Wednesday, December 25, 2024

All - Time Christmas Day Roster

Here's some holiday fun from the fine folks at Quirky Research.

All-Time Christmas Day Roster

Offense

Quarterback
Paul Christman

Running back
Toy Ledbetter

Receivers
Jack Snow
Jesus Wilson
Ike Frankian

Left Tackle
Scott Bergold

Left Guard
Bill Murrah

Center
Pat Elflein

Right Guard
Ben Garland

Right Tackle
Red Sleight

Tight End
Kyle Rudolph

Defense

Defensive end
Frostee Rucker

Defensive tackle
Santana Dotson

Defensive tackle
Jared Clauss

Defensive end
Dadi Nicolas

Linebackers
Frank Kring
Ed Pine
Mathias Kiwanuka

Cornerbacks
Merrill Noel
Daven Holly

Safeties
Gaynell Tinsley
Goose Gonsoulin

Special Teams

Kicker
Sonny Winters

Punter
Rick Partridge

Kick Returner/Punt Returner
Leo Petree

Coach
Pete Carroll

Happy Holidays, Everyone!

Tuesday, December 24, 2024

Minnesota Vikings Week 16 Superlatives

The Minnesota Vikings edged the Seattle Seahawks on Sunday, 27-24. It was very much a team win as the offense, defense, and special teams all made the plays that needed to be made. Here are some of the players that made the Vikings 13th win possible. 

Offensive Player of the Game
Justin Jefferson, WR

Justin Jefferson was the best player on the field. He often is. When the Vikings needed a big play and Sam Darnold needed a target, Jefferson was there. The biggest was the 39-yard game winning touchdown with just under four minutes to play. 

Jefferson’s numbers
10 catches
144 yards
2 TDs (14,39)

The ten catches and 144 yards were season highs. 

Justin Jefferson is the best receiver in the league. 

Defensive Players of the Game
Andrew Van Ginkel, OLB
Dallas Turner., OLB
Theo Jackson, S

It’s easy and fun to keep eyes on Andrew Van Ginkel on every snap. It started with the first game of the season, when he snagged the first of his two pick-6s. It’s been a while since he’s had one of those but his next big play always feels a snap away. The Seahawks zipped down the field on their touchdown drives. Van Ginkel was a big reason they didn’t get a fourth. His two fourth quarter sacks were huge. Both essentially ended two Seahawks scoring threats. 

Dallas Turner and Theo Jackson get mentions for their big interceptions. Turner’s interception was the first of his NFL career. Playing in place of injured Harrison Smith, Jackson’s interception sealed the big win for the Vikings. 

Special Teams Player of the Game
Will Reichard, K
Ryan Wright, P

Will Reichard was great again. The rookie kicker made all five of his kicks. He kicked two field goals (52,48) and three extra points. One of which was from 47 yards due to a personal foul penalty. Thanks to the rookie kicker I no longer fear every extra point and field goal attempt. 

In his third season with the Vikings, this might have been Ryan Wright’s best game. From a team standpoint, six punts is a little much. Wright totaled 300 yards on those six punts for a 50-yard average. Four of those punts pinned the Seahawks inside their own 20-yard line. 

Punt 1: 51-yard punt, fielded at the nine-yard line and returned to the 13. 
Punt 2: 54-yard punt, fielded at the 22-yard line. A penalty brought a big return back to the 12. 
Punt 3: 63-yard punt, fielded at the one-yard line and returned to the 12. 
Punt 4: 38-yard punt, fair-caught at eight-yard line.
Punt 5: 56-yard punt, fielded at 17-yard line and returned to 32.
Punt 6: 38-yard punt, out of bounds at 17-yard line. 




Monday, December 23, 2024

Vikings - Seahawks

The Minnesota Vikings did just enough things right to edge the Seattle Seahawks, 27-24. For the past decade, things haven’t really gone the Vikings way in Seattle. It was nice to see that change. With huge division games against the Green Bay Packers and Detroit Lions, this felt like it could be a trap game for the Vikings. It nearly was. 

The Seahawks are a tough, talented team. Entering the game at 8-6, they are competing for the NFC West title. Despite this loss, they still are. Seattle is always a tough place to play. This was the ninth time the Vikings played the Seahawks in Seattle. It was only their third win. They’d lost the previous five games. Overall, the Seahawks lead the series 13-7. There were many reasons to worry about the Seahawks. Russell Wilson and Pete Carroll may no longer be leading the team but the Seahawks will always be one of the most annoying teams in the league. It’s real fun seeing the Vikings beat them. 

Turnovers are often the difference in football games. They were in this game. The Vikings offense had zero giveaways. Six punts is a little much. Even worse, four of those came on three-and-outs. Credit the Seahawks defense. Still, the Vikings offense didn’t hand the Seahawks the ball. The Vikings defense took the ball from the Seahawks twice. The first (Dallas Turner interception) was turned into three points. The second (Theo Jackson interception) sealed the game. The Vikings should’ve had four interceptions as Shaq Griffin and Blake Cashman had the ball in their hands but couldn’t complete the catch. 

After Turner’s interception was turned into a field goal, the Vikings held a ten-point second lead. It felt like they were on the verge of pulling away from the Seahawks. Unfortunately, that didn’t happen. Instead, Geno Smith got hot. He led the Seahawks on a crisp touchdown drive before the end of the half. They added a field goal to start the second half. Just like that, a 10-point lead was gone. The game was tied at 17. 

Geno Smith was more Joe Montana than Geno Smith on the Seahawks three touchdown drives. He completed all 15 of the passes that he threw on those drives. That passing consistency opened up the running game. Those possessions were outliers. On the possessions that didn’t end in touchdowns, the Seahawks could do little against the Vikings defense. It was all punts and interceptions. The Seahawks and their fans seemed to think they had the game won when Smith hit tight end AJ Barner for a four-yard touchdown with just over four minutes to play. The score gave the Seahawks a 24-20 lead. 

Then it was Sam Darnold time.

Sam Darnold was clutch when the Vikings needed it most. After the Seahawks took the late lead, he only needed 30 seconds to take it back. A key to the quick drive was the officials finally calling a facemask penalty against a Vikings opponent. Darnold’s facemask was clearly grabbed and the officials finally, thankfully saw it. The penalty gave the Vikings a first down on the Seahawks 39-yard line. Darnold then hit Justin Jefferson for a 39-yard touchdown. Vikings now had the lead, 27-24. If there was a problem with the big drive and touchdown, it was that they scored so fast. It would’ve been nice if they had drained much more than 30 seconds off the clock. It forced the Vikings defense to handle a couple, final opportunities for the Seahawks.

To close the game, the Vikings defense forced the Seahawks to attempt a 60-yard field goal with two minutes to play. The kick was short. Unable to get a first down and run out the clock, the Vikings had to give the ball back to the Seahawks with about a minute to play. Theo Jackson intercepted Smith to seal the win. 

Theo Jackson got playing time because Harrison Smith missed the game with a foot injury. With his experience, versatility, and talent, Smith is a big part of the Vikings defense. He was missed but Jackson is a talented player. He’d be a starter on several teams. It was nice to see him get the interception that sealed the game. The Vikings are now 13-2 on the season and riding an eight-game win streak. To get those 13 wins a lot of different players have stepped up with big plays and big games. This week, Theo Jackson was one of those players. 

13-2. Win the final two games and the Minnesota Vikings are NFC North champions and grab the #1 seed in the NFC. First up, the Green Bay Packers come to US Bank next Sunday. 



Sunday, December 22, 2024

Seattle Seahawks All - Time Team

The Minnesota Vikings travel to Seattle this weekend for a big game against the Seahawks. The Seahawks have an interesting history. It’s interesting because they’ve spent significant time in the AFC and the NFC since they entered the league in 1976. The Seahawks were an NFC West team in 1976. Then, they flipped to the AFC West in 1977. The Seahawks remained in the AFC West for nearly 25 years. Realignment put them in the NFC West in 2001. The past 24 years have been the team’s most successful. They’ve had three Super Bowl appearances (2005, 2013, 2014) with one win (2013). Despite having a team for nearly 30 years, their fan base made their first real appearance during this run. 

Offense

Quarterback
Russell Wilson

Running Back
Shaun Alexander
Marshawn Lynch 

Fullback
Mack Strong

Wide Receivers
Steve Largent
Doug Baldwin

Tight End
Jimmy Graham

Offensive Tackles
Walter Jordan
Duane Brown

Offensive Guards
Steve Hutchinson
Chris Gray

Center
Robbie Tobeck

Defense

Defensive Ends
Jacob Green
Michael Bennett

Defensive Tackles
Cortez Kennedy
Joe Nash

Linebackers
Fredd Young
Bobby Wagner
K.J. Wright

Cornerbacks
Richard Sherman
Dave Brown

Safeties
Kenny Easley
Earl Thomas

Special Teams

Kicker
Steven Hauschka

Punter
Jon Ryan

Returner
Joey Galloway


Saturday, December 21, 2024

Flea Flicker Week 16 Predictions

It must be late in the season. We have Saturday games. Here are some guesses at the Week 16 games.

Minnesota Vikings @ Seattle Seahawks
Pick: Vikings
Three more wins and the Vikings have the NFC North title and possible the conference’s #1 seed in the playoffs.

Houston Texans @ Kansas City Chiefs
Pick: Texans
The Chiefs penchant for close games catches up with them one more time.

Pittsburgh Steelers @ Baltimore Ravens
Pick: Ravens
Somehow, the Ravens are chasing the Steelers late in the season.

New York Giants @ Atlanta Falcons
Pick: Falcons
Michael Penix Jr. gets his first start against a team that’s already moved to the offseason.

Detroit Lions @ Chicago Bears
Pick: Lions
The Bears are another team that’s already moved to the offseason. Even an injury-depleted Lions team should be able to handle this Bears team.

Cleveland Browns @ Cincinnati Bengals
Pick: Bengals
The Bengals are fighting for the playoffs. The Browns might be fighting for their jobs.

Tennessee Titans @ Indianapolis Colts
Pick: Colts
Don’t call the Titans soft.

Los Angeles Rams @ New York Jets
Pick: Rams
Rams roll.

Philadelphia Eagles @ Washington Commanders
Pick: Commanders
The Commanders end the 10-game win streak of the Eagles.

Arizona Cardinals @ Carolina Panthers
Pick: Panthers
The plucky Panthers finally win one.

New England Patriots @ Buffalo Bills
Pick: Bills
The Bills roll.

Jacksonville Jaguars @ Las Vegas Raiders
Pick: Raiders
Just going with the home team.

San Francisco 49ers @ Miami Dolphins
Pick: Dolphins
I’ll bet this game looked spectacular when the schedule was released.

Tampa Bay Buccaneers @ Dallas Cowboys
Pick: Buccaneers
The Buccaneers have returned to the playoff chase with victories over broken teams. That continues.

New Orleans Saints @ Green Bay Packers
Pick: Packers
The Packers with another Prime Time appearance. No team should have four consecutive Prime Time games. 



Friday, December 20, 2024

Minnesota Vikings 53 - Man Roster

The Minnesota Vikings roster has been fairly steady for about a month. That’s a good thing as the regular season reaches the final weeks. That means they’ve managed to avoid significant injuries. Linebacker Ivan Pace Jr. was placed on injured reserve a few weeks ago with a hamstring injury. He’s been missed but should return soon. He’ll certainly be ready for the upcoming playoff run. Cornerback Stefon Gilmore is also dealing with a hamstring injury. It’s a minor hamstring injury, if such a thing exists, but it kept him out of the past two games. Having practiced in full all week, he’s expected to play against the Seattle Seahawks on Sunday. The only roster tweaks in recent weeks have been the welcome return of kicker Will Reichard and long snapper Andrew DePaola. John Parker Romo and Jack McQuaide were remarkably steady in their place but Reichard and DePaola are needed on the field. The only other roster tweaks has been the usual shuffling of the practice squad. Part of that shuffling includes the eye-opening addition of former New York Giants starting quarterback Daniel Jones. In a handful of days in November, the sixth pick in the 2019 NFL Draft went from top-salaried starter to practice squad member. The Giants are still paying that top salary so the Vikings have a talented and intriguing quarterback on the cheap. The signing of Jones is more forward-looking than an addition for the moment. If he makes any impact on the Vikings, it would be next season. If player and team are in agreement, Jones could sign a deal in the offseason to provide competition/veteran presence with J.J. McCarthy. With those changes in mind, here’s a look at the current roster of the Minnesota Vikings. 

Minnesota Vikings 53 - Man Roster

Offense (25)

Quarterbacks (3)
14 Sam Darnold
12 Nick Mullens
19 Brett Rypien

Running Backs (3)
33 Aaron Jones
27 Cam Akers
32 Ty Chandler

Fullback (1)
30 C.J. Ham

Receivers (5)
18 Justin Jefferson
  3 Jordan Addison
83 Jalen Nailor
  4 Brandon Powell
11 Trent Sherfield

Tight Ends (3)
87 T.J. Hockenson
84 Josh Oliver
86 Johnny Mundt

Offensive Linemen (10)
74 Cam Robinson
64 Blake Brandel
56 Garrett Bradbury
66 Dalton Risner
75 Brian O’Neill
76 David Quessenberry 
78 Walter Rouse
67 Ed Ingram
65 Michael Jurgens
69 Dan Feeney

Defense (25)

Defensive Linemen (5)
97 Harrison Phillips
90 Jonathan Bullard
99 Jerry Tillery
61 Jalen Redmond
50 Levi Drake Rodriguez

Outside Linebackers (6)
58 Jonathan Greenard
43 Andrew Van Ginkel
15 Dallas Turner
91 Patrick Jones II
52 Jihad Ward
98 Bo Richter

Inside Linebackers (4)
51 Blake Cashman
54 Kamu Grugier-Hill
  6 Brian Asamoah
57 Jamin Davis

Cornerbacks (5)
  2 Stephon Gilmore  
  7 Byron Murphy Jr.
  1 Shaq Griffin
23 Fabian Moreau
29 Dwight McGlothern

Safeties (5)
22 Harrison Smith
24 Camryn Bynum
44 Josh Metellus
26 Theo Jackson
20 Jay Ward

Special Teams (3)

Kickers (1)
16 Will Reichard

Punter (1)
17 Ryan Wright

Long Snapper (1)
42 Andrew DePaola

Practice Squad
95 Travis Bell, DL
63 Coy Cronk, OL 
81 Lucky Jackson, WR
  8 Trishton Jackson, WR
13 Daniel Jones, QB
82 Jeshaun Jones, WR
21 Kelvin Joseph, CB
28 Bobby McCain, CB
48 Calvin Munson, LB
59 Gabriel Murphy, OLB
34 Nick Muse, TE
36 Zavier Scott, RB
89 Thayer Thomas, WR
45 Max Tooley, LB
25 Nahshon Wright, CB
35 Sammis Reyes, TE

Injured Reserve
  5 Mekhi Blackmon, CB
  9 J.J. McCarthy, QB
71 Christian Darrisaw, T
36 NaJee Thompson, CB
63 Jeremy Flax, OL
  0 Ivan Pace Jr. 
94 Taki Taimani, DL 

Practice Squad/Injured
68 Henry Byrd, OL

Thursday, December 19, 2024

Throwback Thursday: Original Teams

This Flicker was originally posted 5/16/19. 

The NFL's celebration of it's 100th season is going to bring a lot of football history fun. Part of that celebration will be honoring the small towns where professional football started.

From NFL Football Operations:

ORIGINAL TOWNS

Nearly 100 years after the NFL was born in Canton, Ohio, the league will honor the 13 Original Towns, which were home to the 14 teams of the league’s inaugural season.


CityTeam 
Akron, OhioAkron Pros
Buffalo, New YorkBuffalo All-Americans
Canton, OhioCanton Bulldogs
Chicago, IllinoisRacine Cardinals, Chicago Tigers
Cleveland, OhioCleveland Tigers
Columbus, OhioColumbus Panhandles
Dayton, OhioDayton Triangles
Decatur, IllinoisDecatur Staleys
Detroit, MichiganDetroit Heralds
Hammond, IndianaHammond Pros
Muncie, IndianaMuncie Flyers
Rochester, New YorkRohester Jeffersons
Rock Island, IllinoisRock Island Independents

A quick glance at those 14 original teams reveals no teams that play today. There's actually two. The Decatur Staleys are the Chicago Bears. The Racine Cardinals are today's Arizona Cardinals. 

Hockey has an Original 6. The NFL has an Original 2. The 1920s was a daily struggle for football teams that wanted to make it in the NFL. Professional football wasn't well received. Each year of that first decade was a revolving door of teams coming and going. 

1920: 14 teams
1921: 21-Green Bay Packers joined the fun
1922: 18
1923: 20
1924: 18
1925: 20-New York Giants joined the fun
1926: 22
1927: 12
1928: 10
1929: 12

The NFL was mostly populated with teams from small Midwestern towns in that first decade. While that was fun for those plucky towns there was a concerted effort by the NFL in the latter half of the decade to establish a presence in the bigger cities. It wasn't a good deal for the small towns but it was deemed necessary for the overall survival of the league. At the start of the next decade, few small towns remained. 

1930 NFL 
Green Bay Packers
New York Giants
Chicago Bears
Brooklyn Dodgers
Providence Steam Roller
Staten Island Stapletons
Portsmouth Spartans
Chicago Cardinals
Frankford Yellow Jackets
Minneapolis Red Jackets
Newark Tornadoes. 

In 1930, only five teams were competing in the NFL that are still competing today. The Portsmouth Spartans joined the fun that year and moved to Detroit in 1935 where the team became the Lions. The Spartans/Lions joined the Bears, Cardinals, Packers, and Giants as the First 5(?). 

The Boston Braves joined the fun in 1932. Their name would unfortunately be changed to the Redskins the next season. Credit racist owner George Preston Marshall for that. The team moved to Washington D.C. in 1937.

Through the league's first 13 seasons (1920-32), 36 teams had tried and failed to make a go of it in the NFL. 

The Pittsburgh Pirates (Steelers) and Philadelphia Eagles joined the fun in 1933. 

1933 was probably the first season in which the NFL finally started to resemble a league that might be a precursor to today's NFL. One reason for that was that the league was split into East and West. Another reason was that most of the teams survive today. Even if some of those teams have changed names and cities. There was finally some degree of stability. Eight of the 10 teams that competed in 1933 compete today. 

East
New York Giants
Brooklyn Dodgers
Boston Redskins
Philadelphia Eagles
Pittsburgh Pirates

West
Chicago Bears
Portsmouth Spartans
Green Bay Packers
Cincinnati Reds
Chicago Cardinals

The Cleveland Rams joined the fun in 1937.

The NFL finally experienced some consistency and increasing public acceptance in the 1930s. After a decade of significant struggle, the league seemed to have a future. Just when it seemed like things were getting better, new challenges were coming. 

The World War II years were tough. Many players joined the fight. The public was preoccupied. Some teams had to join forces to get by but the league survived. The latter half of the 1940s brought a rival league. Unlike previous rivals, the All-America Football Conference was a legitimate rival. So much so, that the NFL was forced to absorb three of the AAFC's teams to end the rivalry. The Cleveland Browns and San Francisco 49ers were two of those teams. The Baltimore Colts were the third. The franchise history of the Colts is wacky. It's too wacky to detail here. The AAFC Colts team that was absorbed by the NFL isn't the Colts team that plays in Indianapolis today. The Colts team that survives today is actually the team that came out of the 1951 New York Yanks team that became the 1952 Dallas Texans. I'll leave it at that. 

1953 was the first year in which all of the teams that competed still compete in the league today. 

East 
Cleveland Browns
Philadelphia Eagles
Washington Redskins
Pittsburgh Steelers
New York Giants
Chicago Cardinals

West
Detroit Lions
San Francisco 49ers
Los Angeles Rams
Chicago Bears
Baltimore Colts
Green Bay Packers

The only changes since 1953 has been the addition of expansion teams and one big merger with a rival league. And, unfortunately, the relocation of a few franchises. 

I've always found the early years of the NFL fascinating. The rag-tag nature of the league, the small town teams, the incredible characters that simply pushed, scraped, scratched, pulled, fought, and refused to let a dream die. It may have been the big cities (and Green Bay) that survived but the Akron Pros, Canton Bulldogs, Pottsville Maroons, Columbus Panhandles, Providence Steam Roller, Duluth Eskimos, Frankford Yellow Jackets, etc. helped make the NFL what it is today. Those teams didn’t survive but they should be better remembered. It shouldn't take a 100 year celebration to honor those teams that competed, the players that played, the coaches that coached, and contributors that contributed to finally know about them. But it's still fun that the league is doing it.