The Vikings spent the first few years of Kirk Cousins’ tenure trying to shoehorn him into a leadership position, even though there was clear tension between the quarterback and coach Mike Zimmer.
Cousins has natural leadership instincts and plays the natural position of a football leader. He clearly grew more comfortable in 2022 when former QB Kevin O’Connell became the coach and established a much better relationship between the two key roles.
Along the way, starting in 2020, wide receiver Justin Jefferson was both at the forefront but also the background. His first four seasons put him on a Hall of Fame trajectory and established Jefferson as the best receiver in the NFL.
But he also had a veteran throwing him the ball and could primarily focus on football instead of other things like locker room dynamics that are required of leaders.
That’s what makes 2024 so different and fascinating for Jefferson, as Andrew Krammer and I talked about on Friday’s Daily Delivery podcast.
The Vikings’ three signature offseason events all combined to thrust Jefferson into the spotlight as not just a star receiver but a leader of this team.
First, they let Cousins leave via free agency. It obviously wasn’t all the Vikings’ choice, but the logical way to view Cousins’ departure to Atlanta is that if Minnesota had wanted to keep him it could have stepped up with an offer to do so. Instead, the Vikings did not.
Second, and in tandem with that Cousins decision, the Vikings drafted J.J. McCarthy to be their quarterback of the future. Sam Darnold was signed to essentially be a placeholder. Neither player’s voice will carry nearly as much weight as Cousins’ voice would have, leaving a leadership void.