The mighty Michigan Wolverines arrived at Huntington Bank Stadium in early October for a night game against the Gophers that proved to be no contest.
The third row of the press box was occupied by four of the Vikings’ top personnel evaluators, including General Manager Kwesi Adofo-Mensah and Ryan Grigson, senior vice president of player personnel.
That level of interest was not surprising considering the Wolverines were the best team in college football last season with a roster stocked with future NFL players.
One couldn’t help but wonder, though, if the Vikings contingent wasn’t there to put eyeballs on one Michigan player specifically. Perhaps their 2024 first-round draft pick, quarterback J.J. McCarthy.
Now that Kirk Cousins’ tenure is over, the Vikings slightly answered the question of “what’s next?” by agreeing to sign veteran Sam Darnold to a one-year contract worth $10 million. For those freaking out about this development, reread the previous sentence. It’s a one-year deal. We call the Darnolds of the league a bridge quarterback, the guy you use to get you from the past to the future.
And while Darnold might become the 2024 starter, the Vikings are squarely in the market to draft a quarterback, and there are no bylaws that prevent a rookie from winning the starting job.
Throw a rock in the direction of any mock draft right now and it’s likely to hit one that projects the Vikings taking McCarthy with either the No. 11 overall pick or trading up to select him.
That scenario makes the most sense.