the morning after his coldest game as a Viking. It was Nov. 11. Yes, the Vikings had won at Jacksonville. But Darnold threw three interceptions with no touchdowns and a 48.2 passer rating.

O’Connell said the key was Darnold looking inward for answers instead of outward for excuses. Since then, he has posted four consecutive passer ratings of 107 or higher, giving him a team-record 11 this season, including a team-record 157.9 to go along with a career-high five touchdowns and NFC offensive player of the week against the Falcons.

“I don’t even know what makes up a 100-plus rating,” O’Connell said. “But I can tell you that if you do it as many times as Sam’s done it, and you’re winning games and making high-, high-level quarterback plays, you deserve MVP consideration.

“If he continues the standard he set for himself these last four weeks, I think our team is in great position over the next four weeks and there is going to be a very, very strong argument for Sam as MVP.”

Heading into Week 15, the gambling site DraftKings had Allen listed as the MVP front-runner (-400). A $10 bet would win you $12.50. Barkley was next (+450) followed by Goff and Jackson (+1000), Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes (+4000) and Darnold (+5000). A $10 bet on Darnold would fetch $510.

Darnold has stonewalled every attempt the media has made this year to get him to reflect on his past or project his future beyond the one-year, $10 million deal he signed with the Vikings. He declined a one-on-one interview for this story and was typically bland in his weekly news conference.

“I’m just going to continue to stay present, locked in on the moment,” Darnold said when asked about the MVP chatter and chant at the end of the Falcons game. “But, yeah, [the chant] was a special moment.”

Gannon opened his career with what he calls six “dysfunctional” years with the Vikings. The bitter end came in 1992, when Denny Green benched him for Sean Salisbury with the Vikings at 8-3 and on their way to a one-and-done playoff performance that Gannon watched from the sideline. He bounced from Washington to Kansas City to Oakland, where he got a foothold on his career and went 33-15 from 2000 until his MVP year.

“When I look at Sam this year, the amazing thing I see is from the neck up he’s a different player,” Gannon said. “Being thrown out there in New York as the third overall pick when he wasn’t ready, that’s not an easy place to fail. I’ve seen guys never recover from failing like that.”

“You think of Sam being around a long time, but the kid’s only 27,” Gannon said. “And he’s in such a great situation. Kevin O’Connell, there’s a method to his X’s and O’s madness. I think he’s terrific.

“But what he’s really done is restore Sam’s confidence. That swagger, that juice is back for Sam. The command of the huddle, the command of the system, the audibles, the checks, he’s matured mentally, emotionally in so many ways, and it’s very noticeable.”

Winning MVP or coming close could be the crowning achievement in what could become one of the most lucrative contract-year performances ever. Maybe even bigger than the one Baker Mayfield used last year to get a three-year, $100 million deal with Tampa Bay.

The Vikings are waiting until after the season to address the situation. They will have first-round draft pick J.J. McCarthy coming back from injury and immediate needs elsewhere that will require significant cap room to fill in free agency.

“There’s going to be a time and a place to figure out what’s best long term, to really discuss and dive into our futures,” O’Connell said. “And then, ultimately, Sam has earned the right to have a big-time say in that as well. Right now, I’m just proud of this team and excited about where it’s going this season.”

Darnold’s current contract came with an $8.75 million guarantee. That’s $176.25 million less than Jackson’s guaranteed money, $161.85 million less than Goff’s and $141.25 million less than Allen’s.

And, no, it won’t be laughable come Monday night and Darnold is playing well and the Vikings are winning and fans start showering Darnold with those once-unthinkable three letters.
“MVP! MVP! MVP!”

“I’m so happy for him,” Gannon said. “I mean how can you not be happy for a guy who’s been to hell and back and is now in the conversation for MVP?”

Startribune
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