MANKATO, Minn. — Jarius Wright has played in all of seven games and has just 22 catches in his young career.
He enters his second season as a 23-year-old former fourth-round draft pick with one start under his belt. On the young and revamped Minnesota Vikings receiver corps, that practically qualifies him as a grizzled veteran and he's acting like one.
"The bottom line with Jarius is he knows what to do all of the time," offensive coordinator Bill Musgrave said. "He can help the other guys in that room. With all of the new faces in the receiving room, he helps them in the meeting room, during the drills and also of course when they break the huddle."
Of the 12 receivers on the roster in training camp, nine of them are new to the team this year. They added Greg Jennings from Green Bay to serve as the veteran mentor and leader of the group, with his accomplishments with the Packers and go-getting demeanor making him ideal to serve as Christian Ponder's top target.
Jennings has been as advertised early in camp, helping the young guys with nuances of the game while catching everything that's thrown in his zip code.
Wright has been more of a surprise. He was slowed early in his rookie season by injury, and quickly found himself buried on the depth chart. His first catch didn't come until Week 10 after star receiver Percy Harvin was injured the previous week against Seattle.
The 5-foot-10 Wright initially was pigeon-holed as a slot receiver, but has shown an ability to get down the field on the perimeter. He had three catches for 65 yards and a touchdown in Week 10 and finished the season with 22 catches for 310 yards and two scores in the final seven games.
"His maturity for his age and also his experience in the NFL, and we saw this year ago, he's a very knowledgeable guy, very conscious guy," coach Leslie Frazier said. "And for him to step in and play as well as he did in this first start action after being, not a guy who was even dressing, that tells you something about the pro that he is and even as a rookie. To see him now kind of take a leadership role that's pretty impressive."