Rookie quarterback J.J. McCarthy will be on the field with the Vikings for the first time this weekend during rookie minicamp, the beginning of what I imagine will be an exercise in managing expectations for coach Kevin O’Connell and the rest of the organization.
There is no greater fascination for a fan base than a young quarterback, particularly one chosen in the top 10 of the draft for the first time in Vikings history.
Sam Darnold is the presumed starter at this point, but the question sure to get asked internally and externally over the next several months is this: When will McCarthy take over the starting role?
To try to gauge that answer, I did two things: I looked at the past 10 years of draft history to see when QBs drafted in the first round tended to make their first start, and I talked to Star Tribune Vikings beat writer Ben Goessling on Wednesday’s Daily Delivery podcast to get insights into how the Vikings will approach this specific situation with McCarthy.
Here are some key takeaways:
* In looking back at drafts from 2014-2023, it became clear that QBs drafted in the first round have almost always tended to play extensively as rookies.
On one hand is the Teddy Bridgewater path, which has been duplicated by several teams with other rookie quarterbacks in the past 10 seasons. Bridgewater, the last QB before McCarthy chosen in the first round by the Vikings (No. 32 overall in 2014), was on the bench the first two weeks of his rookie season, came on in relief in Game 3 and started Game 4.
A dozen other first-round QBs in the past decade started Week 1 of their rookie season, though, including C.J. Stroud, Bryce Young and Anthony Richardson last season. One other who did: Darnold with the Jets in 2018.