Sports

Vikings Surprise Starter Is Turning Heads

A Minnesota Vikings helmet on the field at TCO Performance Center.told KFAN during a radio appearance, “I’ve had so many conversations with people that there’s not that much of a question mark with me about Theo Jackson’s ability.”

Because Jackson is relatively unproven, some have chosen a “believe it when I see it” approach regarding Jackson as a starter. But based on Lewis’ comments, plus general manager Kwesi Adofo-Mensah’s actions this offseason — or lack thereof in signing more safeties — Jackson isn’t some big question mark at training camp and in the preseason.

He’s just “the guy.”

A Promotion after Camryn Bynum Left

Adofo-Mensah actually extended Jackson’s contract right before the free-agent window opened on March 10th. The deal wasn’t massive — three years and $9.3 million — but it was enough to hint at a starter’s job in 2025 and beyond.

Minnesota needed a new safety following Bynum’s free-agent skedaddle, and after not pursuing big names like Jevon Holland, Jackson became the obvious choice inside Brian Flores’ 2025 defense.

Truth be told, promoting Jackson, with Bynum picking the Colts, might’ve been the plan all along.

Theo Jackson Bided His Time

This man has patience.

Minnesota onboarded Jackson at the dawn of the Adofo-Mensah and Kevin O’Connell era — three years ago. Because the safety room has remained stuffed to the gills with Harrison Smith, Josh Metellus, and the aforementioned Bynum, the Vikings haven’t needed Jackson to start or play that much, in general.

Nick Emmanwori and Georgia’s Malaki Starks.

He opined, “If your roster deficiencies force you to pigeonhole him into a single role, such as when they were short on bodies at linebacker last season and Metellus had to fill in there, the Vikings lose his versatility. What remains is a subpar player in a role he’s not perfectly suited for.”

“Metellus needs Theo Jackson to play well. If Jackson struggles and can’t live up to some facsimile of Bynum’s production on the backend, then they may have to slide Metellus back there more often. That makes him less versatile, which means he struggles more at that singular role, making the entire defense worse.”

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