Few athletes looked better sprinting around in spandex than Jerick McKinnon.
The little-known runner out of Georgia Southern literally turned heads during the NFL combine in February, giving scouts whiplash with top performances for his position in pretty much every event.
He finished third in the three-cone drill, blazed to a second-best 4.41 seconds in the 40-yard dash and pumped out 32 reps on the bench press, six more than the next-strongest running back.
"He was just, from an athletic standpoint, too good of an athlete to pass up," Vikings General Manager Rick Spielman said after selecting McKinnon in the third round earlier this month.
Now that McKinnon is all theirs, the challenge for the Vikings will be finding how to best put this explosive but inexperienced running back to use.
The plan for now is for Mc- Kinnon to be a pass-catching complement to starter Adrian Peterson — a role that can be a productive one in Norv Turner's offense — but McKinnon has a lot to learn first for that plan to play out as hoped.
McKinnon played all over the field in college. Before his senior year, Georgia Southern converted the triple-option quarterback and part-time defensive back into a tailback. He finished his college career with 3,899 rushing yards, 43 touchdowns scored, 12 TD passes and limited understanding of some of the nuances needed to play that position in the pros.
"I got a chance to practice it at the Senior Bowl, so I'm kind of a little bit comfortable with it," McKinnon said.