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Who are the Starting Corners Going to Be?
#1
At of the end of day 2 in the draft, the Vikings have the following corners on their roster:

Roster Locks:
Cameron Dantzler
Jeff Gladney
Holton Hill
Mike Hughes

Borderline:
Kris Boyd (Best chance to make the roster out of this group)
Mark Fields
Kemon Hall
Nate Meadors
Marcus Sayles

And there are three starting corner spots LCB, RCB, & NB (slot). To start the conversation, I'll suggest:

LCB Gladney
RCB Hill
NB Hughes

I feel like Hughes should be starting on the outside, but I don't see who else would be a fit in the slot. I also would not be shocked, if the Vikings drafted another corner or two on day 3. What do you think the Vikings starting corner situation will/should look like?
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#2
rcb hill nb 
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#3
"It's a young man's game"

The leader in the club house with 5 starts is Hughes. Next is Cheech Hill. I know Boyd got some live reps too. Gladney played for an excellent D coach at TCU, so at worst he is the Dime. I think the starting 3 in September might look different from the starting 3 the back half of the year. Both draft picks seem to be adept in multiple schemes and techniques. 

Gun to my head, Hill, Hughes, and Gladney is hard to argue against. Gladney shadowed the #1, so he can play anywhere. I think Hughes in the slot makes sense as he has a leg up in experience, but if we truly keep with the trend of more zone, experience matters less. 

Man, we picked the wrong year to completely revamp the entire starting CB group. 
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#4
Vikings are going to be looking for last round CB vet cuts come late August.
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#5
Kirkpatrick is still available and we have cap...sooooo...I called it in...end of story...
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#6
Adding a veteran on a 1-year deal would be nice. I believe Kirkpatrick was cut, so he wouldn't count against compensation picks.
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#7
Quote: @"BarrNone55" said:
Kirkpatrick is still available and we have cap...sooooo...I called it in...end of story...
Beat me to it...Adding Dre to the kiddie pool mix is really important this year. 
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#8
Zimmer is just going to have to get over his anti-rookie bias. Most NFL teams have no problem starting rookies in the secondary.

With that in mind, I'll say...Hughes and Gladney. In nickel, Hill comes in outside and moves Hughes inside. In dime, Hill and Dantzler outside, with Hughes and Gladney inside. 
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#9
Quote: @MaroonBells said:
Zimmer is just going to have to get over his anti-rookie bias. Most NFL teams have no problem starting rookies in the secondary.  


Mike Zimmer has three drafted cornerbacks to develop quicklyTo no surprise, the Vikings drafted two cornerbacks with their first four picks and three in the top eight. Mike Zimmer must nurture development in a group of youngsters, with no formal offseason very likely.
Mike Zimmer has earned the reputation as a cornerback whisperer when it comes to molding young players at that position. The Vikings are banking on his magic touch in rebuilding on the fly a group that is young and inexperienced.
To no great surprise, the Vikings selected two cornerbacks with their first four draft picks and three total in their top eight. Zimmer’s standard quip when asked how many corners he needs — “just one more,” the head coach jokes — has never been more on brand than now.
The Vikings lacked bodies at cornerback before the draft. They solved that issue this weekend. Now, Zimmer must nurture rapid development in a group of mostly unproven youngsters while facing the real possibility of no formal offseason and knowing his defense will encounter a gantlet of top-tier quarterbacks this season, including Tom Brady, Drew Brees, Russell Wilson, Deshaun Watson and Aaron Rodgers all in road games.
The whisperer has a big challenge on his plate.
If ranking positions by importance, cornerback falls second or third on that list in this era of air-it-out offense. It’s awfully hard to hide a bad or inexperienced cornerback. They stick out like a fluorescent yellow car on a freeway.
The Vikings are basically starting from scratch after losing their top three cornerbacks on the depth chart in Xavier Rhodes, Trae Waynes and Mackensie Alexander this offseason. Their departures weren’t unexpected, but replacing them falls on the development of guys still trying to gain their footing in the league.
Mike Hughes, the presumptive No. 1 corner, suffered a broken vertebra in his neck at the end of last season. The team expects a full recovery and Hughes has shown promise when he’s on the field, but the former first-round pick’s résumé includes a torn ACL and a neck injury in his first two seasons.
Holton Hill and Kris Boyd are two candidates for increased roles, but it’s hard to know if they are capable of being full-time starters.
“We’ve got a lot of young depth there,” General Manager Rick Spielman said. “Now we’re going to add another layer of depth into that corner position. We feel very confident we’ve got a lot of young talent there to develop.”
First-round pick Jeff Gladney of TCU seems to fit Zimmer’s blueprint for that position. He’s tough, aggressive, willing to challenge receivers. He might be thrust into a starting role from Day 1.
Zimmer and Spielman trusted their evaluation and not their stopwatch in selecting Mississippi State’s Cameron Dantzler in the third round.
Dantzler ran a slow 40-yard dash at the scouting combine, but the Vikings focused more on how he performed in games, especially against top SEC competition, which should outweigh measurables. He didn’t look slow when covering LSU’s big-play receivers.
Zimmer is notoriously tough on young corners, but he won’t have much choice but to rely on them this season. Unless, of course, the team signs a veteran free agent who gets cut before or during training camp, which would be a smart option for Spielman to consider. That position room would benefit from veteran experience and leadership.
Uncertainty surrounding the pandemic and when teams will be allowed to convene for workouts complicates this entire discussion. Young players will lose valuable developmental time, on the field and in meeting rooms. Zimmer also has a new defensive backs coach after veteran Jerry Gray moved on.
As a position, cornerback is Zimmer’s baby. He spends a lot of time in practice watching and instructing and correcting that unit. He has quite a project on his hands.
https://www.startribune.com/mike-zimmer-...569956722/
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#10
Honestly, this is Holton Hill's chance to be legit. Step up, stay clean, play well and start all year long at CB would go along way toward the organization trusting him to a much better extent. And he's on the last year of his contract, he'll be a RFA in 2021. 

Pull your head out of you ass, kid. You can undue all the bad this season and have a great future. The guy just turned 23 years old in March. If he's got any 'want to' and foresight/maturity in him, the bulb will go on this year. 

Best case scenario for the team is Hughes and Hill, with Gladney in at nickel/slot as starters/contributors for all of 2020. Any vet signed now will be a lesser than talent, but still important for depth/trust. 
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