It’s been a decade since the Vikings last traveled to the NFL scouting combine knowing they could draft their next starting quarterback in the first round. Since 2018, they’ve used the combine almost annually to conduct business with Kirk Cousins’ agent about a new contract for the quarterback.
This year, the Vikings could do both of those things.
Their discussions at the combine, with Cousins’ agent Mike McCartney and the rookies in a deep quarterback class, arguably could shape the most important decision of General Manager Kwesi Adofo-Mensah’s and coach Kevin O’Connell’s tenure in Minnesota. The Vikings, who have never selected a quarterback higher than 11th overall, have the No. 11 pick in this year’s draft; they could select a QB there who would tie Daunte Culpepper as the highest-drafted passer in franchise history, or trade up to draft a quarterback in the top 10 for the first time.
The quarterback decision is a multifaceted question for the Vikings, and it sits atop a list of pivotal decisions facing Adofo-Mensah and O’Connell as they begin their third offseason together, with neither the sense of novelty that accompanies a new regime nor the credit that accrues to a team coming off a surprise division title. The GM and coach begin the 2024 offseason with greater financial freedom than they’ve had the past two years, but also with high stakes, as both Cousins and Pro Bowl edge rusher Danielle Hunter approach the open market and defensive coordinator Brian Flores surveys a unit with needs at every level.
The Vikings have only two picks in the first three rounds, with Detroit claiming Minnesota’s third-round pick as the final piece of the T.J. Hockenson trade. A decision to take a quarterback in the first round could keep the Vikings from addressing other holes at the top of the draft, particularly if they have to move up to select the QB they want. It’s difficult to imagine them letting a third draft go by without a first- or second-round quarterback, though, particularly if they find options they like in a strong group of passers.
Here is a closer look at what the Vikings might hope to get done at the combine this week in Indianapolis:
Free agency: Cousins, Hunter headline the class
The Vikings have 22 unrestricted free agents this year, including key contributors such as linebacker Jordan Hicks and edge rusher D.J. Wonnum. But their most important decisions in free agency center around two players.
Cousins has spoken openly about his desire to return to Minnesota in 2024; teammates such as receivers Justin Jefferson and Jordan Addison and right tackle Brian O’Neill have backed him publicly, and both O’Connell and Adofo-Mensah have said they want Cousins back. The 35-year-old might be the best QB in the free agent class, though, and he’s made enough progress in his recovery from a torn right Achilles tendon that McCartney might be able to make the case to interested teams that Cousins’ injury shouldn’t diminish his value.