Kwesi Adofo-Mensah certainly isn’t batting 1,000 during his time as Vikings general manager. The results – both in terms of success in the NFL Draft and on the field – show as much.
And the quarterback position heading into the 2025 campaign was bungled, particularly considering the 14-win season Minnesota experienced in 2024 and the quality of the roster outside of the most important position this fall.
So there’s a fair amount for which to criticize Adofo-Mensah.
But there also may be reasons to assume better days are to come. Some of those came in his post-mortem press conference Tuesday at the team’s practice facility in Eagan, as a reflective Adofo-Mensah evaluated Minnesota’s build of last season’s quarterback room.
He acknowledged the importance of the spot, noting the Vikings have won at a high clip in recent years “when we’ve gotten a certain level of play at that position, allowing us to be explosive enough on offense to set the table for how we play on defense, special teams.”
And the general manager noted the position wasn’t properly constructed to produce such play under center this fall, which was ultimately the Vikings’ fatal flaw.
When reflecting on the process that led to the decision not to franchise tag Sam Darnold, Adofo-Mensah said he still understands how Minnesota came to that conclusion. But he said the front office could’ve “executed better in certain places.”
That probably entailed entering training camp with more than one realistic option under center – a 22 year old, at that. Adofo-Mensah knows the path of young players “isn’t linear” and that you never know how any player’s first four or five starts will go.
“We have, obviously, a lot of historical studies about what those first few games are going to look like, or what that first year could look like in a sense. And, ultimately, that’s how we tried to build the team, knowing that those growth pains could come, to be able to overcome them and withstand them in a certain sense,” he said. “Sometimes, you have to go on incomplete information. And the information we had was all good, but it was, admittedly, incomplete and small sample. Ultimately, we trusted in the information we had, we trusted in our coaches, we trusted in the team we had around him to do that.”
But it didn’t pan out – not immediately, anyway. And there was no Plan B to turn to. Carson Wentz didn’t even join the team until just prior to the start of the regular season. There was likely an assumption Minnesota would keep Daniel Jones in the building after he signed with the team midway through the 2024 campaign. Instead, Jones bolted for Indianapolis in the offseason, where he won the starting job in camp and went 8-5 in 13 starts this fall.
“Learning lessons – I think execution wise, you have to treat it as such,” Adofo-Mensah said. “No matter what the conversations and relationships are, free agents are free for a reason, and they’re allowed to vet all their options, and ultimately we could have executed better around that.”
In an ideal world, Minnesota wouldn’t have made such mistakes. Had it not, it’s very likely the Vikings would have been a playoff team again this fall. But there’s power in admitting to miscues and attempting to learn and grow from them moving forward.
“You try to make sure that you don’t lock yourselves into what you did and thinking that it’s always right, so there are those nights that you wake up and stare at the ceiling and ask yourself (questions),” Adofo-Mensah said. “I’ve been accountable my whole life, and I don’t think you run from opportunities to get better, so I want to always make sure that I’m doing that.”
That’s the proper mindset. It’s Step 1 in the process of turning any tide. Adofo-Mensah doesn’t plan on making the same mistakes this offseason. If his words are any indication, J.J. McCarthy will not be handed the starting quarterback job in 2026.
Adofo-Mensah said the Vikings’ internal discussions are centered on returning the quarterback room “to a competitive, deep enough standpoint” to be able to execute coach Kevin O’Connell’s downfield passing attack.
Lesson learned. That’s Step 1. The plan is solid in theory. Now comes the most important part over the coming months: The execution.
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