May/08/08 02:29 AM Filed in:
Kyle Wright
Kyle Wright's phone finally
started to ring on the second day of the NFL draft
last month. Nonetheless, the quarterback from the
University of Miami had his concerns.
Entering the process, Wright's expectation was that he
would be a late-round selection. But now he saw
quarterbacks projected to go ahead of him falling. This
couldn't be good.
"I was getting calls in the fifth, sixth and seventh
round," Wright said. "But when I saw those guys like
John David [Booty] that weren't going like everybody
else expected, I knew that was going to drop me a
little from where I was expected to go."
And that was enough to drop Wright out of the draft.
Instead, he signed as a free agent with the Vikings.
Wright did so knowing his new team already has four
quarterbacks, including Southern California's Booty, a
fifth-round draft pick who will battle Brooks Bollinger
for the No. 3 job. Tarvaris Jackson is the starter and
veteran Gus Frerotte will be the primary backup.
This left Wright without much margin for error as he
put on a Vikings uniform for the first time last
weekend for a three-day rookie minicamp. Wright's goal
is simple.
"Just to come in and make the team in some form or
fashion ... either [that or] being on the practice
squad," he said. "They've approached me and asked if I
could hold [on field-goal attempts]. I said I'd never
done it but I'd be willing to learn. Really, just being
a part of this organization in any way possible."
The pressure Wright will face is nothing new. The
nation's most highly recruited quarterback coming out
of Monte Vista High in Danville, Calif., in 2003, he
was the Hurricanes' starter for much of the past three
seasons and handled his share of difficulties and
disappointments.
This included a nearly annual turnover at offense
coordinator, as well as a head coaching change. New
Hurricanes coach Randy Shannon decided to start Kirby
Freeman over Wright last season, but he reclaimed the
job after Freeman struggled early on. In 10 games in
2007, Wright completed 141 of 241 passes for 1,747
yards with 12 touchdowns and 14 interceptions. Knee and
ankle injuries forced him to miss one game last season
-- Wright missed the final four games of 2006 because
of a broken thumb -- and slowed him at other times.
The fact Wright had to adjust to the different schemes
put in by Miami's various coordinators could have
slowed him. But Wright doesn't see it that way.
"I think that's an advantage that I have," Wright said.
"It seemed like in every offense I was learning
something new. This offseason is no different. I'm just
excited to come to a new place and get a fresh start
and have fun with the opportunity."
One reason Wright jumped at the chance to sign with the
Vikings was because of his relationship with
quarterbacks coach Kevin Rogers. A candidate to become
Miami's offensive coordinator in December 2006, Rogers
was an assistant at Virginia Tech when Wright arrived
in college, so the two faced each other as conference
rivals. Wright and Rogers hit it off at the NFL
Scouting Combine last February in Indianapolis and
stayed in touch thereafter.
Vikings coach Brad Childress also was impressed by the
6-4, 220-pound Wright at the combine, especially after
getting a long look at him during drills. Wright was
one of the quarterbacks designated to throw passes to
every group, meaning Childress, Rogers and offensive
coordinator Darrell Bevell had plenty of time to study
his mechanics.
As for Wright's future with the Vikings, Childress
said: "His role will define itself. He's played
big-time football so he's been in some of those arenas.
He's got a nice throwing motion and we'll see if we can
get him some snaps in a few preseason games."
(startribune.com)