The Vikings were down two receivers due to injuries during organized team activities, and suddenly free-agent receiver Albert Wilson's phone lit up.
Wilson, who turns 30 in July, signed a one-year deal with the Vikings on Wednesday, according to his agent, Drew Rosenhaus. Hours later, Wilson was on the practice fields behind TCO Performance Center watching the offense as receivers coach Keenan McCardell talked him through the playbook. Getting him up to speed will take a little longer than contract talks.
"Two days ago, I was just back home training and now I'm here," Wilson said after practice.
Wilson, a speedy 5-9 target, joins a crowded and young depth chart as the most experienced receiver outside of Adam Thielen. This will be Wilson's ninth NFL season. He spent the previous eight with the Chiefs and Dolphins. He has primarily been a slot receiver in the pros, serving most recently as Miami's No. 3 option last year behind Jaylen Waddle and DeVante Parker. He caught 25 passes for 213 yards in 14 games.
"A veteran player with a skill set we like," head coach Kevin O'Connell said. "When we do have those three receivers on the field, we are going to have competition and use the skill sets of all the guys that end up being able to help us."
Behind Justin Jefferson and Thielen, Wilson joins a competition for snaps alongside K.J. Osborn and Bisi Johnson, who have been running with the first-team offense this spring. Ihmir Smith-Marsette, Dan Chisena and rookie Jalen Nailor figure to compete for roles on special teams at least.
But Osborn and Smith-Marsette have been limited by recent injuries. Osborn's undisclosed ailment kept him out of the past two weeks of OTAs, with O'Connell saying Osborn could possibly return for next week's mandatory minicamp. The team isn't expecting Smith-Marsette back until training camp after he suffered a right lower leg injury that had him in a walking boot resting on a knee scooter on Wednesday.
The Vikings are hoping Wilson has a little more gas in the tank. His first NFL touchdown came against Minnesota in 2015, when he turned on the jets, taking a screen pass 42 yards for a score. Speed has been his most notable skill.