Of all the things Vikings cornerback Akayleb Evans had to learn this season — a new scheme, a different set of coverage techniques in Brian Flores' defense — there might be nothing more essential than the video defensive pass game coordinator Daronte Jones sent him.
Evans' rookie year ended after a Dec. 4 injury against the Jets sent him to the NFL's concussion protocol for the third time. He made two starts last season — the Jets game and the victory over the Bills on Nov. 14 — and left both games because of concussion symptoms. The Vikings, concerned what another concussion could mean for Evans' future, placed him on injured reserve in December. Instantly and inextricably, the promising cornerback's career and livelihood were linked to his ability to protect himself on the field.
Jones remembered all the dated (and dangerous) tackling techniques he had learned in his own upbringing as a defensive back in Maryland, about putting your head in an opposing ballcarrier's chest. Some of them had survived into Evans' youth football education in Missouri two decades later. Jones cobbled together a video of the rugby-style tackling methods that Seahawks coach Pete Carroll popularized and Jones learned as a young coach at Hawaii. If Evans could rewire his approach to tackling, Jones hoped, he could be on his way to both a productive career on the field and a safer life away from it.
"He was just a victim of old-school teaching: head across the bow. You know, we all were taught that," Jones said. "... Under stressful situations, sometimes you kind of do what you're used to doing. He got put in some bad situations on the field of play. To study that in the offseason, it's one of those things you have to home in on and change those habits. Coming back here, you can see it's a focus of his."
There are opportunities for Evans. The Vikings covered 617 opposing passes last season; only one of the 10 cornerbacks they have in training camp (Byron Murphy Jr.) has played that many coverage snaps in his career. Former Patriots player Joejuan Williams is the only other corner who has played 10 games in a season. It's largely up to General Manager Kwesi Adofo-Mensah's young draft picks — rookie Mekhi Blackmon, Evans and his fellow second-year player Andrew Booth Jr. — to help transform a defense that gave up the second-most passing yards in the league last season.
Through two weeks of work in training camp, primarily with the Vikings' starting defense, Evans has shown some of the traits required to play man coverage for Flores: the speed to stick with receivers downfield, the length to break up a Kirk Cousins pass in the corner of the end zone during a goal-line drill. The 6-2 cornerback's athletic ability pushed him into the fourth round of the 2022 draft, where Minnesota took him 118th overall, and he has paired it with some of the reliability the Vikings badly need.
"Akayleb is a sharp man," Jones said. "He has the ability to take the drill work into our combo work, into our half-line work, into the team periods, and he's just continued to progress. He's been consistent. That's all you can ask for."
Mom-approved safety measures
Evans' first trip to the concussion protocol last season, during the Vikings' Oct. 9 victory over the Bears, came 10 days after the injury to Dolphins quarterback Tua Tagovailoa that triggered changes to the NFL's medical procedures. Evans said in May he didn't believe he was concussed against the Bears, adding that the Vikings "were just being safe" after "the whole Tua thing happened."