03-01-2020, 08:22 PM
Six winters ago, after he took a Vikings head coaching job that became available in part because of the 480 points the team allowed the year before, Mike Zimmer surveyed his roster and readied himself for a massive fix-it job.
“We looked at the depth chart,” he said. “It was pretty ugly at that point, so we had to manipulate that.”
The Vikings parted with longtime fixtures Jared Allen and Kevin Williams, signed nose tackle Linval Joseph and cornerback Captain Munnerlyn in the first days of free agency and used the 2014 draft’s ninth overall pick on linebacker Anthony Barr. The moves began an overhaul fueled by draft capital — three first-round picks, two second-rounders and two third-rounders from 2014-18 — that turned the Vikings’ once-sordid defense into a model of consistency.
Of the 10 defenders who started at least 13 games in 2019, half had been with the team for each of Zimmer’s six seasons; the other five had been in Minnesota for five of those years. The Vikings jumped from 32nd to 11th in points allowed during Zimmer’s first season; they haven’t finished lower than ninth since.
But six years of continuity is a remarkably long time in the NFL life cycle, and the Vikings appear headed into Year 7 under Zimmer with clear-eyed realism. Their salary cap situation, pressed tight from years of sizable contracts to keep their own players and a lucrative deal for quarterback Kirk Cousins, could compel tough decisions on a number of veterans, at a time when the Vikings seem inclined to pursue updates for a defense that showed signs of slippage
http://www.startribune.com/entering-seve...568350042/
“We looked at the depth chart,” he said. “It was pretty ugly at that point, so we had to manipulate that.”
The Vikings parted with longtime fixtures Jared Allen and Kevin Williams, signed nose tackle Linval Joseph and cornerback Captain Munnerlyn in the first days of free agency and used the 2014 draft’s ninth overall pick on linebacker Anthony Barr. The moves began an overhaul fueled by draft capital — three first-round picks, two second-rounders and two third-rounders from 2014-18 — that turned the Vikings’ once-sordid defense into a model of consistency.
Of the 10 defenders who started at least 13 games in 2019, half had been with the team for each of Zimmer’s six seasons; the other five had been in Minnesota for five of those years. The Vikings jumped from 32nd to 11th in points allowed during Zimmer’s first season; they haven’t finished lower than ninth since.
But six years of continuity is a remarkably long time in the NFL life cycle, and the Vikings appear headed into Year 7 under Zimmer with clear-eyed realism. Their salary cap situation, pressed tight from years of sizable contracts to keep their own players and a lucrative deal for quarterback Kirk Cousins, could compel tough decisions on a number of veterans, at a time when the Vikings seem inclined to pursue updates for a defense that showed signs of slippage
http://www.startribune.com/entering-seve...568350042/