Because Minnesota Vikings defensive tackle Caleb Banks was theorized as a 2nd-Round pick, but Minnesota selected him in Round 1, many national pundits haven’t been shy about skewering the club’s draft decision-making. Bleacher Report was the latest, calling the Vikings’ draft class “baffling.”
Minnesota bet big on defense, but the 1st-Round value debate is still following the class.
It’s the latest in a string of mediocre and bad reviews.
Banks Remains the Flashpoint in Minnesota’s Draft Debate
Were you wholly baffled by the Vikings’ draft class?
BR: Vikings’ Draft Was Baffling
BR’s Kristopher Knox assigned one word to each team’s rookie class last week, and for the Vikings, that term was “baffling.”
Knox wrote, “Ironically, it’s fair to wonder what the Minnesota Vikings were thinking at the top of the draft while simultaneously knowing exactly what they were thinking. After parting with defensive linemen Jonathan Allen and Javon Hargrave earlier in the offseason, the Vikings clearly decided that they needed to reload along their defensive front.”
“Still, using the 18th overall pick on Florida’s Caleb Banks was a massive reach. Banks was the 60th-ranked overall prospect on the B/R board, and he’s dealt with alarming foot issues over the past year.”
Banks was a consensus 1st-Rounder before the broken foot bone at the Combine.
Knox added, “He suffered a broken foot in 2025 that limited him to three games, and he broke the same foot again at the scouting combine. While banks has the potential to be a great player, Minnesota’s decision to take him where it did is baffling.”
To Recap: The Haul
As a refresher, this is the Vikings’ full draft class for 2026:
- R1: Caleb Banks (DT) | Pick 18
- R2: Jake Golday (LB) | Pick 51
- R3: Domonique Orange (DT) | Pick 82
- R3: Caleb Tiernan (OT) | Pick 97
- R3: Jakobe Thomas (SAF) | Pick 98
- R5: Max Bredeson (TE) | Pick 159
- R5: Charles Demmings (CB) | Pick 163
- R6: Demond Claiborne (RB) | Pick 198
- R7: Gavin Gerhardt (OL) | Pick 235
The event was remarkably defense-heavy, with head coach Kevin O’Connell and interim general manager Rob Brzezinski saying afterward that’s just how the board fell to them.
Baffling Is Just Fine if the Class Hits
Generally speaking, it does not matter if Knox was baffled by Minnesota’s draft class. It just doesn’t. Everyone’s confusion about the Vikings’ draft arrived on the first night of the event, mainly because the entire NFL viewing audience expected Oregon safety Dillon Thieneman to be the pick. There was no hard evidence linking Thieneman to Minnesota; it’s just that 90% of mock drafts predicted as much because Minnesota might need a safety, and Thieneman kinda-sorta looks like Harrison Smith.
When Thieneman was not the pick, and the Vikings “reached” for Banks, folks were stunned — why would they draft a Round 2 guy in Round 1?
Some reporting suggested afterward that multiple teams had their eyes on Banks in Round 1, so the Vikings taking the plunge wasn’t that weird at all.
Daily Norseman‘s Warren Ludford noted on Banks’s injury last week, “It is easy to understand why NFL teams would be spooked by Banks’ injury history and that would cause him to fall in their draft assessments of him due to injury risk.”
“At the same time, it is also understandable why the Vikings felt that after having their doctors do their due diligence on Banks’ foot injuries that they were not concerned about their impact on his ability to play football. All indications are that he has fully recovered from the more severe Jones fracture and that the subsequent fourth metatarsal injury is a relatively minor one and he is on track to a full recovery by early June.”
For the Most Part, It’s All on Banks
This draft class boils down to one man, and — you guessed it — his name is Caleb Banks. If the Gator morphs into a Pro Bowl or All-Pro performer, nobody will care one iota that Minnesota drafted him in Round 1. The grievance will be an afterthought.
However, if he succumbs to foot problems, a vast faction of draft pundits will say “I told you so,” and the Vikings will need players like Golday, Orange, Tiernan, and Thomas to pan out to make up for the would-be Banks gaffe.
Minnesota, too, could have big plans for Round 6 running back Demond Claiborne. The Vikings haven’t drafted an RB1 since Dalvin Cook, and that was nine years ago.
It’s all up to Banks and his foot to determine if Knox’s baffled reactions mean anything. He’s the Vikings’ big ticket in the aftermath of the 2026 draft.
