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Casey Sapio-USA TODAY Sports

The Minnesota Vikings, like any other team, have been scouring the country to find hidden gems or find flaws in presumed diamonds, and a good number of players have seen their draft stock fall or rise on Minnesota's board since then. Though we don't know what general manager Rick Spielman's board ultimately looks like, what the pro days have revealed so far should be telling.

The Vikings have expressed serious interest or interviewed a number of players during pro days around the country, and from culling that list, we can identify who the Vikings invested the most scrutiny in and whether or not that scrutiny helped or hurt those prospects.

Media speculation isn't 100 percent accurate. Though quarterback Teddy Bridgewater's pro day was, according to consensus, a massive flop, Minnesota offensive coordinator Norv Turner thought he looked good. Nevertheless, a look into pro day performances will at least give us a better idea of whom the Vikings value and how that value changed.

Because of the nature of pro days and team interest, there are always going to be more risers than fallers (after all, teams tend to be interested in players they think will do well, and pro days enable better performances), but that helps to focus the Vikings' general draft profile and who they may target.