Entering his first start with the Minnesota Vikings, veteran quarterback Carson Wentz doesn’t have the longest leash.
The Vikings are embarking on what could be a three-game stretch without J.J. McCarthy (who suffered a high-ankle sprain in Week 2), leading up to a Week 6 bye. The Vikings (1-1) must remain competitive to keep morale up before McCarthy’s return and are entrusting Wentz to keep the team afloat.
However, it doesn’t appear to be Wentz or bust.
Minnesota Star Tribune beat reporter Ben Goessling laid out the Vikings’ quarterback contingency plans with McCarthy up and did not discount rookie quarterback Max Brosmer taking over as the team’s starter despite the signing of Desmond Ridder earlier this week.
“If Wentz gets injured or is ineffective, they’ll turn next to Max Brosmer, the former Gophers quarterback who signed as an undrafted free agent and made the team as their third QB after a strong training camp and preseason,” Goessling wrote in the “Access Vikings” newsletter.
Brosmer exceeded expectations in the summer by winning a spot on the 53-man roster over Sam Howell. He impressed with his processing and decision-making, but he is just as green as McCarthy when it comes to live action in the NFL.
“O’Connell has praised Brosmer’s ability to play with anticipation and solve coverages quickly… But Brosmer is a quarterback who hasn’t thrown a regular-season NFL pass (like McCarthy was two weeks ago), and he could face a sharp indoctrination into the league if he needs to play. While preparing Wentz to start, the Vikings also have to ready a backup who’d need to quickly adjust to the speed of a NFL game where there’s something at stake,” Goessling added.
Once Told to ‘Back Off’ by Coaches, Max Brosmer is One Snap From Playing for Vikings
Playing for the University of Minnesota just across the Mississippi River in Minneapolis, Brosmer’s NFL dreams are becoming more of a reality despite going undrafted.
”I kind of get speechless about it sometimes. I think in the moment, probably the first couple hours, it was pretty surreal when I found out,” Brosmer said, per the Star Tribune. ”Then it was like, ‘Snap out of it. We’ve got to get back to the grind.’ I couldn’t be more grateful to be in a spot here with the Vikings. I just love coming to the office every single day with this team — some of the best people I’ve ever met and been around.”
Formerly playing in the FCS for New Hampshire, Brosmer played just one season of FBS Division I football with the Golden Gophers. He transformed a traditionally run-heavy Minnesota offense, posting a program record for completions (268) and finishing with the second-best completion rate (66.5%) all time.
”I haven’t been as physically gifted as some people in this profession. I think when you’re kind of on the shorter end of that stick you have to kind of outwork people mentally,” Brosmer added. “You have to know your superpower.”
Since Brosmer arrived to the Vikings’ facilities, his preparation has been dogged — to the point coaches had told him to back off — in hopes of one day playing in a regular season game.
“The mindset I’ve taken is continue to attack every single day and prepare like I’m the starter,” Brosmer said. “That’s the role of the backup quarterback in the NFL, is to prepare like a starter every single day. If you’re doing that, then it doesn’t matter if you’re one snap or two snaps away.
“Last week I was two snaps away. Now, I’m one snap away.”
Carson Wentz Ready for Surreal Moment With Vikings
Brosmer isn’t the only quarterback with Minnesota roots who is having a moment.
After moving to North Dakota when he was 3 years old, Wentz grew up a Vikings fan and admitted that it was always a dream to play for the purple and gold.
“I grew up rooting for this team, it’s one of those things, you play long enough, you kind of forget about those things, ’cause it’s football — you’re bouncing around teams,” Wentz said, who will play for his sixth team in six years on Sunday. “But being here, just how cool it is for me to know I used to cheer for the guys that I’m walking down the hallway seeing. Used to come to the Metrodome, and I was waving the towel. I was part of the Skol chant — all the things.
“So, running out of that tunnel this week will hit me a little different in a surreal way. I’m excited for that.”