Coming into training camp, ups and downs were expected for Vikings quarterback J.J. McCarthy, who is essentially still a rookie. The team has high expectations for the 22-year-old, but also realizes that it’s going to take some time for him to learn and grow and develop after he missed so many valuable reps due to his knee injury last season.
Through the first handful of practices in camp, there had been a lot more good than bad from McCarthy. Saturday’s practice, in particular, saw him put on a show for the fans in attendance with numerous impressive throws.
With that said, Tuesday’s practice was more bad than good. McCarthy’s completion percentage — while I didn’t track it down to the throw — was well below 50 percent in team periods. There were some that were narrow misses, some that were blatant misses or miscommunications, and a couple balls that were arguably drops by his targets. But the overall theme was that far too many balls hit the grass instead of being completed.
In early route-running period near the goal line, McCarthy found Jordan Addison, but he couldn’t secure the ball as Jeff Okudah appeared to punch it out. One play later, McCarthy threw just a touch high for Lucky Jackson, who made a great catch but was ruled to be out of bounds. He also failed to connect with T.J. Hockenson on two targets, one of which was well behind the tight end.
McCarthy was better in 11-on-11 action in the middle of the field, highlighted by a pretty strike to Addison for a chunk gain. Then came another goal line period, this one 7 on 7, and the struggles resumed. He missed Addison in the back corner of the end zone. He threw another one back there to Addison, who caught it but landed out of bounds. He rifled one just high for Josh Oliver, with the ball deflecting off of Oliver’s hands and then directly into the crossbar. McCarthy did throw a couple touchdowns during that period as well.
The Vikings finished up with a situational period where the offense faced a third down and then transitioned into either a field goal, a punt, or a fourth-down attempt. McCarthy’s first throw was a nice completion downfield to Aaron Jones, setting up a field goal try. But he then threw one way too high for Jordan Mason on a fourth down, and followed that by missing Jalen Nailor by quite a bit due to an apparent miscommunication. That caused McCarthy to put both of his hands on his helmet. It was that kind of day.
To be clear, this isn’t concerning or worth putting too much stock in. McCarthy has had a strong start to camp, and off days are going to happen. It wasn’t a particularly long or high-intensity practice compared to some of the other ones we’ve seen. And in training camp, results on one day of practice — good or bad — are never all that meaningful, especially when it’s still July. Lastly, the first-team offense remains without its two best players, Justin Jefferson and Christian Darrisaw.
McCarthy will look to shake it off and have a better day on Wednesday, which will be the second fully-padded practice of camp.
Here are a few other things I saw on Tuesday:
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