Vikings opt for upside and athleticism; Leave run defence unaddressed

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Vikings opt for upside and athleticism; Leave run defence unaddressed

Minnesota’s draft focused more on physical upside than ready-made talent. They opted for length, explosiveness, and projection over proven production, a clear philosophical choice that comes with obvious risks.

Vikings opt for upside and athleticism; Leave run defence unaddressed

Minnesota’s draft focused more on physical upside than ready-made talent. They opted for length, explosiveness, and projection over proven production, a clear philosophical choice that comes with obvious risks.

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Minnesota’s draft focused more on physical upside than ready-made talent.

They opted for length, explosiveness, and projection over proven production, a clear philosophical choice that comes with obvious risks.

This entire draft class will be judged by what White Banks becomes. If he turns into an impact player up front, everything else falls into place.

If not, there’s no real safety net—just a collection of prospects who may never put it together.

Banks certainly looks the part. He’s nearly 6-foot-5 and close to 290 pounds, with standout testing numbers and an impressive pass-rush win rate when he’s at his best. The raw talent is clear every time he steps onto the field.

But there’s still a lot of work to be done. His technique is hit-and-miss, and his output hasn’t caught up to his physical gifts. He’s being asked to grow into a role he hasn’t fully played before in college.

Defensive tackles drafted in the first round tend to pan out when they pair strong production with athleticism. But when teams focus solely on potential, that success rate drops off considerably. Minnesota took that gamble anyway, banking on its ability to develop him into what they need. It’s far from a sure thing.

The Vikings finished near the top of the league in sacks and generated pressure at one of the highest rates in the NFL. That was not what needed to be addressed.

It was their run defence that let them down. Minnesota ranked in the bottom third of the league against the run and regularly allowed chunk yardage on the ground. That is a specific, identifiable weakness that could have been targeted with a proven run-stopper in the draft.

Banks has traits that project to be disruptive inside, but his pass-rush ability is ahead of his run-defense development. He may grow into a player who can help against the run as his technique improves, but right now, he’s more potential than production. In this case, Minnesota went for upside when they could have used reliability.

There is one exception in this class. Taking Charles Demings at cornerback is a small-school defensive back with strong production and high-end athletic testing. That archetype consistently produces NFL contributors when the athletic profile checks out.

It’s a measured risk, based on trends that have been reliable over several drafts. It stands out because the rest of the class doesn’t follow that same logic. Nearly every other pick is built on projection rather than a proven developmental model.

One of the more telling moves by Minnesota wasn’t on defence, but rather the decision to take a fullback. In today’s game, teams aren’t just using fullbacks for traditional power runs. They’re moving them around in wide-zone schemes to create matchups and open up play-action. The pick could be a sign that Minnesota is looking to shift their offensive identity.

That said, there wasn’t much else in this draft that backed up that direction. Some picks looked like they were aimed at defensive changes, while others felt like long-term projects. The fullback choice suggests a greater focus on the ground game, but nothing else from the class really followed through on that idea.

On their own, there’s logic to each of Minnesota’s picks. A defensive lineman with upside, a small-school cornerback with the right traits, a fullback for offensive versatility — they’re all ideas that make sense individually.

Put together, though, it doesn’t form a clear plan. The Vikings didn’t have an obvious draft identity or philosophy this year.

This doesn’t mean it won’t work out. It just means there isn’t much in place to help if individual picks don’t work as hoped.

Minnesota went all-in on upside across the board. Every pick was about potential rather than proven production. That’s not necessarily bad — some of the NFL’s best teams were built on similar ideas — but it does mean the risk level is high.

If things click for Banks and others develop as hoped, this could end up looking like one of the stronger drafts down the line. But if those bets don’t hit early on, there won’t be any reliable players from this group ready to step in immediately.

Drafts based solely on athletic traits rarely come without risks. The Vikings will find out soon enough which side of that line they end up on.

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