Vikings Insider Sends Message to Fan Base Amid J.J. McCarthy Collapse
The Minnesota Vikings traveling to the Seattle Seahawks in Week 13 is more like a nightmare than a sleepless night for a beleaguered fan base.

Longtime Vikings insider Mark Craig of the Star Tribune said it’s time for the fan base to “calm the heck down” despite 2024 top-10 pick and quarterback J.J. McCarthy’s horrendous start. Craig compared McCarthy’s first six games to that of many other more-prominent quarterbacks but not to minimize the grim nature of McCarthy’s early woes.
“It is, however, meant to somehow influence Vikings Nation and national media folks to CALM THE HECK DOWN! Just a whiff of something resembling a hint of patience would be a good start,” Craig wrote.
That said, McCarthy’s struggles and the Vikings’ recent quarterback decisions have the fan base stewing more than anything the Lambeau Field tailgaters cooked up before the Vikings’ 23-6 loss to the Green Bay Packers for Week 12. In lieu of McCarthy, Undrafted rookie Max Brosmer looks like the starter against a Seahawks team that boasts the quarterback, Sam Darnold, whom the Vikings let go after a 14-3 season in 2024.
It all leaves the Vikings fan base in greater buyer’s remorse than Black Friday, Small Business Saturday, and Cyber Monday shoppers combined. McCarthy’s numbers of 929 yards, six touchdown passes, 10 interceptions, and a 54.1% completion rate adds up to that level of disappointment for a fan base that went from years of big numbers from Kirk Cousins to Darnold’s big year to McCarthy’s early blunder in three years.
4 Quarterbacks Who Stumbled Big Out the Gate
Craig’s list of other highly-touted first-round quarterbacks stumbling is quite impressive, and the quarterback likely had their fan bases wanting to hit delete amid their initial buyer’s remorse. That includes Matthew Stafford, who is lighting things up for the Los Angeles Rams this season, and Peyton Manning who is in the Hall of Fame. Stafford had 12 interceptions in his first six games with the Detroit Lions, and Manning had 14 interceptions in his first six contests. Neither had more than six touchdown passes and all the other key numbers looked abysmal.
“We could go on,” Craig wrote. “We could mention how Drake Maye started 2-4 while completing 57.5% of his passes with New England last year. We could mention that Baker Mayfield started 1-5 while completing 58.7% of his passes with Cleveland in 2018.”
Maye is now leading the 10-2 Patriots with the best record in the league during his second year as a starter. Mayfield took the reins from Tom Brady in Tampa Bay three years ago, and the Buccaneers haven’t missed a beat.
“None of this is meant to say the Vikings’ J.J. McCarthy will be the MVP front-runner when he’s 37, like Stafford. Or win five MVPs and stroll into the Hall of Fame, like Manning. Or start next season 10-2 while completing a league-best 71% of his passes on a team that sits atop its conference, like Maye is doing in Year 2 with New England,” Craig wrote. “McCarthy is 2-4. He’s a 54.1% passer. He has thrown six touchdown passes and 10 interceptions. His passer rating is 57.9.”
Mark Craig Calls Fan Base ‘Uber-Impatient’
Vikings fans’ disappointment over McCarthy isn’t atypical in the NFL, where instant success is expected year after year.
“So, to answer the ridiculous but predictably uber-impatient NFL question of the week, no, the Vikings shouldn’t move on from McCarthy,” Craig wrote. “Not now or next week if undrafted rookie Max Brosmer somehow helps upset Sam Darnold and the Seahawks.”
“Franchise-altering decisions were made with McCarthy as the focal point. More will follow,” Craig added. “Brosmer? Sorry, Max, but please. In this movie, your name comes at the end of the credits as ‘third quarterback to appear.'”
BREAKING: Cowboys Legend Roger Staubach Reveals Shocking Truth About Player Who Dominated Eagles – Fans Demand Jersey Swap After Epic Performance

The Dallas Cowboys’ thrilling comeback victory over the Philadelphia Eagles has already been labeled one of the most emotionally charged games of the year, but the aftermath has become even more explosive.
As analysts, fans, and former players dissect every moment of the matchup, one voice has risen above them all — and it comes from a name that carries enormous weight in Cowboys history: Roger Staubach.

In a stunning post-game conversation that instantly swept across social media, the Hall of Famer revealed something that caught even the most seasoned reporters off guard.
“I’ve been around this league a long time,” Staubach said, “but honestly, I’ve never seen a player as dangerous and aggressive as he is in my entire career.” The comment alone would have been enough to electrify the fanbase, but what truly sent shockwaves through the NFL community was the revelation that he wasn’t talking about Dak Prescott, the franchise quarterback.
He wasn’t talking about CeeDee Lamb, the offensive superstar. And surprisingly, he wasn’t referring to Micah Parsons, the face of the Cowboys’ defense.

Instead, Staubach was calling attention to the one Cowboys player who, in his words, “made the Eagles deeply uncomfortable on every single snap,” the only player he believed consistently disrupted Philadelphia’s rhythm and forced them into errors throughout the night.
His performance was so striking that several Eagles players approached him after the game asking for a jersey swap — a gesture that instantly went viral and demonstrated just how much respect he had earned from the opposing locker room.
The player at the center of this sudden media storm is linebacker Jalen O’Neal, the Cowboys’ emerging defensive phenomenon who has been steadily building momentum all season.
But nothing he had done so far compared to the performance he delivered on this night, a performance that many fans are already calling the turning point of the Cowboys’ season.
The game had all the makings of a classic rivalry breakdown early on, with the Eagles dictating tempo and Dallas struggling to respond. But O’Neal’s relentless presence flipped the emotional current of the matchup long before the scoreboard reflected it.

From the first quarter, his aggression was impossible to ignore. He darted into running lanes, closed space that should have belonged to the Eagles receivers, and slammed into ball carriers with a force that shook the stadium.
Every play he touched shifted the atmosphere, and every collision reminded Philadelphia that their night would be far more complicated than anticipated. Even Eagles commentators, typically focused on their own roster, acknowledged on-air that O’Neal was “destroying the rhythm” of their offense.
Though the Cowboys began the game trailing, something changed as O’Neal’s intensity escalated. His forced fumble in the third quarter became the catalyst for Dallas’ comeback drive, reigniting the energy in the stadium and giving the team the spark it desperately needed.
Moments later, his sideline hit on an Eagles wide receiver turned into one of the most replayed clips of the weekend, an explosive highlight that embodied the physical tone he had set all game long.
It wasn’t just the fans who were mesmerized — even his teammates fed off his fire, with multiple players describing him afterward as “the spark plug” and “the emotional engine” of the fourth-quarter surge.
What made his performance so extraordinary was the combination of violence and precision. He wasn’t reckless; he was intentional. He read the field like a veteran, anticipated formations, and executed tackles with textbook technique.
His football IQ matched his physical power, creating a level of play so complete that it stunned even those who had followed his growth closely. And in a rivalry game as heated as Cowboys vs.
Eagles, his composure under pressure elevated him even further in the eyes of coaches and analysts.
But no endorsement hit harder than Staubach’s. The franchise legend, known for his calm and measured assessments, rarely gives out praise of this magnitude. For him to describe a player as the most dangerous he has ever seen sent the sports world scrambling for context.
Several former Cowboys immediately reacted online, stunned by the strength of Staubach’s words. Fans, meanwhile, erupted in excitement, declaring that Dallas had found its next true defensive cornerstone.
The jersey swap moment sealed the narrative, turning O’Neal into the unexpected symbol of dominance in the biggest rivalry game of the season.
As morning arrived, sports networks across the country filled their segments with his highlights. Analysts discussed whether this was a breakout game or the beginning of something even larger for the young linebacker. Reporters compared his energy to some of the great defensive disruptors in league history.
Social media exploded with posts celebrating what many called one of the finest defensive performances by a Cowboys player in recent years. In less than twelve hours, O’Neal’s follower count skyrocketed, his merchandise sales spiked, and his name became the top trending topic among NFL fans.
Far beyond individual praise, the implications for the Cowboys are enormous. This wasn’t just a win; it was a statement. Dallas didn’t simply outscore Philadelphia — they out-fought them, out-hustled them, and out-energized them.
And at the center of that transformation was a player who refused to let the game slip away. With the playoffs looming and every game growing more critical, the Cowboys appear to have unearthed a new force capable of shifting their defensive identity.
Staubach summarized it best with one final remark that resonated throughout the organization: “If he keeps playing like this, the Cowboys won’t just be contenders — they’ll be terrifying.”
For Dallas fans, it’s the kind of promise they’ve been waiting years to hear.
And for the rest of the league, it’s the warning no one wanted.