McShay also noted that while Oliver had a good week in Indianapolis at the Combine, he's interested to see how the Texas native performs at his Pro Day on March 28.

Because Oliver did not participate in on-field agility drills at the Combine, McShay said teams will be watching how he performs in the 40-yard dash and various shuttle drills.

"All the talk was with his size, and what he was going to weigh-in as and is he heavier and is he going to move well? I thought he answered some of those questions because he's not 6-1 or shorter … he's 6-2 and 287 pounds," McShay said. "He does have shorter arms … just under 32 inches … but you look at what he was able to do. The 32 [reps] on the bench press, 36-inch vertical jump … which is very good … 10-foot broad jump, which is very good. He did those things.

"What I'm interested to see in Houston [at his Pro Day], does he get back down to 275 [pounds] in order to run? He is going to move around, or did he choose not to run because he wants to keep working on it and run at his Pro Day?" McShay added. "We'll see with the agility stuff, but obviously by not running a 40 and the 3-cone and the shuttles … I'm not saying he's hiding anything, but that's the one thing he didn't answer. 'OK, he can bulk up, now can he keep the weight on and run?' "

Here are four other topics McShay addressed in his ESPN conference call:

1. Alabama's Jonah Williams

Much like NFL Network analyst Daniel Jeremiah, McShay was asked whether or not he sees Jonah Williams as a tackle or guard in the NFL.

McShay said Williams, who played both left and right tackle in three years for the Crimson Tide, could excel at either spot, although he sees him primarily as a tackle.

McShay also noted that Williams, a First-Team All-American in 2019, is one of the more complete offensive linemen in this draft class.

"He's consistent, he's patient in pass protection … he doesn't have the long arms, obviously, but he plays with good balance," McShay said. "He's a natural bender, and it's a guy that's lunging a lot or getting off balance.

"He went up against [Clemson defensive end] Clelin Ferrell and he had the one play where he was off balance and got pushed back, but for the most part I thought he won that 1-on-1 and did a really good job," McShay added. "And he comes in with starting experience on both sides, which is important as well because not all guys can play both sides. Some guys are just more comfortable in their sets kicking back with their left foot as opposed to their right foot. That he can play both sides is a positive."

Williams was projected to the Vikings on numerous occasions in the latest Mock Madness.

2. Garrett Bradbury on the rise

North Carolina State's Garrett Bradbury was also linked to the Vikings in the Mock Madness above.

McShay also raved about Bradbury, who played center and guard for the Wolfpack. McShay believes the lineman is an immediate starter in the NFL and mocked him to the Titans with the 19th overall pick.