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Kwesi Fired...
Vikings ownership tried something unorthodox, something so out-of-the-blue that it was either going to work brilliantly or land with a thud. Hiring a former Wall Street broker to oversee football operations for an NFL team offered no middle ground.

The answer came Friday, Jan. 30, in an announcement that was stunning in timing but not in practicality.

The Vikings fired General Manager Kwesi Adofo-Mensah after four seasons and no playoff wins, and only eight months after giving him a multiyear extension.

Co-owner Mark Wilf offered mostly generalities about the decision but noted his family did not feel “comfortable” or “confident” keeping Adofo-Mensah in his post.

“We have an urgency to create a winning football team,” Wilf said.

The Vikings’ owners often spoke admirably about Adofo-Mensah’s spirit of collaboration. That’s all well and good, but results are ultimately what matters.

Adofo-Mensah’s résumé as a talent evaluator and roster architect simply included too many draft mistakes. The scarcity of true impact players acquired via the draft forced the organization to rely heavily on free agency to fill holes, which is neither an ideal nor sustainable blueprint because it’s expensive and the roster skews older.

What’s more, somebody had to answer for a 2025 season that missed the mark by a mile.

The Wilfs didn’t become billionaires by being bad at business. They must have felt like they were sold a lemon.

Adofo-Mensah’s plan compelled ownership to commit more than $300 million to free agents last offseason under the premise that the team would be equipped to contend.

Not only did the Vikings fail to make the playoffs, Adofo-Mensah miscalculated the quarterback situation, along with head coach Kevin O’Connell, assuming O’Connell had a voice in the dynamics of that position.

The Wilfs watched Sam Darnold lead the Vikings to 14 wins and a playoff berth last season. The front office opted to let Darnold walk, whiffed on re-signing Daniel Jones as a bridge quarterback and put the offense in J.J. McCarthy’s hands when he clearly needed more development time.

Wilf said that ownership evaluated Adofo-Mensah’s entire tenure and that his dismissal was not tied to “any one decision or move.”

Even so, the sight of Darnold celebrating a trip to the Super Bowl with the Seahawks after a sensational performance in the NFC title game Jan. 25 served as one final kick to the britches. It was an embarrassing look for the organization.

Adofo-Mensah was always viewed as an outsider infiltrating the NFL’s insulated world. He didn’t fit the profile of a “football guy.” That was never going to be an easy hurdle to clear when surrounded by coaches and scouts who have sacrificed and invested their entire lives to reach that career pinnacle.

Rumors of tension between the front office and coaching staff behind the scenes are being reported, but nothing ever spilled into public view. Wilf was asked multiple questions about whether owners found discord between Adofo-Mensah and the coaching staff. He called the firing “100 percent an ownership decision.”

“No one was suggesting, ‘Kwesi this or Kwesi that,’ ” Wilf said. “We are in touch with everyone in the building, sensing the dynamic, how people work together. It’s a good collaborative situation. People get along here. It’s strictly a professional decision on where we think the dynamic was best going forward. Yes, we got input from everybody, but nobody said, ‘Hey, you’ve got to fire.’ As ownership, we said, ‘We’re not satisfied, we need to be better as an organization, and this is the direction we have to go.’ ”

Protracted contract negotiations between ownership and Adofo-Mensah last offseason gave the impression that something was amiss. O’Connell signed a multiyear extension days after the Vikings’ playoff loss to the Rams. Adofo-Mensah downplayed the absence of news in his own negotiations as months passed, but the optics invited skepticism that not everything and everyone were aligned.

The timing of his firing is odd given the Vikings played their final game on Jan. 4. Wilf mentioned being methodical in conducting a season-ending analysis, but the decision can be boiled down to a simple thought: Adofo-Mensah couldn’t be trusted to oversee another draft. A very important draft considering the number of picks the Vikings have and their need to inject young impact players into the roster.

One of Adofo-Mensah’s first moves as GM became a harbinger that defined his tenure. Overseeing his first draft in 2022, he traded back 20 spots to select Georgia safety Lewis Cine with the final pick in the first round.

Not only did Adofo-Mensah make a trade with a division foe (Detroit), he passed up the chance to take Notre Dame safety Kyle Hamilton, who has become a star, in favor of Cine, who is now playing in the UFL.

As first (and last) impressions go, that one leaves a sour taste.

STRIB

Hurry-up Vikings, we ain't getting any younger! 
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(01-30-2026, 03:28 PM)MaroonBells Wrote: Florio's a pinhead, and wrong more than he's right, but for what it's worth...

The Purple Persuasion@TPPSkol
There it is! Mike Florio saying Kevin O'Connell tried warning the Vikings FO J.J. McCarthy wasn't ready.

Kwesi Adofo-Mensah didn't listen... and now he is FIRED.

"This was rooted in, if not driven by, the ill fated QB decision of 2025. This tells us Kwesi Adofo-Mensah wanted what they got. J.J. McCarthy with journeyman backups and that O’Connell was cautioning against it. He was the guy saying this isn’t going to work”.

This makes sense.  I heard in the off-season that KOC was willing to put his career on the line for Sam Darnold running it back with us to give JJ McCarthy more time after missing all his rookie season. KOC was overruled since the FO wanted to proceed with a QB on a rookie contract.

As far as tensions go... Grigson is an alpha but not a great talent evaluator IMO. I'm sure his style and Kwesi clashed. Then look at the relationship between Assistant HC Pettine and Flores. Oil and water. I'm sure these relationships are what insiders are referring to with "tension" in the organization.
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Kwesi butchered the draft in 2022 ,he'd been playing from behind ever since.

Free agency class of 2024 helped but the draft whiffs and the back up QB situation 2025 cooked him.

The timing of all this is deliberate, so what's the advantage?
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I read an article a couple of days ago (can't remember where to be honest) where Kwesi was being interviewed and was asked about his thoughts on Darnold being the starting QB in the Super Bowl and his response was pretty nonchalant. Instead of complimenting Darnold on a great season, he said something along the lines of 'you make plans based on what you visualise and sometimes those plans just don't work out as you thought they would'. I didn't really think much of the article, but now after his being fired (which I am glad happened), it is clear that running JJ out with no clear back-up plan and cutting ties with Darnold was mostly or solely his plan, and it backfired. The way it was written sure seemed to imply, a kinda of, 'oh well, it just didn't work out there' attitude with no gravitas. Some other things are making sense now in hindsight, like KOC coming out and saying, after a long stint on the bench with an "injury", when JJ came back, he suddenly had "footwork" issues that needed to be corrected. Most coaches it seems, want their young QB's to get game time experience to shorten the learning curve and let them see if the guy has "it" or not. It seemed like JJ was wrapped in bubble wrap most of the season. I am not a big fan of JJ to date, but to be fair, more time (game experience) is needed. I do wish he would ditch the lame "9" alter-ego. This isn't high school ball. I digress, I was shocked when the Wilf's extended Kwesi, but happy to see that despite the extension, they had seen enough and reversed to make the right decision. Grigson should be next. Sounds like we will be hearing more soon on all of this drama, but count me happy that at least he is done with the Vikings.
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I am listening to this press conference and something feels off to me. KAM is the scapegoat for now but now KOC has no cover whatsoever. It's time to put up or shut up
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(01-30-2026, 03:16 PM)ArizonaViking Wrote: Supa, please step away from the ledge, take a deep breath and let's wait and see what the rest of the fallout looks like.

There's no ledge. I've been vindicated from all the shit I took from several on this board who fluffed poetic about this great "outside the box" Wallstreet hire when anybody who's paid attention to how the NFL actually works knew it was a shit hire that would end in disaster. Four years later....I was right, the Wilfs and several on this board were wrong, rinse and repeat..

For the record, I'm all in on McKay or Nolan Teasley from Seattle as our next GM and the sooner they come in and clean house, the better
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(01-30-2026, 01:49 PM)Chuckf Wrote: He is one of the best Cap Guru money men in the business, lets hope his skill set includes player evaluation.
The thing that catches my attention is this bypasses Grigson.
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I'm a little more optimistic about the draft now. Maybe we will hit on 20-25% of our picks instead of 6%
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(01-30-2026, 04:01 PM)JimmyinSD Wrote: he can barely handle the role he has now,  i think he needs to give up play calling and offensive control and focus on being a HC and game manager,  but now this is added to his plate,  I am expecting a total shit show.
I agree, but having the opportunity to select the players he wants to incorporate into his system has nothing to do with the rest of it. If you watch his reaction to when Kwesi drafted Turner, you know KOC wasn't making calls on which players to select.
The things you mention aren't relevant to the off season.
I would rather KOC, and Flores, have more say over which  players to select than Grigson.

(01-30-2026, 04:03 PM)MaroonBells Wrote: Which suggests he didn't already have a big role, which would surprise me if true.
It was a traditional system. The coach would collaberate and make suggestions, but the GM made the decisions.
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(01-30-2026, 08:17 PM)Vikergirl Wrote: I am listening to this press conference and something feels off to me. KAM is the scapegoat for now but now KOC has no cover whatsoever. It's time to put up or shut up

What feels off? Scapegoat for what? Kwesi sucked. Spent 300 mil on nothing. Didn't listen or take advice. He wasn't qualified to begin with.
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