| Daunte Culpepper long ago convinced coach Dennis Green that he could 
quarterback the Vikings this season.
  As for the Minnesota fans, Culpepper won them over during an exhibition 
season in which he got better with every game. Still, the Vikings' second-year quarterback isn't totally in the clear. He 
hasn't satisfied all of his critics just yet.
  This is Minnesota, after all, and the toughest critics for any Vikings 
quarterback are often standing right in his own huddle.
  Remember, it was wide receivers Cris Carter and Randy Moss who lobbied 
Green to dip into Red McCombs' vault and keep Jeff George after George 
personally rescued the team after a 2-4 start in 1999. However, after a 
preseason performance that was better than Green or anyone else had a right 
to expect, Culpepper is even winning that battle.
  "In my eyes, he's gaining our confidence," Moss said recently.
  Actually, there is only one way for Culpepper to completely gain the 
confidence of his teammates and satisfy the critics massing at the gates 
ready to rip Green should he fail. That's to continue doing in the regular 
season what he did in the preseason, which is show poise in the pocket, use 
his running ability judiciously and get the ball to Moss and Carter as much 
as possible.
  As the only starting quarterback in the NFL who has never taken a 
regular-season snap, however, Culpepper is the league's mystery man. No one 
knows what he'll do once teams start getting judged on wins and losses 
instead of style points.
  At least Culpepper got high marks during the preseason, a quantum leap over 
last year, when he was so inept he could barely take a snap. In the 
equivalent of two full games this summer, the 6-foot-4, 265-pounder completed 
43 of 74 passes for 751 yards and five touchdowns. He was intercepted three 
times, but all three came in the first two games and all three were on tipped 
balls. He had five passes of 50 or more yards and almost half of his 
completions went to Moss and Carter, which made them very happy.
  Culpepper also brought a new dimension to the Vikings offense -- a physical 
runner at quarterback.
  "I think any questions about Daunte Culpepper have been answered," 
halfback Robert Smith said.
  It's probably a bit premature to say that. After all, gaudy preseason 
passing statistics are often the result of short-handed defenses that don't 
bother to disguise their coverages. More than one young quarterback has seen 
preseason poise turn into regular-season rigor mortis when the other guys 
start moving faster and trying harder.
  But at least Culpepper has shown he's not the bumbling disaster who played 
six snaps and attempted no passes as the No. 3 quarterback last year. He's 
proved that he won't automatically kill the Vikings' chances this year and 
that down the road he has the talent to be as good as the other four 
quarterbacks taken near the top of the 1999 draft.
  "Daunte is a very accurate passer," Green said. "You give him the time 
to throw and he can throw the ball very well."
  Green has much invested in Culpepper, whom he drafted with the 11th overall 
pick while others in the organization wanted defensive end Jevon Kearse. Many 
thought Green committed another blunder during the winter when he allowed 
George and Randall Cunningham to join other NFC contenders and annointed 
Culpepper as the starter.
  But Green, who doesn't lack for confidence in his decision-making ability, 
remains steadfast in his belief that the Vikings' quarterback-friendly system 
and surrounding offensive talent will turn Culpepper into a playoff-caliber 
quarterback this year. In fact, he's banking his reputation -- some say his 
job -- on it.
  Others aren't so certain. That's why no one outside of the organization has 
any idea whether the Vikings, who still have more offensive weapons than any 
team this side of the Rams, will finish first or fifth in the NFC Central. 
And despite Culpepper's success during the preseason, they still don't.
  "There are still going to be people doubting," Culpepper said. "But 
hopefully by the end of the year there won't be any."
Tom Oates of the Wisconsin State Journal writes a weekly NFC column for ESPN.com.|  |  |  | Daunte Culpepper is starting to win over his biggest critics. | 
 
 
 
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