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Good read (s) on P. Peterson
#1


Patrick Peterson and the Vikings are betting on each other in 2021

"We [had] talked about him during our free agency meetings, but didn't think we would have a legitimate shot," Spielman said Monday. "And then next thing I know, I talk to [VP of football operations] Rob Brzezinski — 'Can we figure this out to make it work from a cap planning standpoint? But most importantly, we need to get this player on our football team.' Joel and Rob were able to make that work; I think this thing came together in about two hours."

Spielman sent Peterson, an eight-time Pro Bowler and three-time first-team All-Pro, the Vikings' free agent recruiting video and called him from the Atlanta airport. Mike Zimmer, who'd talked with Peterson before the 2011 draft, also gave the 30-year-old corner a call last Wednesday.
"Deion Sanders, Leon Hall, Terence Newman, Johnathan Joseph, the list goes on — he's able to help further those guys' careers," Peterson said of Zimmer, whose Bengals took receiver A.J. Green a spot ahead of Peterson in the first round in 2011. "And if you look at all those guys' careers, those guys played 13-14-plus years, so Coach Zim definitely has something he's giving those guys to not only help prepare their career into new heights but also help their longevity as well."
The one-year, $8 million deal Peterson officially signed Monday kicked off an unlikely marriage between a corner looking to rejuvenate his career after a decade in Arizona and a defense that stumbled from lofty heights during a hasty rebuild in 2020. Had things gone differently for both sides, Peterson might not have been available to the Vikings, and they might not have needed him.
Instead, the corner that hopes to play another six years and the regime that wants to stick around Minnesota for the foreseeable future will team up for a season that could hold the key to both sets of plans.
"I feel great. I'm in shape," Peterson said. "My mind feels young, my body feels young, and I just want to continue to grind. Whenever you lose that drive, that focus of that desire of not wanting to work out, of not wanting to go to work, that's when I've decided that will be the call-it point for me. At this moment right now, I feel unbelievably great. My shape is unbelievable, and I just want to continue playing at a high level."
Peterson said Monday he believes "the plan is me playing cornerback," rather than shifting to safety to play alongside Harrison Smith. He'd be asked to help mold second-year corners Jeff Gladney, Cameron Dantzler and Harrison Hand, but staying at the position would also give him a chance to bounce back from a two-year stretch where his work as a cover corner slipped.
According to Pro Football Focus, Peterson gave up a passer rating of more than 100 on balls thrown his way in 2019 and 2020, as his eight-year streak of Pro Bowl selections ended. He was suspended for the first six games of the 2019 season for violating the league's performance-enhancing substance policy. He gave up five touchdowns last season (his most since 2014, according to PFF) as Arizona lost five of its last seven to miss the playoffs.
"I don't think the last two seasons definitely went as planned," he said. "Having the year before to serve that six-game suspension, last year having little ebbs and flows throughout the season. I can't really point at what caused that or whatever. I just know there's long seasons and things happen throughout the season to where you're not necessarily getting thrown off track or anything like that. You just have to find ways.
"With me playing 150-some games, I've been through worse times. I've been through some good times. I've been through the bad times. Just as long as I find a way to stick to the script and fall back on my fundamentals, I know I'll be OK. So now having a fresh start, new scenery, fresh air, I think it's going to be great for me."
The Vikings bet a sizable portion of their available salary cap space on a bounce-back year from Peterson, who made his own wager on Zimmer's history with corners late in their careers.
Should it all work out, the Vikings might derive a similar benefit from Peterson as they got from Newman, who steadied a young cornerback group, played multiple positions and helped develop players like Xavier Rhodes, Trae Waynes and Mackensie Alexander from 2015-17. He also spent a year as the Vikings' assistant defensive backs coach after his retirement in the 2018 training camp.
"I've been in the league for 11 years now," Peterson said. "I've seen guys come in and take practice like a joke on a Wednesday or a Thursday. The next thing you know, that comes up on Sunday because on Wednesday you didn't take it serious. It's just little things like that. Taking the walk through seriously because now, in today's game, you can't be out on the field as long as you were as far as the hitting. You have more walk throughs now so you have to take advantage of those types of things."
The Vikings are wagering that his experience can make up for what they were missing last year, and that they can provide him with what he might have lacked.
"Usually, when you bet on guys that have the pedigree that he has," Spielman said, "you're going to get some outstanding football going forward."
https://www.startribune.com/patrick-pete...600037257/

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#2
I like that it's a 1-year deal. Huge incentive for P2 to bounce back and get paid more next season. And if he has the kind of year DBs of his age often do in new surroundings (especially with Zimmer), he might just want to stay in Minnesota in '22 when Barr's money goes off the books. 
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#3
Ex-Packers star LeRoy Butler says Vikings picked up Patrick Peterson to follow Davante Adams ‘all over the place’In his last four games against the Vikings, Green Bay receiver Davante Adams has 41 catches for 431 yards and five touchdowns. Perhaps there is now a way to slow him down. 
The Vikings on Wednesday night agreed to terms with eight-time Pro Bowl cornerback Patrick Peterson, and the team announced Thursday his deal will become official when he passes a physical. Peterson tweeted on Thursday he was in the Bahamas and a source said he likely won’t be in Minnesota until Monday to finalize his deal. 
“I think the reason why they signed him was for Davante Adams,’’ former Packers star safety LeRoy Butler said in a phone interview. “They had the babies, the two young corners (last season in Cameron Dantzler and Jeff Gladney). Now, you play (Green Bay) two times a year, and they can put a guy on (Adams) to follow him all over the place, and feel good about it.’’ 
Peterson, who agreed to a one-year deal worth as much as $10 million, obviously will be a starter and has been a cornerback throughout his 10-year career. The other starting corner could be Dantzler with Gladney possibly being the nickel back. 
Then again, Butler, now a radio analyst for Milwaukee’s WOSQ-FM, brought up another possibility. Peterson, who turns 31 in July, showed signs last season of slowing down. Butler pointed to hall of famers Deion Sanders and Charles Woodson shifting from cornerback late in their careers. Sanders moved to nickel back and Woodson to safety. 
“He could go the Deion Sanders and Charles Woodson route,’’ said Butler, who played for the Packers from 1990-2001 and was a finalist earlier this year for the hall of fame. “You could always move him to safety if they want to keep the babies out on the corner. He could play the safety spot with Anthony Harris gone, and I think he’d be a fantastic safety. And if you want to put him on Davante sometimes, you can do that, too.’’ 
Harris, a starting safety the past 2 ½ years, is not expected to return as a free agent. That would leave the Vikings in need of starter alongside five-time Pro Bowl selection Harrison Smith. 
Regardless of where he plays, Butler said Peterson should be a good tutor for Minnesota’s many young defensive backs and a good example for all the players on the team. 
“When I saw Reggie White come through the door in Green Bay, everybody stepped their game up,’’ Butler said of the future hall of fame defensive end arriving in 1993. “I mean, guys studied and guys didn’t hang out as much, didn’t drink as much. …. That’s what Patrick Peterson can do for guys. You’re talking about a hall of famer coming through the door.’’ 
Peterson was named to the Pro Bowl in each of his first eight seasons, but hasn’t made it since 2018. Butler doesn’t deny that he slipped last season, when he was ranked by Pro Football Focus No. 90 out of 136 NFL cornerbacks, but he still likes the move by the Vikings. 
“It’s a risk worth taking,’’ said Butler, who was a cornerback for his first two NFL seasons before moving to safety. “I think he has two years left easily to play at a high level.’’
https://www.twincities.com/2021/03/18/ex...the-place/
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#4
Patrick Peterson signing fixes mistake Vikings made last yearThere was an assumption last offseason that the Vikings would address their need at cornerback by signing at least one veteran free agent. Xavier Rhodes, whose play had declined drastically, had been let go and Trae Waynes and Mackensie Alexander left for Cincinnati as free agents. This left the Vikings with serious question marks at an importation position.
The Vikings had Mike Hughes returning but he hadn’t played a full season in his first two years because of injury. Minnesota added Jeff Gladney with its second pick of the first round and then selected Cam Dantzler in the third round.
What the Vikings lacked was the type of stabilizing veteran that coach Mike Zimmer liked to have at corner. Zimmer had been hired in 2014 largely because of his ability to coach defense and work with defensive backs. In his second season with the Vikings, Zimmer brought in Terence Newman at the age of 37 and kept him around for three years in part because he served as a coach on the field.
So it seemed odd that Zimmer was suddenly going to rely on three younger corners to be his starters. (We’re including the nickel corner as a starter.) The guess was that Zimmer thought veteran safeties Harrison Smith and Anthony Harris could make up for the inexperience but that proved to be wrong. Hughes was lost to a season-ending neck injury after six games and while Gladney and Dantzler (when healthy) got valuable experience, they had many of the typical rookie struggles going against some of the NFL’s top quarterbacks.
Zimmer, clearly realizing he had misjudged things during a 7-9 season in which the Vikings’ defense frequently struggled, made sure he didn’t repeat the same mistake in 2021. Minnesota signed veteran corner Patrick Peterson to a reported one-year, $10 million deal on Wednesday night as free agency officially started. The Vikings had swung and missed on some of their top targets during the legal tampering period that began Monday.
Peterson’s name will generate plenty of excitement because of his accomplishments during his first 10 NFL seasons with the Arizona Cardinals. The fifth-overall pick in the 2011 draft, Peterson had 28 interceptions in 154 games (all starts), including a career-high seven in 2012. He played in all 16 games in nine of his seasons, missing six in 2019 when he was suspended for violating the NFL’s performance-enhancing drug policy. Peterson, who will turn 31 on July 11, went to eight consecutive Pro Bowls, has been an All-Pro three times and was named to the All-Decade Team (2010-2019) by the Pro Football Hall of Fame.
Peterson, Gladney and Dantzler are likely to open the season as the Vikings’ starting corners, meaning Peterson can serve as a coach on the field while also playing an important role in Zimmer’s defensive scheme. Peterson figures to have plenty of motivation as well. The Vikings face the NFC West, Peterson’s old division, playing his former team in Arizona on a yet-to-be determined date.
If Peterson has the type of season the Vikings are hoping he does, he will hit the free agent market again next March when teams have more salary cap room than the pandemic-impacted $182.5 million of 2021. The Peterson signing comes after the Vikings failed to land cornerback Shaquill Griffin, who left Seattle to sign a three-year, $44.5 million deal with the Jacksonville Jaguars.
So what’s the Vikings’ next move? They continue to look for help at defensive end and guard but their cap space is an issue. The Vikings have about $5.6 million in room, according to Over the Cap. Much of that will have to go toward their draft class, but more could be made available by negotiating an extension with Smith.
https://www.skornorth.com/vikings-sign-v...-contract/

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#5
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#6
^ He looks *good* in purple.
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#7
Patrick Peterson has a career grade of 91.8 in zone coverage (
@PFF) which ranks 2nd in the entire NFL (min. 100 targets).

Arizona ran the 4th most man-coverage in 2020. The Vikings were 28th.

Could this be a perfect match?
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#8
Quote: @"BarrNone55" said:
Patrick Peterson has a career grade of 91.8 in zone coverage (
@PFF) which ranks 2nd in the entire NFL (min. 100 targets).

Arizona ran the 4th most man-coverage in 2020. The Vikings were 28th.

Could this be a perfect match?
He's going to do a lot better with Minnesota than he did the last couple years, but I think we ran more zone in 2020 because we had to--because we had young corners and no pass rush. It will be interesting to see what Zim does in terms of man/zone with P2 and those young corners in their 2nd seasons. 
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#9
Quote: @MaroonBells said:
@"BarrNone55" said:
Patrick Peterson has a career grade of 91.8 in zone coverage (
@PFF) which ranks 2nd in the entire NFL (min. 100 targets).

Arizona ran the 4th most man-coverage in 2020. The Vikings were 28th.

Could this be a perfect match?
He's going to do a lot better with Minnesota than he did the last couple years, but I think we ran more zone in 2020 because we had to--because we had young corners and no pass rush. It will be interesting to see what Zim does in terms of man/zone with P2 and those young corners in their 2nd seasons. 
Quote:
  With Pierce and Tomlinson clogging up the running lanes, I think that opens up more options for our safeties.  So who knows what he has planned, but it should work better with some veteran players than a bunch of rookies and backups.
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