Vikings’ long shot rookie is making waves to the point where he found himself on a list every undrafted free agent wants to be on

The Vikings’ receiver room is one of the most talented groups in the NFL and one long shot rookie is forcing himself up the ladder.

Evan Winter NFL Managing Editor
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Dillon Bell is turning heads at Vikings practice, so far.
Dec 6, 2025; Atlanta, GA, USA; Georgia Bulldogs wide receiver Dillon Bell (86) looks on after the game against the Alabama Crimson Tide during the 2025 SEC Championship game at Mercedes-Benz Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Brett Davis-Imagn Images

Justin Jefferson, Jordan Addison, and Jauan Jennings are about as good a wide receiver trio as it gets in the NFL and surprisingly enough, an undrafted free agent rookie is currently on pace to make the room even better.

Dillon Bell, the former Georgia wideout, has turned heads throughout spring practices to the point where ESPN recently named him the Vikings’ biggest surprise of the offseason. That’s quite the feat for a player who didn’t produce eye-popping college numbers: Over the course of 56 games with the Bulldogs, Bell recorded just 119 receptions for 1,269 yards and 11 touchdowns.

It was eye-opening to see Bell — an undrafted rookie from Georgia — working extensively with the second team during drills. That placement spoke volumes about his initial impression with Vikings coaches, who in essence were putting him in the (early) mix to be the No. 4 receiver behind Justin Jefferson, Jordan Addison and Jauan Jennings.

kevin seifert

ESPN

Regardless of production, the raw tools are there. Bell checks in at around 6-foot, 210 pounds and he ran a 4.5-second 40-yard dash at the combine. He also recorded a 39-inch vertical jump, and a 126-inch broad jump. The 4.5 40 time isn’t ideal for receivers, but we all know 40 times aren’t the end-all be-all. I mean, people held Jerry Rice’s and Jaxon Smith-Njigba’s 40 times against them, and I think it’s safe to say both receivers have turned out just fine in their respective NFL careers.

The momentum has placed Bell in line to make the Vikings’ 53-man roster and there’s a clear path to get there.

Dillon Bell can certainly claim one of the WR4-WR6 positions

Granted, the pads haven’t even come on yet, but that doesn’t take anything away from Bell’s performance over the last few weeks. Training camp will obviously increase the intensity and physicality to the proper levels, but there’s a realistic world where Bell fits right in and makes the roster.

As Seifert mentioned above, Bell has been working extensively with the second team, which puts him right in line for that WR4-WR6 range. When you look at the guys past the trio of Jefferson, Addison, and Jennings, there’s not much to write home about. Minnesota has a lot of young players competing for those spots.

In fact, including Bell, six of the Vikings’ 13 receiver spots belong to UDFA rookies. No one has a true advantage when it comes to experience, leaving the door wide open for all of them.

Special teams will make or break Bell’s roster chances

Here’s the thing about being a wide receiver in that 4-6 range: you have to play special teams. Teams trot out five receivers less than 1% of the time in the NFL. Even four-receiver sets aren’t common. Therefore, the receivers in those depth spots need to find snaps elsewhere, and that’s on ‘teams.

If Bell can come out and show he’s competent on special teams, you better believe he’ll be a roster lock, especially if he keeps up his practice performances. He doesn’t need to be a special teams ace, either. He just needs to prove he can contribute there, and the rest should take care of itself.

The path is there. Bell just needs to keep doing what he’s doing, and he should find himself on the Vikings roster when Week 1 rolls around.