Tight end Chris Herndon was traded from the Jets to the Vikings less than two weeks before the regular season, and the whirlwind has only continued in Minnesota, where he's being asked to quickly learn a fourth different playbook in his fourth NFL season.
"It's been pretty hectic," Herndon said Wednesday. "Just getting my car here, finding somewhere to stay, learning the offense, and doing my best to also learn everybody around the facility as well. I'm just taking it day by day."
Herndon is expected to immediately play a role against the Bengals on Sunday, coach Mike Zimmer said. But how much he plays remains to be seen for an offense that lost starter Irv Smith Jr. to a knee injury in the preseason finale and typically leans on heavy personnel groupings with multiple tight ends.
Tyler Conklin is expected to start, while Herndon and Brandon Dillon will contribute off the bench in front of quarterback Kirk Cousins, who reminded reporters that Herndon's acclimation is just getting started.
"We need more time," Cousins said. "He's done a great job, like I said, picking up the offense. That was really the first hurdle, so he has a good feel for what we're trying to do. We do need more time to just get a feel of how he's wired, and what he does naturally well."
Herndon's Jets tenure began well as a rookie, when he was their second-leading receiver with 502 yards and four touchdowns. But his second year was derailed by injuries and a four-game suspension stemming from a 2018 drunken-driving arrest. After he was plagued by drops last year, he's hoping a fresh start can help rebuild any confidence lost.
"You want to get out there and prove to yourself, most importantly, that you can play the game at a high level," Herndon said. "Having those types of setbacks really kind of makes your mind run a lot, especially as a young guy."
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