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  FOXSports.com: ‘Calm,’ ‘Hungry,’ ‘Infectious’, ‘Psycho’?: The Sides of JJ McCarthy
Posted by: StickierBuns - 09-03-2025, 10:34 AM - Forum: The Longship - Replies (17)

Can't throw a dead cat and not hit a new JJ McCarthy article the last 3 weeks. This is one of the best writeups I've seen of McCarthy. NFL media knows he's a different cat in the best way, he's got a chance to be a face of the NFL:

https://www.foxsports.com/stories/nfl/ma...er-offense

Hard not to fall in love with this kid. I'm beyond stoked to his rapid development this year, because the JJM you see this Monday and the JJM you see in mid-December is going to be a much better QB. If he can take the team to the playoffs, this kid is ice water. For real.

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  Daddy's little QB
Posted by: purplefaithful - 09-03-2025, 09:21 AM - Forum: The Longship - Replies (6)

Growing up in suburban Chicago, J.J. was destined to become a diehard Bears fan, just like his dad and so many relatives. Jim painted his son’s bedroom in Bears colors before he was born so that when they brought him home from the hospital, he would be appropriately indoctrinated, a fan from birth.

J.J. wore his favorite player’s jersey to the game that day at Soldier Field. No. 54, the great Brian Urlacher. Young J.J. had a Bears baseball hat turned backward, and a foam Bears claw on his hand.

He was ready to Bear Down.

The opponent? The Minnesota Vikings.

“Surreal,” Jim said recently. “Everything about him being where he’s supposed to be, he’s always manifested a way. But my gosh, how the stars line up to do this.”


Vikings quarterback J.J. McCarthy, age 4, at his first NFL game at Soldier Field on Oct. 14, 2007. He's wearing the jersey of his favorite player Brian Urlacher. (Jim McCarthy)

On Monday night, J.J. will be back at Soldier Field, 22 years old now and starting his first NFL game against the team he grew up cheering.

This isn’t a story line. It’s a Hollywood script.

Strib


The McCarthys did a double take when the NFL released the schedule in May. They’ve been counting down the days ever since.

“Being able to watch your son start in the NFL, let alone between the Colonnades of Soldier Field,” Jim said, “you can’t draw up a bigger dream in the world as a parent.”

The family’s history helps explain the context of this dream.

Jim grew up just outside Chicago. His dad had Bears season tickets and took his son to many games. Jim would get $5 to buy a hot dog, a soda and a program. He never left his seat once the game started.

“I didn’t care about anything else,” he said.

He loved all the Bears players, especially the Super Bowl Shuffling ‘85 crew, but Walter Payton was his guy.

“Walter, hands down,” he said. “Not even a question.”

His dad rode a train with Bears fans to New Orleans to witness the coronation of the ’85 Bears in a Super Bowl beatdown of the New England Patriots. Jim could recite stats of every player.

Fast-forward to 2003. Jim and his wife, Megan, are in the hospital a few hours before J.J.’s arrival into the world. Jim is recording their conversation on a camcorder as they discuss possible names for their son. They settle on J.J.

“He’s going to be daddy’s little quarterback,” Jim says to his wife in the video.

That statement made in a moment of euphoria hits differently 22 years later.

“That is literally how his life started,” Jim said. “It just came out of the blue that I said that. ‘He’s J.J. He’s going to be daddy’s little quarterback.’”

J.J. became a Bears fan before he became a quarterback, and that first game cemented it. “It was the greatest thing because it felt like my dad was taking me to the game,” Jim said.

Jim made sure to buy his son a program, just as his dad did for him.

Jim doesn’t remember too many details from the game, though Vikings fans likely do. Rookie Adrian Peterson set a team rushing record with 224 yards and three touchdowns and Ryan Longwell kicked a game-winning 55-yard field goal as time expired.

Jim says the clock on his Bears fandom rests at 51½ years. Family allegiances shifted once the Vikings drafted J.J. with the 10th overall pick in April 2024.
“Everything is purple in our house now,” Jim said.

They will be decked out in purple on Monday night. The McCarthys have been flooded by messages from family, friends and acquaintances from multiple states who are planning to be at the opener. Jim expects hundreds to gather in a tailgating lot.

“All I’m [saying] is south lot,” Jim said. “My phone will be off, but we will be in the south lot.”

But not for long. The family wants to get inside Soldier Field in time to watch warmups. Daddy’s little quarterback will be preparing for his first NFL start, 18 years after attending his first NFL game in that same historic venue. The Vikings were the enemy that day. Now he is their leader.

A surreal moment, indeed.


[Image: 5C4CYJ5A6FE5RBSTMH2SQ5PVH4.jpg?&w=1080]

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  Will Fries: The player with a 'snarl' to him
Posted by: StickierBuns - 09-03-2025, 09:09 AM - Forum: The Longship - Replies (6)

https://www.nytimes.com/athletic/6592829...sive-line/

Alec Lewis
@alec_lewis

"This offseason was a turning point for the Vikings.

They said enough.

They fortified both trenches.

Many men embody what they want to become, but perhaps none more than Will Fries, who has some snarl to him"

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  This just isn't going to end well, is it..sigh
Posted by: purplefaithful - 09-03-2025, 08:51 AM - Forum: Sensitive Topics - Replies (20)

More risky actions are being alleged against former Minnesota Viking Everson Griffen, this time he has been ticketed for going 130 miles per hour on a Twin Cities interstate while on probation for drunken driving.

The 37-year-old Griffen was stopped about 10:15 p.m. Friday in Minnetonka by police on Interstate 494 near Stone Road, according to court records.

The citation, for misdemeanor reckless driving and petty misdemeanor speeding, says Griffen was driving a Bentley Bentayga SUV at 130 mph. That’s more than double the 60 mph speed limit on that stretch of interstate.

The Minnesota Star Tribune reached out to Griffen on Wednesday regarding the traffic stop.

Griffen, who has remained in the Twin Cities after his retirement, was accused in July of creating an unspecified scene soon after takeoff from Chicago to the Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport, according to TMZ Sports.

Delta Air Lines said pilots went back to O’Hare International Airport “to have an unruly passenger removed.”

In November, Griffen was sentenced to a 60-day term for driving while drunk in May on a Minneapolis interstate. Judge Gina Brandt set aside a year in the workhouse for Griffen and put him on supervisory probation for four years.

In July 2023, he was stopped in Chanhassen and accused of driving 60 mph in a 40 mph zone. His blood-alcohol content was 0.09%. Griffen pleaded guilty to a reduced careless driving charge in February 2024 and was placed on a year’s probation.

In the months following that allegation, Griffen crashed his car into a fence and gazebo in Mound on Oct. 28, 2023. He was cited and convicted of failure to drive with due care, a petty misdemeanor.

On Dec. 7, 2023, in Shakopee, police stopped Griffen for driving 55 mph in a 30 mph zone. He was convicted of a petty misdemeanor in that case as well.

In December 2021, following multiple troubling incidents, Griffen announced on social media that he had been living with bipolar disorder.

Griffen called 911 shortly after 3 a.m. from his Minnetrista home on Nov. 24, 2021, saying someone was with him, and he needed help. He also told the dispatcher he fired one round from a gun, but no one was wounded, police said. They added that no intruder was found.

The same day, Griffen had posted, then deleted, a video on Instagram saying people were trying to kill him as he held a gun in his hand. He was alone inside the house, with police outside, until he emerged and agreed to be taken for treatment.

He also spent four weeks undergoing mental health treatment in 2018 after two incidents that September — one at the Hotel Ivy in downtown Minneapolis, the other at his home — that prompted police involvement. 

He later revealed he lived in a sober house for the remainder of the 2018 season.

Strib

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  Vikings like where their roster is
Posted by: StickierBuns - 09-03-2025, 06:44 AM - Forum: The Longship - Replies (16)

Zero doubt about it. Albert Breer said as much in his MMQB column yesterday and I agree and have said as much also. Making the trade for Thielen shows this to be true because of what they gave up and additionally their belief in McCarthy because its been 'win now' mode all offseason. Only 4 CBs? What, 6 UDFAs make the final roster? Everything screams that they love this roster and the makeup of the team. Actions have followed the words. No need to put this kind of urgency and resources behind this for any other reason....it reeks of confidence.

We'll see, of course. We've been let down before, that's not new territory. Time to strap it up and see what's what. I'm really looking forward to seeing what this team is like in late October/early November.


Also:

The Purple Persuasion
@TPPSkol
·
13h
A text
@DWolfsonKSTP
received from a source on the status of S Harrison Smith and whether or not he’ll be ready for Monday night’s game against the Bears:

“He's doing well, hopefully should be good.”

The Vikings first injury report comes out on Thursday.

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  ESPN computer simulation has Vikings in NFCC game
Posted by: StickierBuns - 09-03-2025, 06:23 AM - Forum: The Longship - Replies (10)

So just go ahead now and make arrangements, its a done deal.

(*cough* never mind that last year this simulation had Minnesota winning 4 games and the worst record in the NFL Wink )

https://www.espn.com/nfl/story/_/id/4608...l-champion

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Wink Eagles have monetized the Tush Push
Posted by: Montana Tom - 09-02-2025, 04:51 PM - Forum: The Longship - Replies (4)

Eagles new sponsor

So with this new information, what kind of "out of the box" sponsor pairings can you think of, that would work for the Vikings?
Inquiring minds want your opinion!!

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  Only 22?! How high is up?
Posted by: purplefaithful - 09-02-2025, 11:00 AM - Forum: The Longship - Replies (3)

No, this isnt about JJM. 

The fact that Jackson is starting as a rook with this surround? Tells me the floor is pretty high already....The fact he can bump outside if need be? Thats probably huge too. 
============================


Donovan Jackson phoned his parents with a declaration before even leaving Minnesota following his top 30 pre-draft visit with the Vikings.
“I want to be a Viking,” Jackson said from Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport.

Todd Jackson heard the excitement in his son’s voice as he recited a list of reasons he was sold on the Vikings, from coach Kevin O’Connell to the locker room ceiling at TCO Performance Center mimicking a ship’s hull.

Jackson hadn’t made a call like that after his other visits, normally waiting until he was home in Texas or back to training in California before divulging details.

Anything he could do to become a Viking, Jackson told his parents, he wanted to do. They reminded him that wasn’t how things work in the NFL.

Only for Jackson, it kind of did.

Source: Startribune


[Image: 4PME5D3NUVACXHOQIOFYZDPGFY.JPG?&w=1080]


On the first night of the NFL draft in April, Jackson’s declaration changed to “I am a Viking,” the phrase he yelled to a house full of friends and family after the phone call telling him the Vikings would pick him No. 24 overall.

Almost immediately, he was anointed starting left guard on a reworked offensive line otherwise populated by veterans and tasked with protecting quarterback J.J. McCarthy in his first year helming the offense.

Jackson, 22, is one of only a handful of first-string rookies at his position.

“It’s a dream come true, but it also makes you more determined to go even harder ’cause talent got me here, but I got to work even harder to stay,” Jackson said during training camp.

Talent played a hand in Jackson climbing the ranks through Texas youth and high school football to Ohio State and now the Vikings, yes.

But there’s a rule in the Jackson household: If you want to do something, you better put your whole effort into it.

Jackson was in middle school and just making the switch to playing on both the offensive and defensive lines when his dad asked him what his intention was in the sport so his guidance aligned with his son’s goals.

Jackson already had his future planned out in his mind. He communicated his goals clearly to his dad:
Be a four-year starter in high school.
Win a state championship.
Go to a Division I school.
Play for a national championship.
Be drafted in the NFL.

Melanie Jackson, a now-retired fifth grade teacher, had heard hundreds of young boys say they wanted to be football players when they grew up. She hadn’t always been 100% on board with her son treating the sport as his Plan A but committed to the vision after that conversation.

“Once that decision was kind of there, then we had to promote it,” she said. “We had to help him be the best at it.”

Jackson committed to Ohio State, his second offer after Memphis, in the spring of his junior year.

He’d been a star throughout high school, winning a state championship as a junior at Episcopal High outside of Houston and being ranked the No. 1 overall 2021 prospect in football-frenzied Texas.

When he arrived at Ohio State, he was, for the first time in his life, a small fish in a big pond.

Melanie Jackson recalls her son calling home during his freshman year, baffled he wasn’t going to play in games immediately, at least not on offense. He couldn’t believe he was benched when teammates he thought he was better than received playing time.

“Well, prove it,” his parents would tell him. “If you say that you’re better than someone when you’re on the field, you have to show it. The coaches will see it. The coaches are looking. They’re looking for you to be great.”

By the next fall, Jackson was a big fish. He started 26 games at left guard for the Buckeyes between 2022 and 2023, earning first-team All-Big Ten honors after both seasons.

He considered leaving after 2023 to turn pro, but he still hadn’t achieved one of the goals he’d laid out for his father in middle school: Play for a national championship.

Midway through the 2024 season, though, that goal was in jeopardy as two Ohio State offensive linemen suffered injuries.

Todd Jackson knew his son would be asked to make a move for the good of the team.

Sure enough, Jackson called his parents after a meeting with head coach Ryan Day and offensive line coach Justin Frye. They asked him if he’d move to left tackle, laying out why it was best for the team.

“That was a long phone call,” Todd Jackson said with a chuckle.

He prompted his son to think about the goals he’d set when returning to Ohio State that season.

Would they be achievable if Jackson said no to his coaches and the team was forced to play a third-string tackle?

The next day, Jackson told his coaches he’d make the move. He wanted to do what was best for the team.

The team aspect was among the several reasons Jackson was first drawn to football.

“There’s 11 guys on the field, everyone with a unique responsibility, yet everyone needs to do their job for a play to work,” Jackson said. “Especially offensive line. That’s about as team as team gets.”

In his first game at left tackle for the Buckeyes, Jackson faced off against Penn State’s Abdul Carter, who would later be drafted No. 3 overall.

After the game, Jackson met with his parents outside the locker room, as he always did. He felt good about his performance but was happy he’d move back to guard.
“Oh no,” Todd Jackson said to his son with a smile. “You are playing tackle for the rest of the year.”

Jackson did, making a 10-game move as the Buckeyes went on to win the national championship. He was named an All-American at left tackle by three different outlets.

Center Ryan Kelly, at 32 the oldest member of the Vikings’ offensive line, was impressed by Jackson during training camp.

He has the athletic ability, and he quickly picked up what Kelly admitted is a hard offense to learn.

Maybe most important: “[Jackson] doesn’t talk too much as a rookie, which is a good thing,” Kelly said. “He refills the snacks. He does all the good things that you want rookies to do. He’s great.”

Jackson was thrown into the starting offensive line during organized team activities in the spring, and by training camp in late July, the full group of left tackle Christian Darrisaw, Jackson, Kelly, right guard Will Fries and right tackle Brian O’Neill was regularly practicing together.

Jackson’s linemates, two other first-round picks among them, are familiar with the challenges of transitioning from college to the pros, even coming from a program like Ohio State.

Faster pace. A need for cleaner, tighter hand placement. Going against defenders who’ve been in the league half your life and have moves to defeat any block, like teammate Jonathan Allen’s hump move.

“Oh my gosh,” Jackson said with a smile. “He’s really good at that.”

Vikings offensive line coach Chris Kuper said he saw Jackson start to settle in after a full week of training camp.

By Week 4, when the Patriots visited for joint practices, Jackson was pancaking multiple defenders downfield while running back Aaron Jones broke away on a long rush.

Kuper loved it, as did many of Jackson’s teammates, including McCarthy.

“You know, us Michigan guys, we get a little skeptical of the mentality and tough-guyness of Ohio State, but he absolutely proved it,” McCarthy ribbed the next day. “It was a sight to see, and I just loved how fired up he got after that, too.”

But even relishing the highs of that day at practice, Jackson left the field telling reporters he still has a lot to improve.

Jackson would write goals on the mirror, his dad said, both weekly ones and more long term. The goals he’d “build his life on,” his mom said.

This particular note was more a mantra than a goal. Maybe a manifestation. Proof, at the very least, that Jackson’s always been pushing himself down a path toward getting to yell “I am a Viking” in his living room.

“I am already great,” the note on the mirror read.

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  Vikings - Bears line holding firm at -1.5 Vikings
Posted by: StickierBuns - 09-02-2025, 04:36 AM - Forum: The Longship - Replies (7)

And interesting maybe only to me: the league kicks off its marque, season opening game on Thursday night with a spread of -7.5 for Philly. That's a good matchup? Its the biggest spread of the weekend in the NFL. It shows you the TV ratings power that Dallas still has (don't ask me why).

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  Great to see Max Johnson throwing a TD pass
Posted by: JR44 - 09-01-2025, 09:46 PM - Forum: The Longship - Replies (5)

Awesome for Brad's kid to be back on field after that brutal injury where at first they thought he was at risk of losing the leg.  Belicheat gives starting job to a transfer in a jerky move, Max comes in 6-7 for 81 yards on drive with a sweet long pass to get them a TD on his first drive back.

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