Sports
Bleacher Report Delivers Brutal Take on Vikings Draft Pick
The Minnesota Vikings shocked the masses one week ago, selecting Florida defensive tackle Caleb Banks in Round 1. Most draft pundits had labeled Banks as a 2nd-Round pick. This week, Bleacher Report wasn’t shy about the selection, naming it one of the draft’s worst selections and criticizing Banks’s injury history.
Minnesota bet big on upside, and national skepticism arrived almost immediately.
Banks will now have to prove them wrong. He’s already a lightning rod from the 2026 NFL draft, and only stellar performance will change that.
Vikings DT Enters the NFL with Boom-or-Bust Attention
The Banks pick wasn’t universally praised.
BR on Banks
BR’s Brent Sobleski delivered his takes on the NFL’s “worst draft picks,” and regrettably, Banks made the cut.
Sobleski opined, “The Issue: Caleb Banks is a massive and mega-talented defensive tackle, who barely played during his final season on campus and has significant concerns over previous foot injuries. How to Make it Work: A healthy career and continued progression from Banks is the only way to validate this selection.”
“Once again, Banks broke a bone in his foot at this year’s NFL Scouting Combine. The Vikings still pulled the trigger, because Minnesota’s decision-makers felt they had a good grasp on Banks’ health and his talent was well-worth the first-round investment.”
Before Thursday night, Minnesota hadn’t drafted a defensive tackle in Round 1, 2, or 3 since 2013.
Sobleski added, “First-round picks tend to be a 50-50 proposal even in optimal situations. Banks has an added strike against him before walking into Minnesota’s building. The Vikings must now cross their fingers and hope the defensive lineman can stay on the field.”
“The pick was the type of high-risk, high-reward opportunity multiple other franchises wouldn’t have considered, particularly among the top-20 selections.”
It Really Is Boom or Bust
Large humans with foot injuries always raise concerns. They just don’t heal ideally, or at least such injuries make big headlines when they occur to such people.
Prior to the Combine, when Banks broke a bone in his foot, the mock draft community projected him as a sure-fire Round 1 selection. The injury truly changed that. What does this mean? Well, Banks undoubtedly has the size and talent for a 1st-Round commodity. It’s all about the injury.
If Banks hits, no one will care that the Vikings “reached” for him. If the foot injury lingers or leads to others, it will be easy to say, “I told you so.” Plain and simple.
SB Nation‘s Scotty Payne noted on Banks a week before the draft, “Banks is very boom/bust. You love the traits, and he has the potential to be a Chris Jones-like player in the middle of your defense. However, the inconsistent play, lack of production, and injuries could give you a dud.”
A Summer of Watchful Eyes
With the draft in the rearview and the NFL schedule release around the bend, the Vikings and all 31 teams will turn to organized team activities (OTAs), minicamp, and later, training camp. You better believe all eyes will be on Banks, with fans waiting to see if the early gamble pays off.
For example, if Banks is off and running by early August, that will provide a positive signal about his Week 1 readiness. On the contrary, if Banks simply doesn’t do much this summer, many will roll their eyes and think or say, “See, this is a guy you could’ve got in Round 2 or 3 if you knew he wouldn’t be ready for 2026.”
The easiest path for all parties is for the Vikings’ diligence on Banks’s medicals to pan out in the next few months, enabling him to be an active participant this summer.
Joining an Already Good Defense
From the moment defensive boss Brian Flores arrived in the Twin Cities in 2023, Minnesota’s defense has ranked second in the NFL per EPA/Play and DVOA and placed No. 3 last year behind the Houston Texans and Seattle Seahawks. Banks is joining a sweet system; Flores and the rest of the gang don’t need him to kickstart a unit from the bottom rung of the ladder.
Think of it this way: in 2025, Flores’s defense produced the NFL’s third-best efficiency rankings while employing Jonathan Allen and Javon Hargrave, two expensive free agents from the 2025 class who did not play up to their contractual value. A third-ranked defense with two middling iDL performers suggests the group can become even more dominant if Banks is worth his salt early on.
Flores and the Vikings also drafted Iowa State nose tackle Domonique Orange one night after Banks. The interior defensive line may cook in 2026.
It’s just that Sobleski isn’t a fan of Banks’s lower-than-50-50 odds to succeed. It’s now on Banks and the Vikings, as an organziation, to prove everyone wrong.
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