Vikings Undrafted Rookie Could Force a Summer Surprise

When free agency opened, the most notable name the Minnesota Vikings lost was wide receiver Jalen Nailor.
They never intended to keep him at an inflated contract to be their third wide receiver, but he did well in his deal from Las Vegas.
Brett Thorson Brings Legitimate Competition to Vikings Punter Room
Potentially getting lost in the shuffle from Nailor moving teams was punter Ryan Wright flying the coop as well. He left Minnesota for greener pastures with the New Orleans Saints. While his career traditionally bounced between good and bad years, he was coming off a season in which the Vikings would have liked to keep him.

They pivoted and landed on veteran punter Johnny Hekker. However, Hekker has been trending down for some time now, and he is very clearly at the end of the line.
It would have been a shock to see the Vikings use a draft pick on a punter. Despite grabbing Will Reichard with a late-round pick, he has the utility of being a kicker. However, Brett Thorson came into The Draft as the nation’s best punter, and Minnesota was clearly enamored.
They didn’t need to use a draft pick on him, and wound up getting him anyway. Signed as an undrafted free agent, the Georgia Bulldog racked up accolades in the SEC. He now comes to what will be a punting competition in Minnesota, but even with Hekker’s presence, it’s one he could very well win.

Thorson can boom the football, but he’s also more than capable of using finesse. Pinning punts inside the 20-yard line, or offering up enough hang time for the coverage unit to get down the field, are both in his toolbox as well.
More often than not, NFL teams cycle through kickers and punters. Veterans stick around forever and rarely find tenure with teams. Reichard looks the part of a kicker like that for the Vikings, and Thorson replicating it as a punter would be a lot of fun.

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