The Vikings’ Best Draft Pick Is Already Pretty Clear

The Minnesota Vikings 1st-Round draft pick from Thursday night, Caleb Banks, comes with some injury risk and an overall boom-or-bust profile. The team’s 2nd-Rounder, Jake Golday, might be a bit raw for Year No. 1 readiness, which is fine because the Vikings have plenty of off-ball linebacking depth. What does this mean? Well, the 3rd-Round selection of Iowa State nose tackle Domonique Orange takes the cake from a post-draft standpoint.
Minnesota needed a true interior run-stuffer, and Orange may have the cleanest rookie fit on the roster.
Big Citrus — his nickname because of his last name — is set up to succeed more than any Vikings draft pick in the immediate fallout of the event.
A New Nose Tackle Option Has Entered the Chat
The Big Citrus fan club has already begun.

An Immediate Roster Opening
So long as Orange doesn’t look like an idiot at training camp in July — he won’t — the large defender has a clear path to splash right away. On the pre-draft depth chart, 2024 7th-Rounder Levi Drake Rodriguez was slated for nose tackle duty in 2026. That all changed with the Orange selection.
It just makes more sense that Orange would play sooner rather than later, a sharp contrast to Orange’s new teammate, the aforementioned Banks, who will undergo a summer filled with injury questions about his game-readiness. That will not be the story for Orange. There will be some instant gratification regarding Orange.
SI.com‘s Will Ragatz on the pick: “Whereas Banks is a freak athlete with big-time pass-rush potential, Orange is a true run-stuffing nose tackle. Across four seasons with the Cyclones, he recorded one sack. He also had just seven career tackles for loss.”
“But at 6’2,” 322 pounds, the work he does generally doesn’t show up in the stat sheet. This is a guy who eats up blocks and is very difficult to move off of his spot, which creates tackle opportunities for others in the run game. Instant grade: B.”
Nose Tackles Are Set Up to Succeed
Drafting nose tackles somewhat high in a draft is like pepperoni pizza. Nobody from your group of hungry folks will complain about the selection — or Orange … or the pizza. Nose tackles have a higher rate of success in the draft, mainly because their job is slightly less complicated than pass-rushing DTs. Nose tackles are instructed to be “big and there.”
This is a similar situation to safeties: they’re just easier to hit on in the draft. Low risk, high reward.
The Scouting Report
Orange, an early-down option as his career gets off the ground in the big leagues, offers immediate help. At 6’2″ and 325 pounds, he boasts a quick first step, a solid anchor, and long arms evident on tape. He perfectly fits Minnesota’s profile for interior run stoppers.
However, his pass-rush game requires development. He primarily relies on positioning and leverage, rarely demonstrating the bull rush often seen from other defensive tackles in this class. Still, he possesses significant room for growth.
Generally speaking, the Vikings’ rookie DT roles are clearly defined: Banks will hunt the quarterback, and Orange will handle the interior “dirty work.”
NFL.com’s Lance Zierlein on Orange: “Orange is a sturdy nose tackle capable of muddying the middle of the field with his first-step quickness and take-on power. His reaction time makes it hard to reach-block him in zone and he has the anchor to play landlord over the A-gaps against double-teams.”
“He gets bounced around on contact but is excellent in recovery and winning the final phase of the rep. Orange is a non-factor as a pass rusher, but his value versus the run should attract teams.”

And The Athletic‘s Dane Brugler: “Orange is an ineffective pass rusher but has the frame and play strength to be an immovable, stout nose when he wants to be. He projects best as a one-technique or shade in a 4-3 scheme. Using his long extension, he creates powerful knockback, controls the point and eventually discards blockers, although his shed timing must improve.”
“Despite having a limited range of impact, he played lighter in 2025, and his conditioning is a critical factor in his on-field success. Durable — played in combined 50 games the past four years. Strong, violent hands to rid himself of contact. Trimmed down to 325 pounds and worked well with nutritionists in the program.”
First Real NT since Dalvin Tomlinson
Remember Tomlinson? Ironically, he’s probably the best NFL comp for Orange, and Orange just so happens to be the first genuine prospective starting nose tackle on the Vikings’ roster since Tomlinson left Minnesota after the 2022 campaign.

Before Tomlinson, Linval Joseph held down the NT fort from 2014 to 2019. Since Joseph’s departure, the Vikings have cycled through these NT or faux NT personnel:
- Sheldon Day
- Javon Hargrave
- Michael Pierce
- Harrison Phillips
- Levi Drake Rodriguez
- Shamar Stephen
- Taki Taimani
- Dalvin Tomlinson
- Khyiris Tonga
- Elijah Williams
So, yes, it’s a new day and a bit of a throwback for the Vikings to have Orange on the depth chart.
Orange turned 22 last month.

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