
Sam Darnold makes eye-opening admission about how things ended with Vikings
NY Post
Seattle Seahawks quarterback Sam Darnold reflected on his ending with the Minnesota Vikings.
Speaking in a recent interview with The Athletic, Darnold admitted the offseason exit was “tough to swallow,” acknowledging expectations and his own shortcomings down the stretch.
Despite an impressive, overachieving regular season, the Vikings greatly underwhelmed in the playoffs, losing 27-9 to the Los Angeles Rams in the wild-card round.
“For lack of a better term, we laid an egg as an offense,” Darnold said. “And I think, for me personally, that sucks. I felt like we were a really good team, but at the end of the day — and this is gonna sound a little pessimistic — but when you get to the end of it and you don’t win the whole thing, you failed.
“I feel like I could have played way better, to be completely honest with you. I feel I didn’t play up to my standard. I truly feel that way. I feel like if I would have just played better, I would’ve been able to give the team a chance.”
Darnold, who signed a one-year, $10 million “prove-it” deal in March 2024 with Minnesota, became the starter for a team expected to be one of the worst in the NFC and likely to turn to rookie first-rounder JJ McCarthy, who missed the season with an injury, at some point.

Suddenly, someone had hit a rewind button and everyone had been transported back seven months. It was early spring instead of late fall, it was broiling hot outside the arena walls and not freezing cold. Everyone was back at TD Garden. There were 19,156 frenzied fans on their feet begging for blood, poised for the kill.












