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The Minnesota Vikings team
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Minnesota
Vikings 2007
Preview
(My
Sportsbook) - Each team in the NFL has
major questions heading into every season, but
none are more basic than those that confront
the 2007 Minnesota Vikings.
Question 1: Who's going to throw it?
In just two seasons, the top two rungs of the
depth chart have gone from bearing the identifiable
names of Daunte Culpepper and Brad Johnson to
the lower-recall monikers Tavaris Jackson and
Brooks Bollinger. The four quarterbacks in camp
this season have combined for 10 NFL starts,
including two for Jackson, the second-year-pro
who most expect to win the job.
Question 2: Who's going to catch it?
The Vikings' 2006 leader in catches and receiving
yards, Travis Taylor, bolted to Oakland via free
agency. The man who ultimately led the team in
touchdown catches, Marcus Robinson, didn't even
last the '06 season in Minnesota. Tight end Jermaine
Wiggins, who averaged 62 catches a year since
2004, now resides in Jacksonville.
And the organization didn't do a heck of a lot
to fill those voids, bringing in journeyman Bobby
Wade and second-round pick Sidney Rice (South
Carolina), neither of whom looks like the second
coming of Cris Carter or Randy Moss.
Those are the most basic queries that Brad Childress
must answer in his second year in the Twin Cities,
but they're by no means the only ones.
Childress must figure out how to best use rookie
Adrian Peterson and 1,000- yard returnee Chester
Taylor in the running game, and must also address
depth issues along the offensive line.
Defensively, the Vikings have to adjust to life
without coordinator Mike Tomlin, now the head
coach in Pittsburgh, and have to figure out how
to breathe some life into a pass rush that struggled
mightily last year.
The questions are all significant, and if Childress
doesn't make progress toward answering them,
he could soon be facing some question marks about
his job status as well.
Below we take a capsule look at the 2007 edition
of the Minnesota Vikings, with a personnel evaluation
and prognosis included therein:
2006 RECORD: 6-10 (3rd, NFC North)
LAST PLAYOFF APPEARANCE: 2004, lost to Philadelphia,
27-14, in NFC Divisional Playoff
COACH (RECORD): Brad Childress (6-10 in one
season with Vikings)
OFFENSIVE COORDINATOR: Darrell Bevell
DEFENSIVE COORDINATOR: Leslie Frazier
OFFENSIVE STAR: Adrian Peterson, RB (1st Round,
Oklahoma)
DEFENSIVE STAR: Kevin Williams, DT (36 tackles,
5 sacks)
OFFENSIVE TEAM RANKS: 16th rushing, 18th passing,
26th scoring
DEFENSIVE TEAM RANKS: 1st rushing, t31st passing,
14th scoring
FIVE KEY GAMES: at Detroit (9/16), Green Bay
(9/30), Philadelphia (10/28), at San Francisco
(12/9), Chicago (12/17)
KEY ADDITIONS: RB Adrian Peterson (1st Round,
Oklahoma), WR Sidney Rice (2nd Round, South Carolina),
WR Cortez Hankton (from Jaguars), WR Bobby Wade
(from Titans), TE Visanthe Shiancoe (from Giants),
LB Vinny Ciurciu (from Panthers), S Mike Doss
(from Colts), CB Marcus McCauley (3rd Round,
Fresno State)
KEY DEPARTURES: QB Brad Johnson (to Cowboys),
WR Travis Taylor (to Raiders), WR Bethel Johnson
(to Texans), TE Jermaine Wiggins (to Jaguars),
T Mike Rosenthal (to Dolphins), OL Jason Whittle
(to Bills), DT Ross Kolodziej (to Cardinals),
LB Napoleon Harris (to Chiefs), LB Jason Glenn
(retired), CB Fred Smoot (to Redskins)
QB: The battle for quarterback duties is at
best a nominal one during training camp, as second-year
pro Tarvaris Jackson (475 passing yards, 2 TD,
4 INT) will have to either get hurt or experience
a major meltdown to lose the No. 1 job. Jackson
is athletic and smart with a good arm, but is
raw and looked mostly unsure of himself in two
starts at the end of last season. His main competition
is overachiever Brooks Bollinger (146 passing
yards, 1 INT), who appeared in a couple of games
last year after going 2-7 as a starter for a
disaster of a Jets team in 2005. No. 3 quarterback
duties will go to either seventh-round draft
choice and Coastal Carolina product Tyler Thigpen
or Cowboys castoff Drew Henson.
RB: The Vikings caught a break when Oklahoma
running back Adrian Peterson slipped to them
in the No. 7 spot of the April Draft. Don't look
for Minnesota to bring Peterson along slowly
- the explosive back should begin getting a full
platter of touches from the outset of the regular
season. That will mean a lesser role for Chester
Taylor (1216 rushing yards, 6 TD, 42 receptions),
who carried the ball a lot but did not prove
himself to be a No. 1 NFL ball carrier after
arriving in Minnesota from Baltimore last season.
The versatile Mewelde Moore (131 rushing yards,
46 receptions, 1 TD) has an inside track on the
third running back job due to his abilities in
the return game, though Moore's injury history
could also prompt the team to keep another back
such as Ciatrick Fason (99 rushing yards, 1 TD)
or Artose Pinner (190 rushing yards, 3 TD). Fullback
Tony Richardson (13 receptions) is back after
missing seven games with a broken arm last year.
Richard Owens (6 receptions, 1 TD), who can also
play tight end, has a decent chance to stick
as Richardson's backup.
WR/TE: Minnesota had one of the weakest receiving
corps in the league last season, with no player
emerging as a reliable outlet for the team's
quarterbacks. The symbol of this ineptitude was
former first-round pick Troy Williamson (37 receptions),
who had the speed to get open but lacked the
hands to catch the ball. This will be a make-or-break
year for Williamson, who will still be given
a chance to produce after the team made few credible
additions to the receiving ranks. Ex-Bear and
Titan Bobby Wade (33 receptions, 2 TD with Tennessee)
and second-round draft choice Sidney Rice are
the new faces attempting to break through, though
neither will necessarily trouble opposing defensive
coordinators. Holdover Billy McMullen (23 receptions,
2 TD) should also be welcomed back, with fifth-round
draft pick Aundrae Allison and late 2006 addition
Martin Nance (4 receptions) possibly vying for
a starting job. Tight end Jim Kleinsasser (7
receptions) will try to replace the departed
Wiggins, and will be backed by former Giant Visanthe
Shiancoe (12 receptions with New York) and perhaps
holdover Jeff Dugan (8 receptions, 1 TD).
OL: The addition of left guard Steve Hutchinson
did some good things for the Minnesota offense,
particularly within the running game, but the
overall unit wasn't much better than average.
Hutchinson, left tackle Bryant McKinnie, and
center Matt Birk are all top-tier talents, but
there isn't much to recommend the rest of this
group. Right guard Artis Hicks is a fringe NFL
player, and probable right tackle Ryan Cook is
a former college center who will be in trouble
against some of the better pass rushers in the
league. The backup corps will include just two
players with game experience, Anthony Herrera
and Marcus Johnson, and should also feature greeenhorns
like Chase Johnson and Jimmy Martin.
DL: The Vikings were among the worst pass-rushing
teams in the league last year, not an acceptable
trend for a team that used first-round draft
picks on defensive ends in both 2004 and 2005.
Part of the problem was the 14-game absence of
one of those players, Erasmus James, due to knee
surgery. The other was that the regular ends
in 2006, former No. 1 Kenechi Udeze (29 tackles)
and Darrion Scott (46 tackles, 6 sacks), were
stronger against the run than the pass. The Vikings
really need James to make a full recovery and
begin pressuring passers, and will also require
some impact from situational pass rushers Ray
Edwards (10 tackles, 3 sacks) and rookie Brian
Robison. The club is in much better shape on
the interior line, where no one got by tackles
Kevin Williams (36 tackles, 5 sacks) and Pat
Williams (44 tackles, 1 sack) last year. With
both Williams' setting the tone, the Vikings
came up just short of the NFL record for fewest
rushing yards allowed in a season. Spencer Johnson
(15 tackles) and Howard Green will be join Scott
among the backups in the tackle rotation.
LB: The development of Minnesota's linebackers
will be essential to team success, as the group
that starts the 2007 opener will be drastically
different from its 2006 counterpart. Moving from
the weak side to the middle is E.J. Henderson
(109 tackles, 3 sacks, 2 INT), who led Minnesota
in tackles a year ago but had his problems patrolling
the middle earlier in his career. Making his
first appearance on the weak side will be 2006
first-round draft pick Chad Greenway, who needs
to prove himself after missing all of his rookie
year with a knee injury. The most anonymous member
of the unit is Ben Leber (46 tackles, 3 sacks,
1 INT), who is capable but not flashy on the
strong side and will get the nod over the inconsistent
Dontarrious Thomas (31 tackles, 1 sack). If the
Vikings sustain any injuries in the linebacking
group there could be trouble. Two of the LBs
that figure to be kept are Heath Farwell (27
tackles) and Vinny Ciurciu (18 tackles with Carolina),
who are almost exclusively special teams players.
DB: The lack of a pass rush caused major problems
for the Minnesota secondary, which was left out
on a island more often than not in the Vikings'
Cover-2 scheme. There is plenty of talent in
this area, however, with cornerback Antoine Winfield
(97 tackles, 4 INT) at the forefront of the group.
Winfield is outstanding in run support and also
a capable man in coverage. Fellow corner Cedric
Griffin (41 tackles, 2 INT) could be destined
for stardom in his second year in the league,
and the projected nickel back, rookie Marcus
McCauley, looks like a gamer as well. Safeties
Darren Sharper (67 tackles, 4 INT, 1 sack) and
Dwight Smith (78 tackles, 4 INT, 1 sack) are
both in decline but remain rock-solid. If one
of them goes down, the next man in will likely
be former Colt Mike Doss (29 tackles, 2 INT with
Indianapolis), who missed the second half of
2007 with a torn ACL. Players like safeties Greg
Blue (14 tackle) and Tank Williams along with
cornerbacks Charles Gordon (14 tackles), Dovonte
Edwards, and Ronyell Whitaker (24 tackles) were
left to battle for 2-3 remaining d-back jobs.
SPECIAL TEAMS: Kicker Ryan Longwell (21-25 FG)
doesn't have the deepest leg in the world, but
is accurate and has been in a number of big-game
situations during his 10-year NFL career. It
was believed that the Vikings might bring someone
in to test punter Chris Kluwe (42.3 avg.) during
training camp, but that plan apparently never
came together. Long snapper Cullen Loeffler is
set to begin his fourth year in that role. Mewelde
Moore (10.1 punt return avg., 1 TD) will probably
be kept on to field kickoffs, and new addition
Bobby Wade (23.9 kickoff return avg. with Tennessee)
is among the favorites for punt return duties.
PROGNOSIS: Childress must think a great deal
of his schematic abilities, because this offense
is not one that is going to succeed based on
its talent. Peterson will help, but he'll have
trouble becoming a dominating player with no
one to take the pressure off of him (think Willis
McGahee in Buffalo). Minnesota is going to have
to win games on defense, and while there are
some studs on that side of the ball, opponents
should have little trouble exposing the Vikings'
continued weakness against passing attacks. All
told, Minnesota doesn't look ready to challenge
Chicago in the NFC North by any stretch of the
imagination, and if things go really poorly,
Childress and company could find themselves at
the bottom of the division.
Between their inexperience
at QB and lack of playmakers out wide, Minni will
be 1 dimensional no matter how potentially dominant
its ground game is. They have the defense to contend,
and both the division and the conference are weak
enough for a sleeper to emerge, but even with even
with AP toting the rock, the Vikings still may
not have the horses on a fence to stay above water.
So it's another 9-7 season for the Vikings.
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