The Minnesota Vikings still have a hole to fill as training camp draws closer, and the answer might be a familiar one: Jihad Ward.
Minnesota has spent the offseason trying to lower its risk, adding Kyler Murray to the quarterback room and building out more depth in the hope of getting back to the playoffs after watching them from their couch in 2025. Even with those moves, the Vikings could still use another edge rusher to help complete the picture.
That need has kept fans watching the market closely, with bigger names such as Joey Bosa and Jadeveon Clowney floating around as possible fits. But Minnesota may be aiming for something more practical than flashy - a player who can hold down the spot if Dallas Turner gets hurt. In that sense, a reunion with Ward makes a lot of sense.
Ward’s first run in Minnesota was brief, but it served a purpose. He joined the Vikings as a free agent before the 2024 season and wasn’t asked to carry the defense.
According to Pro Football Focus, he finished with a 51.5 overall grade across 505 defensive snaps. That wasn’t standout production, but it also wasn’t the point.
He was used as a versatile piece in Brian Flores’s front seven.
The Vikings moved Ward around plenty in that one season, lining him up at both left and right defensive tackle while also giving him some edge snaps to back up Jonathan Greenard and Andrew Van Ginkel. He finished with 31 total pressures and one sack on 416 pass-rushing snaps.
He then landed with the Tennessee Titans the next offseason and posted the best pass-rushing season of his career. Tennessee used him mostly off the edge, and Ward responded with 47 pressures on 410 pass-rushing snaps, plus five sacks to match his career high. He remains unsigned with training camp approaching.
That’s why Minnesota could make sense as his next stop. Ward would not need to be a headline addition to matter. He could rotate in behind the starters, give the Vikings another body at a thin spot, and add some competition to a position group that currently has Tyrion Ingram-Dawkins and Bo Richter as the favorites to make the roster.
There’s also a longer view here. If Ingram-Dawkins handles the move from the interior to the edge, Ward could still stick around. He could also provide insurance if first-round pick Caleb Banks has trouble with his troublesome foot or if Domonique Orange needs time to adjust to the NFL.
And because this would likely be a low-cost move, the Vikings would not be tying themselves down. They have $13.1 million in cap space going into the season, according to Over The Cap, which gives them room to keep their options open.
It wouldn’t be the kind of signing that gets the fan base buzzing. But for a team looking to get better without taking on much risk, Ward looks like the sort of under-the-radar gamble that can quietly help.
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