Nolan Teasley Made One Thing Perfect Clear about the Vikings

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Minnesota Vikings owner Mark Wilf and newly hired general manager Nolan Teasley participate in an introductory press conference at the TCO Performance Center. On June 3, 2026, in Eagan, Minnesota, Teasley outlined his vision for the franchise while discussing collaboration with ownership, coaches, and football operations during his first public appearance in the role. Mandatory Credit: YouTube

When a new general manager takes over an organization, he or she often embarks on a roster rebuild, cutting dead weight from the past and exercising patience for the future. That won’t happen for the Minnesota Vikings, at least not anytime soon, as new boss Nolan Teasley told reporters Wednesday his squad is ready to win now.

The Vikings have never really conducted a full rebuild in the first place, and they’re not about to start in the summer of 2026.

Teasley’s Seahawks Blueprint Arrives in Minnesota​

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New Vikings general manager Nolan Teasley speaks with reporters after formally taking over football operations duties. During a media session on June 3, 2026, at the TCO Performance Center in Eagan, Minnesota, Teasley outlined his leadership approach, discussed collaboration across the organization, and shared priorities for the franchise as the Vikings entered a critical offseason. Mandatory Credit: YouTube.

Teasley: Win Now

Asked if we would “rebuild” the Vikings or let it ride in 2026, Teasley replied, “I believe we’re ready to compete right now because they’ve been competitive.”

Teasley added, “I don’t know if I would get into depth in terms of staffing or anything in that regard because I haven’t been here to assess the people that are here. But I know there’s a lot of strong evaluators and a really strong football operation in place. The roster, it’s obvious it’s a strong nucleus of talent on both sides of the ball.”

The Vikings finished 9-8 last year, one win away from an NFC North crown, despite featuring the league’s fifth-worst quarterback efficiency.

Tealsey also observed, “They’ve won a lot of football games here in the last four years, including five in a row to end last season. We’re going to build the deepest, most competitive roster possible so that we can be at our best in December and January and February, and ultimately working toward winning the Super Bowl that this fan base deserves.”

… Probably Why He Was Hired

When the owners, the Wilfs, interviewed all nine candidates for the general manager job, discussing the franchise’s continuous win-now mantra was probably paramount. That is — Mark and Zygi Wilf may have ruled out any would-be executive who recommended a full rebuild for the Vikings.

Why? Well, aside from a poor season in 2011, the Wilfs, who have owned the club for 20 years, have never hosted a terrible Vikings team. When Minnesota has a down year, that translates to seven wins, not two.

Remaining competitive at all times — like the Pittsburgh Steelers and Kansas City Chiefs — is the Viking Way. Teasley’s modus operandi evidently aligns with the Wilfs: if a team must rebuild, it should do so gradually.

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Minnesota Vikings owners Leonard Wilf and Mark Wilf watch pregame festivities before an international matchup overseas. Prior to kickoff on Oct. 2, 2022, at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium in London, England, the ownership duo observed warmups and preparations as the Vikings continued their efforts to expand the club’s global presence. Mandatory Credit: Kirby Lee-USA TODAY Sports.

Star Tribune‘s Ben Goessling wrote Wednesday, “That sustained run of success — without an extended period of losing that delivered premium draft picks — resonated with the Vikings owners. The Wilf family have stated almost annually their desire for the Vikings to compete for division championships and playoff spots without a protracted rebuilding period.”

The State of the Roster

Meanwhile, the Vikings’ roster is, indeed, ready to contend. If one assumes that Kyler Murray stabilizes the quarterback position, or if J.J. McCarthy takes the next maturational step, the sky is the limit for wins. The playmaking weaponry is there; Justin Jefferson, Jordan Addison, Jauan Jennings, T.J. Hockenson, Aaron Jones, and Jordan Mason can attest.

The defense has ranked in the NFL’s Top 3 in back-to-back seasons thanks to Brian Flores’s innovative and intense scheme. In fact, Flores’s system propelled Minnesota to five straight wins at the end of the 2025 campaign.

And the special teams ranked eighth last season per DVOA. Kicker Will Reichard even took home All-Pro honors.

The whole team is ready to win in 2026, so long as Murray or McCarthy is ready for the QB1 job.

Picking the GM from the Super Bowl Champs

Picking Tealsey was no accident. He came up within the Seattle Seahawks organization. In addition to winning the Super Bowl last season — the second in 12 years — Seattle has not won fewer than six games in a season since 2009.

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Seattle Seahawks quarterback Sam Darnold waits near the field before a major league ceremony following the season. Ahead of the Super Bowl LX trophy presentation on Feb. 11, 2026, at Lumen Field in Seattle, Washington, Darnold appeared during pre-event activities as attention turned toward the NFL’s championship celebration. Mandatory Credit: Steven Bisig-Imagn Images.

These are Seattle’s win-loss records during Teasley’s employment:


2025: 14-3
2024: 10-7
2023: 9-8
2022: 9-8
2021: 7-10
2020: 12-4
2019: 11-5
2018: 10-6
2017: 9-7
2016: 10-5-1
2015: 10-6
2014: 12-4


Vikings head coach Kevin O”Connell said about Teasley, “You think about how they were able to do it in Seattle, really in multiple ways, they weren’t ever picking in the top five, or number one overall.”

“They were able to do it in ways that, quite honestly, I view as the ways we’re probably going to have to operate moving forward, either within our quarterback room right now or potential acquisitions in the future. You have to lean on process. You have to lean on a world where you can make really good decisions.”

Maintaining a winning or competent roster — at all times — is all Teasley knows. It also just so happens to be the strategy the Wilfs endorse. They don’t embrace taking a step backward to be better; it’s habitually a steady wave of competitive rosters.



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