Vikings rookie Ingram joins deep competition at guard

Year after year under the previous regime, the Vikings drafted an offensive lineman within the first few rounds. Not even the blocker they took in the second round, LSU guard Ed Ingram, expected the Vikings to take a sixth straight swing on a first-, second- or third-round offensive lineman. Ingram said he only spoke with team evaluators during a formal interview at the NFL Scouting Combine.

"Other than that, I haven't talked to them at all," Ingram said. "So, it caught me off guard when I got the call."

So it goes for a Vikings offense that has started 17 different guards over the past six seasons and now has a new coaching staff led by head coach Kevin O'Connell, who brings a playbook that asks their linemen to do things differently. First-time General Manager Kwesi Adofo-Mensah leaned on those coaches and "o-line guru" Ryan Grigson, a new senior adviser, to help pinpoint their latest additions.

Ingram was the first of two offensive linemen drafted by the Vikings; sixth-round tackle Vederian Lowe out of Illinois followed. As a second-round pick, Ingram will be expected to catch on quickly. Jamaal Stephenson, co-director of player personnel, said he expects a smooth transition for Ingram, who made 34 starts at both guard spots for LSU, often against top-flight college defensive lines in the SEC.

"RG has this term whenever an offensive lineman has good feet, he calls them Fred Astaire feet," Adofo-Mensah said of Grigson, the former Colts general manager. "So I was watching Ingram and texted RG, 'Did he get to Fred Astaire?' Yeah, I'm getting soft in my old age. [Ingram] should have, but [Grigson] said he was just a cut below.'"

The Vikings don't need their blockers to be as fleet of foot in O'Connell's offense as they were in the Gary Kubiak wide-zone schemes, but evaluators said Ingram offers the blend of movement and power that'll be required of linemen in the new run plays. Perhaps most importantly for quarterback Kirk Cousins, Ingram was the top-rated pass blocking guard in the SEC last season by Pro Football Focus.

Ingram isn't the biggest 6-foot-3 guard – weighing in at 307 pounds at the NFL scouting combine – but said he prides himself on clearing lanes.

"I've always been dominant in the run game," Ingram said. "I feel like I'm a natural mauler."

Vikings scouts prioritized more of the bully-blocker type for O'Connell's "mid-zone" run schemes, which won't ask running backs to aim as wide as they did under the Kubiaks.