Thank you for submitting questions for this week's Vikings mailbag. You can always send questions to @Andrew_Krammer on Twitter or andrew.krammer@startribune.com, and listen for answers on the weekly Access Vikings podcast or find them here on Friday mornings. Let's get to it.
Q: Obviously there's a lot wrong with the Vikings. What are three things fans should be excited/optimistic about? — @DavisTorgerson
AK: Let's start on the positive side. That's not the easiest needle to find in a haystack of questions about the 1-5 Vikings, but thank you to Davis for the changeup. Any talk about new stars emerging among the many young Vikings has to start with rookie Justin Jefferson, who leads the highly-touted 2020 draft class with 537 receiving yards (10th among all WRs). We need to wait years to truly pinpoint the greatest receiver from this class, but we can already say Jefferson will be part of the conversation. He's buried pre-draft speculation he would be just a slot receiver, proving as efficient from the outside (18 catches on 22 targets for 286 yards and two touchdowns) through six games, plus the shiftiness underneath that can shake a defender to convert on fourth down like his 5-yard, out-and-in route in Seattle on a fourth-and-2.
Look at this route in Houston. Jefferson already looks like a veteran on plays like that, with a quick release inside vs. man coverage. He's got the speed to burn corners on over routes, and his ability to change directions and break those off into corner routes isn't seen from too many 21-year-old NFL receivers.
Two other positives are the improvements of the top two 2019 draft picks in center Garrett Bradbury and tight end Irv Smith Jr. Neither have avoided the ups and downs of development, but Bradbury has improved as a run blocker while Smith's role in the passing game has steadily grown.
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Q: Will the Vikings retain linebacker Anthony Barr next year since they might be looking to save money and he's somewhat been underperforming the last couple of years? — @chadm214
AK: I think Mike Zimmer would disagree with the last part, even as I understand where the question is coming from. Barr's 2019 season, which I broke down at length here, saw him fall from the NFL's most-effective blitzing linebacker by pressure rate (Pro Football Focus) in 2018 to 32nd, however he posted a career-high 30 run stops and career-low four missed tackles for a Vikings defense that, a year ago, surrendered the second-fewest rushing TDs in the NFL. He only got a little more than one game in 2020 before the season-ending injury, and it wasn't a great start. But Barr can still play and will be 29 years old next year. His $15 million cap hit is steep, and $7.1 million becomes fully guaranteed on March 15, so perhaps a restructure is in play if both sides are open to extending, not ending, his time in Minnesota.