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| Tuesday, September 7 | ||||||||||||||||||||
Pro Football Weekly | |||||||||||||||||||||
To best understand how the Vikings felt last January, follow these directions:
Get in a car, a high-performance sports car. Accelerate to 100 mph or more. Drive head-on into a brick wall.
Devastating. The Vikings went from high-flying to ground zero the instant Morten Andersen's field goal gave Atlanta an overtime victory over Minnesota in the NFC title game. After becoming the third team in NFL history to go 15-1, the Vikings became the first such team not to reach the Super Bowl. "It was tough on everybody," said Vikings head coach Dennis Green, who, since the end of last season, has been given the added title of vice president of football operations. "There's not a player, a coach or an owner -- Red (McCombs) or anybody else -- who it wasn't tough on. But you clearly have to put it behind you." That might be the toughest job. But it's not the only one. The Vikings have to overcome the losses of several key components of last year's success. Minnesota lost two coaches this offseason, with offensive coordinator Brian Billick leaving to become the Ravens' head coach, and Chip Myers, who was elevated from QB coach to replace Billick, died from a heart attack in February. They have been replaced by Ray Sherman (offensive coordinator) and Alex Wood (QB coach). The Vikings also lost some key players, though not as many as some other successful teams have (e.g., Pittsburgh). CB Corey Fuller and NT Jerry Ball were the biggest losses, though the team is confident both can be replaced. "I don't think there could be anything better," Green said, "than playing the first game in Atlanta and then playing the last game at Atlanta." The Vikings open the season against the Falcons in Atlanta, the host city for Super Bowl XXXIV. "It's up to us," Green said. Here's a position-by-position look at Minnesota's roster:
Quarterbacks
The Vikings are convinced that with a top flight offensive line, a receiving corps full of deep threats and a stocked backfield, Cunningham can duplicate last year's success. But the even bigger question is whether Cunningham will stay healthy. If he doesn't, the Vikings have Jeff George, who signed for the paltry sum of $400,000. Imagine George's rifle arm and Randy Moss' fleet feet. No. 1 pick Daunte Culpepper has been tabbed as Minnesota's quarterback of the future. Grade: A
Running backs Leroy Hoard? He gets the tough yards, on third down or near the goal line. He had a career-high nine TD runs last year. David Palmer? He's Mr. Third-and-Long. He converted 20 plays for first downs last season, 15 receiving and five running. But the Vikings need to replace the departed Charles Evans at fullback. His role will likely be filled with two or more players, including rookie Jim Kleinsasser, who will line up at both tight end and fullback. Grade: B+
Receivers Add Jake Reed, who is finally healthy after a season marred by a back injury, and the Vikings have three pass catchers with a total of 11 1,000-yard receiving seasons among them. All three are 6-foot-3 or taller. Andrew Glover is an above-average pass-catching tight end. The question defenses must answer is: Which wide receiver do they double-team? It's no wonder the Packers spent their top three draft picks on cornerbacks. Grade: A
Offensive linemen David Dixon is coming back from knee surgery and won't be ready to play every snap until a couple of weeks into the regular season. ORT Korey Stringer has his weight down and looks on the verge of Pro Bowl status himself. The unit's top reserves in-clude veteran OG Corbin Lacina and second-year OT Matt Birk. This is where the Vikings' offensive success begins. Grade: A
Defensive linemen But do the Vikings have enough pass-rushing ability at defensive end to take advantage of the mayhem Randle will cause in the middle? That is the biggest question. Duane Clemons, entering the final year of his rookie contract, has beefed up and faces a make-or-break year. John Burrough, signed during the offseason from Atlanta, will play lots of snaps at both DE positions and rush from tackle on passing downs. Stalin Colinet, starting at left end, can play the run, but can he get to the quarterback? With a new, young starter at one CB spot, the Vikings absolutely need to turn up the pass rush. Can this group of ends do it? Consider that Burrough, Colinet and Clemons have combined for only 17 career starts and 12 sacks among them. Grade: B-
Linebackers On the strong side, Kailee Wong takes over for the departed Dixon Edwards. It remains to be seen if Wong can take on a tight end regularly, but it won't take much to improve on the play Edwards provided last year. Grade: B+
Defensive backs In his second season, Ramos McDonald becomes the full-time starter at left cornerback for the departed Fuller. McDonald is big (5-11, 194 pounds) and fast but was picked on during the preseason. Expect that to continue. Reserves include Antonio Banks, who appears headed for the nickel-DB role, and rookie Kenny Wright, who played relatively well in extended preseason action and could work his way onto the field in the dime defense. Grade: B-
Special teams Palmer returns as the sole return man. While he's not overwhelming, he is very steady. He finished eighth in the NFC with a 10.3-yard punt-return average and ninth with a 23.5-yard kickoff-return average last season. He has scored touchdowns on two punt returns and one kickoff return in his five NFL seasons. Grade: B+
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