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Next QB? Look beyond the names you are hearing?
#21
Read into this what you will, take away from it what you will...J

ust like listening to a politician speak, there are a thousand things the brain can go spin on lol!

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Though Vikings General Manager Kwesi Adofo-Mensah and coach Kevin O’Connell struck hopeful tones about quarterback J.J. McCarthy‘s progress in their season-ending news conference Tuesday, Jan. 13, both said they expect the team to have competition at the position in 2026.

Injuries and inexperience made McCarthy’s first season as the starter a rocky one for the Vikings, as the 22-year-old completed 57.6% of his passes and threw for 11 touchdowns against 12 interceptions. McCarthy, who started 10 games and played 52.25% of the team’s offensive snaps, posted a 100.4 passer rating in his final four starts, though he left both of his final two games early because of a hairline fracture in his right hand.

“I absolutely want a competitive situation,” O’Connell said. “What that looks like with the reps, I think it’s all predicated on — obviously, J.J. is going to be a major, major emphasis for our staff and our team and me personally. We’ll figure out what that looks like as we navigate, you know, the early part of this offseason when it comes to managing the roster, and I know Kwesi and his staff will do a great job of that.”

Asked whether he wants McCarthy to be the starter in 2026, Adofo-Mensah said: “I want the Vikings to achieve our goals. And I think one of those goals is to make playoff runs. I think he has the character and ability to be the person to do that. If I say that in 2026, that kind of binds us into a certain area.

“The way we’ve set this team up, we built this core like we’ve always talked about, [to] give ourselves multiple shots at it, because you never know when there’s going to be a year where the field feels a little bit wide open and you can make that run. Whether it’s this year or next year isn’t really my immediate reflection. It’s my job to really bring that deep competitive group that we’ve talked about.”

The Vikings tried to re-sign Daniel Jones last March after adding him to their practice squad for the final months of the 2024 season, and sources have said the team offered more money to Jones than did Indianapolis, which signed him to a one-year, $14 million deal. Jones believed he had a better chance to win the Colts’ starting job over Anthony Richardson than he did to claim the Vikings’ starting job from McCarthy. The Vikings traded for Sam Howell during the NFL draft, then signed Carson Wentz in late August after an ineffective camp from Howell.

Adofo-Mensah didn’t agree with the notion the Vikings were overconfident Jones would return, though he said the team thought Jones’ time on the practice squad would impact his decision. But, Adofo-Mensah said, “free agents are free for a reason, and they’re allowed to vet all their options. We could have executed better around that.”

The Vikings need to clear more than $40 million in cap space before the start of free agency in March, which could affect how aggressive they will be on the quarterback market. But QBs might be inclined to view the Vikings’ job more favorably if they think they have a chance to win a competition.

“My conversations with agents are typically focused on that,” Adofo-Mensah said. “We’re going to be honest, as we always are. We’re very transparent in our free agency conversations. We want to be able to play a certain style over 17-plus games, and we’re going to create a competitive environment.”

The Vikings will continue to develop McCarthy, who will train with other QBs in Southern California this offseason before returning to Minnesota in April. He should be able to get more work in this year after recovering from his hand injury than he did last year after returning from knee surgery.

McCarthy, O’Connell said Tuesday, “knows the things he’s going to work on. He knows the things he needs to be a little more consistent at.”

Adofo-Mensah said the Vikings are also talking with the quarterback, who was injured multiple times on plays outside the pocket, about how to balance his on-field tenacity with the need to keep himself healthy.

“Availability is a skill, as they say,” Adofo-Mensah said. “You’re talking about a player who’s incredibly tough, didn’t miss games in college, and that was one of the things we talked about when we went to the people at Michigan. They told us the things he fought through, and different things like that. And that’s really not different than the player we’ve gotten here. 

And so ultimately, that is something that we’re mindful of, given just how it’s happened. We can control though, how we get him right from a mechanical standpoint, from a decision-making standpoint, to protect himself. But that mindset — me versus them, I’m going to get this last yard — that’s also what the great ones have.

So for me to sit here, or anybody else to tell him to be a different version of himself, it’s a delicate balance.

“I know that he wants it more than anybody I’ve ever been around, and he’s got an offseason where he’s going to have time to not rehab an injury. And so we’re excited to see what development he takes and the steps he takes towards being available for us.”

Were the Vikings too optimistic in thinking McCarthy could develop on the fly while leading a playoff push for a veteran team coming off a 14-3 season? Adofo-Mensah said Jan. 13 they were aware McCarthy would face difficulty in his first year and focused on surrounding the No. 10 overall pick in 2024 with veterans who could help him withstand them.

Adofo-Mensah acknowledged the fact that starting McCarthy, whose 713 passes at Michigan were fewer than any of the six quarterbacks taken in the first round of the 2024 draft, required some projection.

“In a perfect world, you would have had three years of watching him play in the NFL,” Adofo-Mensah said. “That’s not how this works, and sometimes you have to go on incomplete information. ... You saw the improvement at the end. You saw the flash of the player we thought he could be. So in that sense, you know, I can’t say that we were overconfident. Maybe that timing didn’t work out with other aspects of our team, whether that be injuries or different things like that.

But ultimately, we’re comfortable with where we are and we’re excited about where he can go.”

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#22
(6 hours ago)JimmyinSD Wrote: All that said,  who the fuck picked sam howell?  I dont want him anywhere near this decision,  and if they are going to go after the best players they can for that room, then its likely that they can find one that is more ready than JJM. 

This has been my contention all year because it had to be the "whisperer." OConnell is no more a quarterback whisperer than Brad Childress was. He needs a certain skillset at quarterback for his offense to be successful and McCarthy does not appear to be a fit in what he wants to do offensively.  When you look at the quarterback decisions and how that room was made up, it's got OConnell written all over it. 

- The drafting of McCarthy. You have to firmly believe the organization relied heavily on OConnell when making that decision 

- The Sam Howell debacle. Does anybody really believe Kwesi just went out and blindly made a move for a quarterback without OConnell giving the ok first?

- Wentz was almost killed trying to run the KOC "chuck and duck" offense. 

-Brosmer looked a lot like McCarthy when he played, maybe worse. 

Kevin OConnell isn't the guy everybody thinks he is when it comes to offense and identifying and developing quarterbacks and the proof is in the pudding.
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