The Vikings Needed JJ To Become Jets - Zone Coverage (2024)

The Minnesota Vikings celebrated Justin Jefferson’s extension with typical fanfare. They placed him at a podium next to Kwesi Adofo-Mensah and Kevin O’Connell in a conference room at TCO Performance Center and seated his family, friends, and owner Mark Wilf along the wall next to the assembled media.

Adofo-Mensah and O’Connell discussed their relationship with Jefferson and how much he means to the organization, reiterating that they never considered trading him. Jefferson thanked God, his family, and the Vikings for the opportunity to become a football star and earn generational wealth.

“There’s nothing wrong with this organization at all,” said Jefferson. “I love every single thing about it. From the fanbase, to the coaches, to the teammates, to the owners that support this organization. Everything has been phenomenal.”

The way Jefferson said that first sentence stood out: There’s nothing wrongwith the Vikings. It’s the reassurance anyone who has followed this team needs to hear because years of heartbreak have created a jaded fanbase. Minnesota is one of the winningest franchises of all time, but they suffer excruciating losses in the playoffs. There were Gary Anderson and Blair Walsh’s missed kicks. Brett Favre throwing across his body against the New Orleans Saints. Nick Foles beating the 2017 defense in Philly.

Part of the issue was star power at crucial positions. The Vikings haven’t had a franchise quarterback since Fran Tarkenton. Diva receivers forced their way out of town. A combination of parsimonious ownership and Randy Mossoff-the-field issues resulted in Minnesota trading him to the Oakland Raiders in 2005. Percy Harvin tossed a weight at Leslie Frazier. Stefon Diggs had a cough.

Jefferson can’t fix everything that ails the Vikings, but he’s part of a championship formula. He can help make things easy for J.J. McCarthy as he tries to become Minnesota’s next franchise quarterback. Jefferson opens things up for Jordan Addison and puts points on the board to relieve the stress on the defense. Ultimately, he allows Kevin O’Connell to empty his playbook and unleash his Sean McVay-inspired offense on the NFL.

“The pitch-and-catch factor will always be part of playing our game,” said O’Connell. “You can have a bunch of lines on a sheet of paper, you can run it against every coverage on a man and feel good about kind of the what and the why, but you still got to have that how and that feel between player to player.”

However, Jefferson gives the Vikings an opportunity to put all that behind them.

Adofo-Mensah mentioned that Rick Spielman drafted him in passing. “All the people in the football operation, player personnel that were involved in bringing Justin here, some here, some still not,” he said, “they deserve a lot of credit.” Still, Adofo-Mensah and O’Connell took over, knowing that Jefferson was the franchise, and ownership tasked them with bringing out the best in him.

Adofo-Mensah and O’Connell ran back the 2021 Spielman-Mike Zimmer team in their first year together. But two years ago, they moved on from popular veterans like Adam Thielen, Eric Kendricks, and Dalvin Cook. Once Kirk Cousins signed with the Atlanta Falcons this offseason, Adofo-Mensah and O’Connell had established their core. They drafted Addison and McCarthy. They hired Brian Flores to run the defense and overhauled it in the offseason. The Vikings are their team now.

Adofo-Mensah and O’Connell have done everything they can to win a championship with Jefferson. He’s the skeleton key that unlocks Minnesota’s potential and has the right personality to purge the Vikings of their demons. Jefferson is a transcendent receiver but isn’t a diva. He’s a game-breaking star who leads by example. He didn’t sign an extension last year and still played in a lost season after getting hurt. Jefferson is the rare player who relishes the bright lights without asking that they all focus on him.

Jefferson’s greatness likely stems from schools underrecruiting him. He was 6’2”, 180 lbs. coming out of high school and used to complain to his parents, who he credits with helping shape his career, because he wasn’t the biggest or strongest player. During Jefferson’s press conference after signing his extension, a reporter asked him why he wasn’t recruited more out of high school. Jefferson’s brother, former LSU quarterback Jordan Jefferson, said “grades” from the back of the room before his brother could answer.

“It had a little bit to do with grades,” said Jefferson, who couldn’t hear his brother in the back of the room, “a little bit to do with just not being fully developed. You know, I was very small, not really being that big, not really that fast, not explosive like I am now. So I definitely had times where I complained at my parents and stuff for not being the biggest, not being the strongest, about what I’m going to do.

“It was just all about being patient, all about just staying on the course and working my butt off. And then once I’d seen that I had that type of skill set, once I’d seen that I had the ability to go out there and play football at the highest level, that’s when the confidence started to come in.

“That’s when I started to be Jets.”

The last sentence is worth lingering on for a second. Jefferson has often used the “Jets” moniker, but people called him “JJ” more frequently during his first four years in the league. However, he’s repeatedly referred to himself as “Jets” this year because the Vikings drafted another JJ.

“He already let me know, ‘I go by Jets,’ so there is no confusion,” McCarthy said at his introductory press conference in April.

Jefferson said he’s been telling his parents he would be in the NFL since he was eight. Their reaction when he said that indicated that he was telling the truth. Jefferson knows he needs a star quarterback to be at his best, and McCarthy must pan out for Minnesota to contend during his extension. Jefferson has always acted like a superstar, and his play backs it up. The Vikings have always needed a franchise player who acts like they’ve been there before to take them somewhere they’ve never been. They needed JJ to become Jets.

Tom Schreier

The Vikings Needed JJ To Become Jets - Zone Coverage (1)

Tom Schreier is the founder and proprietor of Zone Coverage. He created Zone Coverage with the goal of mixing new age media with old-school journalism. His goal was to create an economically sustainable platform for sports content for Minnesota fans. Before Zone Coverage, Tom wrote for Bleacher Report and Yahoo! Sports before joining 105 The Ticket in 2014.

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The Vikings Needed JJ To Become Jets - Zone Coverage (2024)

FAQs

The Vikings Needed JJ To Become Jets - Zone Coverage? ›

The Vikings have always needed a franchise player who acts like they've been there before to take them somewhere they've never been. They needed JJ to become Jets. Tom Schreier is the founder and proprietor of Zone Coverage. He created Zone Coverage with the goal of mixing new age media with old-school journalism.

What did the Vikings trade to the Jets? ›

The deal involved sending the No. 11, 129 and 157 picks to New York in exchange for the 10th pick and the No. 203 pick. This will be just the 19th time in franchise history that the Vikings have used a top-10 selection and just the seventh occurrence since 2002.

How did the Vikings get the 10th pick? ›

It took just 10 picks for five quarterbacks to come off the board in the 2024 NFL Draft. The Minnesota Vikings selected Michigan quarterback J.J. McCarthy with the 10th overall pick, which they acquired via trade with the New York Jets. Minnesota traded the Nos. 11, 129 and 157 picks to the New York Jets for the Nos.

Who is the 18 Vikings wide receiver? ›

Justin Jefferson
No. 18 – Minnesota Vikings
Height:6 ft 1 in (1.85 m)
Weight:195 lb (88 kg)
Career information
High school:Destrehan (Destrehan, Louisiana)
18 more rows

Why did the Vikings need to trade? ›

Viking trade and raids helped reintroduce coins and other valuable goods that were either traded for or stolen back into the economy. Such goods were reintroduced into the economy through either trade or markets that were set up by the Vikings for the purpose of selling plundered objects.

Why did Minnesota trade with Jets? ›

The Vikings wanted to jump up a spot to secure the quarterback they coveted, J.J. McCarthy of Michigan. The Jets then stayed in the Big Ten with their pick at No. 11, selecting Penn State OT Olu Fashanu to protect Aaron Rodgers on that offensive line.

Where did J.J. McCarthy go in the 2024 NFL Draft? ›

10 In 2024 NFL Draft.

How much will J.J. McCarthy make in the NFL? ›

We don't yet know how much that option will cost the Vikings, but it will likely be a massive upgrade from the previous four years. McCarthy's deal will be fully guaranteed for the first four years, and should come in at a total of just over $21.8 million, with a $12.715 million signing bonus.

Why did Minnesota trade up one spot? ›

The Minnesota Vikings traded up one spot in the first round 2024 NFL Draft to get their quarterback of the future, national championship-winning J.J. McCarthy of Michigan.

Who is the best WR in Vikings history? ›

Minnesota Vikings all-time receiving leaders from 1961 to 2024 (in yards)
CharacteristicReceiving yards
Cris Carter12,383
Randy Moss9,316
Anthony Carter7,636
Adam Thielen6,882
9 more rows
Mar 19, 2024

Who is the goat wide receiver? ›

Rice has long been considered the GOAT among wideouts. A 10-time All-Pro and three-time Super Bowl champion, he led the NFL in receiving yards in six different seasons. He remains the all-time leader in catches (1,549), yards (22,895) and touchdowns (197).

Have the Vikings ever won a Super Bowl? ›

Since the franchise's inception, the Vikings have completed 61 seasons of play in the NFL. The team won one NFL Championship in 1969, and was the last team crowned NFL champions before the AFL–NFL merger in 1970. The franchise has been conference champions three times since the merger, but has never won the Super Bowl.

What items did the Vikings trade? ›

The things they bought were usually luxury goods or materials that they couldn't find easily in their own lands. In return, they sold items like honey, tin, wheat, wool, wood, iron, fur, leather, fish and walrus ivory. Everywhere they went, the Vikings bought and sold slaves too.

What did the Vikings trade for pick 17? ›

17 pick — to nab Alabama edge rusher Dallas Turner. The Jaguars will get the Vikings' No. 23 pick, a 2024 fifth-round pick (No. 167 overall) and third- and fourth-round picks in the 2025 draft.

What did the Vikings give to trade up? ›

Trade terms: Vikings traded No. 11 overall, a 4th-round pick and a 5th-round pick to the Jets in exchange for No. 10 and pick No. 203.

What did Jets trade to move up? ›

New York traded picks 185 and 190 overall to Philadelphia to move up for Travis. Travis is the eighth quarterback to be selected in the 2024 draft after six were selected during Thursday's first round.

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