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Minnesota Vikings' offensive line issues plagued them in 2025, but the solution to fix it is a simple one that's being overlooked

The Minnesota Vikings having offensive line issues is pretty normal. It's been a part of the fabric of the team for the last 15 years.

The last truly great offensive line was in 2009, and that team went to the NFC Championship Game. The units in 2010, 2011, and 2012 were also good, but they struggled mightily after that. Even in their NFC Championship Game season of 2017, the offensive line was a major issue, and the Philadelphia Eagles feasted on Riley Reiff, Mike Remmers, and Pat Elflein.

This season, the offensive line wass inconsistent at best, and it cost offensive line coach Chris Kuper his job.

Issues with the Minnesota Vikings offensive line are complicated in context

We know the offensive line needs to be better, there isn't a single person who will argue against that fact. The big thing here is trying to figure out how much blame to place on each element.

Let's start here. The offensive line's biggest issues were with injuries instead of just performance. When you look at the starters, who played less than 100 snaps together this season, they had 106 pressures allowed on 3,340. That is one pressure allowed on every 31.5 snaps played, or every 6.3 plays. The backup offensive linemen were worse, as they had 1,658 snaps this season, played by backup offensive linemen, with 67 pressures allowed. That's a rate 2/3rds as good as the starters, at 24.75 snaps, or every 4.95 plays

Player

Snaps

Pass Blocking Snaps

Pressures

Efficiency

Christian Darrisaw

504

325

18

96.7

Donovan Jackson

784

468

26

96.8

Ryan Kelly

329

191

4

98.6

Will Fries

989

612

37

96.5

Brian O'Neill

734

446

21

97.3

Justin Skule

578

356

29

94.6

Blake Brandel

604

395

19

97.0

Joe Huber

79

50

4

94.6

Walter Rouse

88

62

6

94.3

Michael Jurgens

309

177

9

96.1

Pressures are the best stat here, but the ideal outcome is getting a sack. The Vikings' quarterbacks were sacked 60 times this season. Normally, your brain would go right to the offensive line. Where things get fascinating is how the sacks get distributed.

Position

Sacks

Percent

Offensive Line

26

43.33%

RB/WR/TE

4

6.67%

Quarterback

18

30%

No Responsibility

12

20%

The interesting one here is quantifying the no responsibility sacks. Those are given out when no one player is responsible. Sometimes, an overload blitz happens and a sack occurs. What is stark is seeing how few sacks actually came from offensive linemen.

Of those 26 sacks, just 10 of them (38.46%) came from the starting five. Not all pressures are created equally, and when the backups were playing, things were significantly worse for the Vikings.

This isn't meant to absolve the offensive line as a whole. They needed to play better, but the games missed, along with Darrisaw and O'Neill playing hurt consistently throughout the season, were huge factors when it came to their performance.

Quarterback play was a big factor

The optics of the offensive line always hinges on the quarterback play. The flaws that the 2024 offensive line possessed were mitigated by the brilliance of Sam Darnold in navigating the pocket. This season, the Vikings weren't so lucky. All three quarterbacks who started for the Vikings were bad in one way, shape, or form.

All three quarterbacks had serious issues in being charged with pressures this season.

Player

Times Pressured

Pressure Percentage

Pressures Allowed

Percent of Dropbacks w/Some Responsibility

Sacks

J.J. McCarthy

115

39.5%

18

18.4%

8

Carson Wentz

78

39.2%

11

15.3%

5

Max Brosmer

34

39.1%

6

22.2%

5

It's not just being responsible for pressure, but also how you act when pressured and processing the field as a whole. All three quarterbacks struggled in processing the field quickly and making decisions in a timely fashion. Those all make a serious impact on the offensive line performance.

The fix is relatively simple for the Vikings

When it comes to the offensive line for the Vikings, the offensive line isn't perfect. If Ryan Kelly does end up retiring, center could become a need. However, that depends on how the team feels about both Blake Brandel and Michael Jurgens.

The reality of the offensive line comes down to three factors:

  • They need to stay healthy
  • Quarterback play must improve
  • Small coaching changes can elevate this unit

Too many are calling for major changes to a unit that was decimated due to injuries. The only needs on this unit are a center if you don't believe a starter exists on the roster and a swing tackle. They have four of five starters locked in, and having that is huge.

It's going to require patience, but if we see Darrisaw improve to his normal level, that will arguably do enough on its own to fix the offensive line.


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This article first appeared on A to Z Sports and was syndicated with permission.

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