Former Vikings GM Weighs In on Team’s Draft

Former Vikings GM Weighs In on Team’s Draft

Caleb Banks speaking to media at the NFL Scouting Combine in Indianapolis.NFL draft, that I think it’s ridiculous when so-called draft analysts in the media give grades to team drafts immediately afterward. The reality is that it takes at least two to three years to truly evaluate how a team did on draft day.

Example A — Tom Brady as a sixth-round pick in 2000 when he was a skinny QB out of Michigan. Example B — when the Chiefs traded their 27th overall pick and a third-rounder in 2017, plus their 2018 first-round pick, to move up to No. 10 overall and select Patrick Mahomes in a move that was considered risky for a “raw” prospect who played for Texas Tech in the then-no-defense Big 12.

Then there’s Joe Montana and Russell Wilson as third-rounders turned top QBs and Super Bowl champs.

Jeff Diamond Sees Upside — and Risk — in Vikings Draft

With 15 Super Bowl titles, 11 Super Bowl MVPs and 39 Pro Bowls between them, those picks turned out pretty, pretty good (as Larry David would say on Curb Your Enthusiasm) for the Patriots, Chiefs, 49ers and Seahawks. Their drafts would’ve been graded A+ a couple of years later just because they found their ultra-successful franchise quarterbacks.

Closer to home, Fran Tarkenton was a third-round pick in 1961, and it was hard to predict he would lead the Vikings to three Super Bowls and become an NFL MVP, nine-time Pro Bowler, and Pro Football Hall of Famer.  

If J.J.McCarthy and Dallas Turner turn into All-Pros who someday lead the Vikings to the promised land, we’ll give the 2024 draft an A+ for the Purple after they picked McCarthy and Turner in the first round. Sixth-rounder Will Reichard already is an All-Pro kicker from that draft class.

So while I can certainly give the Vikings’ 2022 draft, which has no players still with the team, a resounding F, I’m not going to grade the Vikings’ just-completed 2026 draft for a couple of years. What if Caleb Banks stays healthy and is the next Chris Jones or Kevin Williams as a big, dominating defensive lineman? What if several of the remaining picks become starters, and a couple turn into top players?

Time will tell, but I do have several reactions as follows, and I’ll go round-by-round and hit on the Jonathan Greenard trade that I was not thrilled by:

Caleb Banks — DL, Florida — Round 1:

I respect and agree with always picking the best player available regardless of position (unless it’s a quarterback and the team already has a “franchise QB”). So I have no problem with the Vikings picking Banks as the top player on their draft board at No. 18 overall if he stays healthy and is a productive starter.

Emmanuel McNeil-Warren (who went No. 58 to Cleveland) at Golday’s No. 51 spot to fill a big need position (again, if McNeil-Warren graded out at about the same level as Golday; if not, then I say go with the higher-rated Golday). Or take a center at another big need position since two highly-rated centers went after Golday in the second round–Logan Jones to the Bears at No. 57, and Jake Slaughter was picked at No. 63 by the Chargers.

Again, I don’t advocate for picking a lower-rated player at a position of need over the best player available in the first three rounds. But it will be interesting to follow the players I mentioned above that the Vikings passed on.

Domonique Orange — NT, Iowa State Round 3a

It’s great to have a rotation of quality defensive linemen. Many championship teams have used that formula. The Vikings should have an excellent rotation of run-stuffers and pocket pushers. Orange certainly looks like he’ll be great against the run and help free up inside backers Blake Cashman and Eric Wilson to make a lot of plays.

Jeff Diamond is a former Vikings GM, former Tennessee Titans President and was selected NFL Executive of the Year … More about Jeff Diamond

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