Here's what Chat GPT says about Banks...
The consensus on Caleb Banks landing with the Minnesota Vikings at No. 18 is pretty clear: analysts love the traits, but they're split on the value and the medical risk.
Most draft experts see Banks as a classic high-upside Brian Flores pick—a massive, explosive defensive lineman with rare length, power, and interior pass-rush ability. His physical tools are exactly what NFL teams covet. At 6-foot-6 and over 325 pounds, he can collapse pockets and disrupt both the run and pass game. That fit in Minnesota's aggressive defensive front is widely praised. �
Minnesota Vikings +2
Where the debate starts is his health. Banks dealt with significant foot injuries in college and suffered another setback during the pre-draft process. Some evaluators considered him a top-10 talent when healthy; others viewed him as a risky first-round swing because availability matters—a lot. NFL teams generally prefer their first-rounders to have both feet fully operational. �
Daily Norseman +1
Overall, the expert grades have landed mostly in the C-to-B range:
Optimists gave the pick a B, citing elite upside and excellent scheme fit.
More cautious analysts graded it around a C, acknowledging both the talent and the medical concerns.
A few harsher evaluators handed out D grades, believing Minnesota reached relative to safer options still on the board. �
Daily Norseman +1
The best summary is this: Banks could become a dominant interior force and a cornerstone of the Vikings' defensive line—or his injury history could make this selection look risky in hindsight. It's the kind of pick that could look brilliant in two years or questionable by Thanksgiving. Draft season loves that sort of drama.
The consensus on Caleb Banks landing with the Minnesota Vikings at No. 18 is pretty clear: analysts love the traits, but they're split on the value and the medical risk.
Most draft experts see Banks as a classic high-upside Brian Flores pick—a massive, explosive defensive lineman with rare length, power, and interior pass-rush ability. His physical tools are exactly what NFL teams covet. At 6-foot-6 and over 325 pounds, he can collapse pockets and disrupt both the run and pass game. That fit in Minnesota's aggressive defensive front is widely praised. �
Minnesota Vikings +2
Where the debate starts is his health. Banks dealt with significant foot injuries in college and suffered another setback during the pre-draft process. Some evaluators considered him a top-10 talent when healthy; others viewed him as a risky first-round swing because availability matters—a lot. NFL teams generally prefer their first-rounders to have both feet fully operational. �
Daily Norseman +1
Overall, the expert grades have landed mostly in the C-to-B range:
Optimists gave the pick a B, citing elite upside and excellent scheme fit.
More cautious analysts graded it around a C, acknowledging both the talent and the medical concerns.
A few harsher evaluators handed out D grades, believing Minnesota reached relative to safer options still on the board. �
Daily Norseman +1
The best summary is this: Banks could become a dominant interior force and a cornerstone of the Vikings' defensive line—or his injury history could make this selection look risky in hindsight. It's the kind of pick that could look brilliant in two years or questionable by Thanksgiving. Draft season loves that sort of drama.
