03-14-2018, 12:30 AM
Case Keenum was never going to return to the Minnesota Vikings.As much as that might have frustrated some, and as well as Keenum played last season, it should have come as a surprise to no one when reports surfaced early Tuesday morning that Keenum would sign with the Denver Broncos when free agency opens at 3 p.m. Wednesday.
As ESPN’s Kevin Seifert pointed out in a tweet on Tuesday morning, “the Vikings walked away from a player who produced one of the top five single-season QB performances in their history.”
No one will argue how well Keenum performed in leading the Vikings to a 13-3 regular-season record, the NFC North title and the conference title game. Keenum did it after taking over for the injured Sam Bradford in the second game of the season and playing for the paltry sum (at least for a quarterback) of $2 million on a one-year contract he signed to serve as a backup.
Keenum, who had never started more than nine games in a season, threw for 3,547 yards, completing 67.6 percent of his passes, with 22 touchdowns, seven interceptions and had a 98.3 rating in 15 games and 14 starts. Keenum’s most memorable moment came on his desperation heave to Stefon Diggs on the final play of the Vikings’ victory over the Saints in the divisional round.
And despite all of this you never got the feeling that Vikings coach Mike Zimmer was sold on Keenum’s ability to repeat that success. When it came to Keenum, the question was whether he had turned a corner and established himself as a potential star or was a backup having a career year.
It was clear Zimmer felt it was the latter.
http://www.1500espn.com/vikings-2/2018/0...attention/
As ESPN’s Kevin Seifert pointed out in a tweet on Tuesday morning, “the Vikings walked away from a player who produced one of the top five single-season QB performances in their history.”
No one will argue how well Keenum performed in leading the Vikings to a 13-3 regular-season record, the NFC North title and the conference title game. Keenum did it after taking over for the injured Sam Bradford in the second game of the season and playing for the paltry sum (at least for a quarterback) of $2 million on a one-year contract he signed to serve as a backup.
Keenum, who had never started more than nine games in a season, threw for 3,547 yards, completing 67.6 percent of his passes, with 22 touchdowns, seven interceptions and had a 98.3 rating in 15 games and 14 starts. Keenum’s most memorable moment came on his desperation heave to Stefon Diggs on the final play of the Vikings’ victory over the Saints in the divisional round.
And despite all of this you never got the feeling that Vikings coach Mike Zimmer was sold on Keenum’s ability to repeat that success. When it came to Keenum, the question was whether he had turned a corner and established himself as a potential star or was a backup having a career year.
It was clear Zimmer felt it was the latter.
http://www.1500espn.com/vikings-2/2018/0...attention/