Sunday, April 30, 2023

Minnesota Vikings 2023 NFL Draft

After months of talking and mocking, the 2023 NFL Draft is done. All drafts are about waiting. There were 259 picks in this draft. That’s an average of about eight picks per team. That’s a lot of waiting. The Minnesota Vikings selected six players in the 2023 NFL Draft. In between those six selections there was a lot of waiting. For the Vikings, this draft was all about waiting. 

The Vikings entered the draft with only five picks.

1. #23
3. #87
4. #119
5. #158
6. #211

As was the case in his first draft, Vikings general manager Kwesi Adofo-Mensah made a lot of trades. The #23 pick was the only pick that he kept. He dealt the rest in a cascade of wheeling and dealing. The second-round pick was used in the fall to acquire T.J. Hockenson from the Detroit Lions. Thanks to that deal, the Vikings were already scheduled to sit out the second. Thanks to Friday’s trade of the #87 pick, they damn near sat out the third round. The Vikings made the last pick of the night. From pick #24 through pick #101, the Vikings made no selections. That’s a lot of waiting. 78 picks passed by. It was the longest wait of the draft but it wasn’t the only long wait. Between their second and third picks, 31 picks passed by. Between their fifth and sixth picks, 57 picks passed by. That’s a lot of waiting. It’s not about where a team picks. It’s about how or who that team picks. The Vikings entered the draft with the above five picks. They ended up making selections with the following picks.

1. #23
3. #102
4. #134
5. #141
5. #164
7. #222

The six pick wait between #134 and #141 was glorious. So was having two picks in the fifth round.

The Picks:

1. Jordan Addison, WR, USC
3. Mekhi Blackmon, CB, USC
4. Jay Ward, DB, LSU
5. Jaquelin Roy, DT, LSU
5. Jaren Hall, QB, BYU
7. DeWayne McBride, RB, UAB

The pattern of picking teammates had me hoping that BYU receiver Puka Nacua would fall to the Vikings in the seventh round. Those hopes were dashed by the Los Angeles Rams at the end of the fifth round. Also, the Vikings seem to have a fondness for players with names that start with “J.” Perhaps that’s inspired by Justin Jefferson.

I see a lot of potential in this draft. Pairing Jordan Addison with Justin Jefferson is brilliant. I like the potential of corners Mekhi Blackmon and Jay Ward. I wouldn’t be at all surprised if the versatile Ward emerges as the Vikings nickel as a rookie. While I was hoping for an interior defensive linemen that could provide immediate pass rushing, Jaquelin Roy reminds me of Dalvin Tomlinson. If the Vikings couldn’t pull off a miraculous draft day deal for one of the draft’s top quarterbacks, Jaren Hall and UCLA’s Dorian Thompson-Robinson were my top choices for a mid-round quarterback. If Hall can avoid the injuries that peppered his college career, he has a shot. Franchise quarterbacks don’t often come out of the fifth round but I’m now hoping that his kid can be one of them. He has some nice traits. DeWayne McBride was one of college football’s most productive backs the last couple seasons. 1713 yards, 7.4 yards/carry, 19TDs last season. It’s remarkable that he was still available in the seventh round. 

6 picks
3 offense
3 defense

From the Athletic’s Alec Lewis:

“A dynamic WR, versatile defenders, a developmental QB, and high-upside RB.”

It’s a productive draft that addressed the team’s needs. 



Saturday, April 29, 2023

Minnesota Vikings Draft: Day 2

Since the NFL moved the Draft to a prime time event, I’ve raced home from work to catch the telecast. Day 1 and Day 2. I had to catch each from the start. This year was a bit different. This year was different because the Minnesota Vikings first pick on Day 2 was pick #87. That’s the 24th pick of the third round. The Vikings entered the draft with only five picks. After selecting USC receiver Jordan Addison with the 23rd pick of the first round, only four picks remained. The Vikings didn’t really have the picks to move up in any round. The 2023 NFL Draft was coming to them. I figured that there was about a 5-hour wait until the Vikings were on the clock. There was no need to rush home. I simply followed the draft by phone. There was no rush. 

The Vikings had no pick in the second round. That pick was passed to the Detroit Lions in the trade deadline deal for T.J. Hockenson. That’s a nice exchange. Addison in the first. Hockenson in the second. I’ll take it. It also meant that the Vikings would be observers for the entirety of the second round. Missing a round, any round, is always a tough deal. Then came the wait until the 24th pick of the third round. After 23 third-round picks, the Vikings were finally on the clock. Then they weren’t. The Vikings traded that long-awaited 87th pick to the San Francisco 49ers. A long wait for a Vikings pick became longer. 

The Vikings traded pick 87
The Vikings received pick 102, 164, and 222

The wait between Vikings picks was now 78 picks. More than two rounds. 

No matter the excitement over free agency, successful teams are built through the draft. When a team picks isn’t as important as how a team picks. The Vikings had two picks in the first 102 picks of the 2023 NFL Draft. #23 and #102. Both of the players played their final year of college football at USC. 

23.   Jordan Addison, WR, USC
102. Mekhi Blackmon, CB, USC

The Vikings had a cornerback need. Mekhi Blackmon wasn’t one of the leading contenders for an early round selection. There were bigger corners available. There were faster corners available. There were bigger names available. Despite all of that, it felt like the Vikings decision-makers had targeted Blackmon. He was a Top-30 visitor and even from a distance it felt like there was a connection. 

Blackmon had a circuitous route to the NFL. He wasn’t recruited out of Menlo-Atherton High so he went the JC route. He went to Julian Edelman’s old stomping ground of College of San Mateo. Blackmon played for four years at Colorado then really found himself as a football player during his final year of college at USC. During the draft telecast, Daniel Jeremiah mentioned that Blackmon routinely positioned himself in drills against Addison so that he could get better. It worked. 

If Mekhi Blackmon had played three years of college football like he played his final year of college football, he would’ve been a first-round pick. At 24, he’s older than most rookies but his best football years are in front of him.

Day 3 of the 2023 NFL awaits. The Vikings entered the draft with five picks. Thanks to the Day 2 deal, they enter Day 3 with five picks. 

 







Friday, April 28, 2023

Finally. The Real First Round of 2023 NFL Draft

After months of evaluations and too damn many mock drafts, the real first round of the 2023 NFL Draft finally took place last night in Kansas City. Here it is. 

First Round of the 2023 NFL Draft

1.   Carolina Panthers: Bryce Young, QB, Alabama
2.   Houston Texans: C.J. Stroud, QB, Ohio State
3.   Houston Texans (via Ari): Will Anderson Jr., Edge, Alabama
4.   Indianapolis Colts: Anthony Richardson, QB, Florida
5.   Seattle Seahawks: Devon Witherspoon, CB, Illinois
6.   Arizona Cardinals (via Det): Paris Johnson Jr., OT, Ohio State
7.   Las Vegas Raiders: Tyree Wilson, Edge, Texas Tech
8.   Atlanta Falcons: Bijan Robinson, RB, Texas
9.   Philadelphia Eagles (via Chi): Jalen Carter, DT, Georgia
10. Chicago Bears (via Phi): Darnell Wright, OT, Tennessee
11. Tennessee Titans: Peter Skoronski, OT, Northwestern
12. Detroit Lions (via Ari): Jahmyr Gibbs, RB, Alabama
13. Green Bay Packers (via NY Jets): Lukas Van Ness, Edge, Iowa
14. Pittsburgh Steelers (via NE): Broderick Jones, OT, Georgia 
15. New York Jets (via GB): Will McDonald IV, Edge, Iowa State
16. Washington Commanders: Emmanuel Forbes, CB, Mississippi State
17. New England Patriots (via Pitt): Christian Gonzalez, CB, Oregon
18. Detroit Lions: Jack Campbell, LB, Iowa
19. Tampa Bay Buccaneers: Calijah Kancey, DT, Pittsburgh
20. Seattle Seahawks: Jaxon Smith-Njigba, WR, Ohio State
21. Los Angeles Chargers: Quentin Johnston, WR, TCU
22. Baltimore Ravens: Zay Flowers, WR, Boston College
23. Minnesota Vikings: Jordan Addison, WR, USC
24. New York Giants (via Jags): Deonte Banks, CB, Maryland
25. Buffalo Bills (via Jags): Dalton Kincaid, TE, Utah
26. Dallas Cowboys: Mazi Smith, DT, Michigan
27. Jacksonville Jaguars (via Buf): Anton Harrison, OT, Oklahoma
28. Cincinnati Bengals: Myles Murphy, Edge, Clemson
29. New Orleans Saints: Bryan Bresee, DT, Clemson
30. Philadelphia Eagles: Nolan Smith, LB, Georgia
31. Kansas City Chiefs: Felix Anudike-Uzomah, Kansas State

***

At least my dream of the Minnesota Vikings trading up to select Florida quarterback Anthony Richardson was dashed early. I was convinced that the Vikings were poised to pounce if Richardson was still on the board as the 10th pick approached. Each pick would’ve been excruciating. Instead, he didn’t make it to #5. The Indianapolis Colts were probably locked on their quarterback of the present and future from the start. 

Jordan Addison. He’ll pair nicely with Justin Jefferson. If the Vikings hadn’t pursued a quarterback, he was among my favorites for the 23rd pick. The Vikings needed to replace the steady receiving presence of Adam Thielen. Addison should do just that. He’s younger, quicker, more versatile. The Vikings offense got much more explosive, more varied. Justin Jefferson, Jordan Addison, K.J. Osborn, T.J. Hockenson, Josh Oliver, Jalen Nailor, Jalen Reagor. That’s a lot of “Js” and a lot of pass-catching options for Kirk Cousins. 

The Carolina Panthers made the right choice. 

When NFL Network draft analyst Daniel Jeremiah had the Houston Texans maneuvering into position to select at #2 and #3 in his final mock, it looked like he’d lost his mind. Instead of far-fetched he was on top of Houston’s plans. The Texans had the draft capital to make the top of the draft their own. Why not use it? They needed a quarterback and a high-end defensive talent. There was so damn much pre-draft chatter that the Texans would get the defensive player with the second pick and deal with the quarterback issue with the 12th pick. Instead, they were smart. They took Ohio State quarterback C.J. Stroud with second pick. With the popular QB off the board, the market for the Arizona Cardinals’ #3 pick dried up. The Texans were the only team interested in the pick. With the opportunity and the means, they easily moved back into the top-5 for their top defensive player, Alabama edge Will Anderson Jr. The Texans have been a poorly run franchise for the entirety of the existence. This felt so different. 

Best 1st Round:
It’s a tie.
Houston Texans
1a. C.J. Stroud, QB, Ohio State
1b. Will Anderson Jr., Edge, Alabama
The Texans used means and opportunity to bend the top of the draft in their favor. 

Philadelphia Eagles
1a. Jalen Carter, DT, Georgia
1b. Nolan Smith, LB, Georgia
The Eagles really had no business collecting the two Georgia defensive starts. Jalen Carter should not have been available at #9. Nolan Smith should not have been available at #30. The Texans bent the draft their way. The Eagles simply let the draft fall their way.

Honorable Mention:
Seattle Seahawks
1a. Devon Witherspoon, CB, Illinois
1b. Jaxon Smith-Njigba, WR, Ohio State
The Seahawks surprised some (and possibly the Detroit Lions) when they passed over Jalen Carter in favor of Devon Witherspoon. Collecting the best cornerback and best receiver is a very productive first round. The Seahawks had a terrific draft last year. This is a terrific start this year. 

It helps to have multiple first round picks. 

Surprises of the 1st Round:
Detroit Lions
1a. Jahmyr Gibbs, RB, Alabama
1b. Jack Campbell, LB, Iowa
It’s fairly safe to say that the Lions didn’t use their two first round picks as well as the Texans, Eagles, and Seahawks. It was widely expected that the Lions were fond of Witherspoon. Perhaps reeling from the Seahawks selection of the cornerback, the Lions traded out of the top-10 with the Cardinals. The biggest surprise of the first round was easily the Lions selection of Alabama running back Jahmyr Gibbs with the 12th pick. It even surprised Gibbs. If the Lions had selected Gibbs with their second pick in the round (#18), it still would’ve been a surprise. At #12, it was shocking. If the Lions were so enamored with adding a running back, they could’ve selected Bijan Robinson at #6. Anyway, trading the #6 pick wasn’t the problem. That was a productive trade. The Lions didn’t drop back too far and received the #34 pick in return. I’m sure that they are thrilled with Gibbs with Jack Campbell. It just feels like they could’ve selected Oregon corner Christian Gonzalez at #12, Gibbs at #18, and Campbell at #34.

The fall of Christian Gonzalez.
Christian Gonzalez was my favorite cornerback in the draft. He’s so smooth. I was stunned that he fell to the New England Patriots at #17. 

The fall of Nolan Smith.
I still can’t believe that Smith fell into the laps of the Eagles at #30. 

The fall of Will Levis.
This one doesn’t actually feel that surprising. Perhaps that’s hindsight. Pre-draft expectations consistently had him as a top-10 pick. Some even had him as a solid top-5. It never felt right. He’s still in the Green Room on Day #2. 

It’s on to Day 2.

The Vikings don’t pick until the third round (#87). That’s going to be a long, excruciating wait. With players like Joey Porter Jr., Brian Branch, Cam Smith, Adetomiwa Adebawore, Keeannu Benton, and Daiyan Henley still available, it’s painful to not have an early Day 2 pick. Will the Vikings find a way to move into Round 2? With only four remaining picks, that’ll be tough. Maybe they’ll trade a player. Who knows? Quarterback? The Vikings clearly didn’t see Hendon Hooker or Will Levis as first round options. Maybe they are more attractive on Day 2. Dorian Thompson-Robinson, Jalen Hall, Tanner McKee…

The 2023 NFL Draft continues. 


Thursday, April 27, 2023

Final Flea Flicker Mock Draft

It’s Draft Day! Here’s one final mock draft. 

1.   Carolina Panthers: Bryce Young, QB, Alabama
2.   Houston Texans: C.J. Stroud, QB, Ohio State
3.   Arizona Cardinals: Will Anderson Jr., Edge, Alabama
4.   Indianapolis Colts: Will Levis, QB, Kentucky
5.   Seattle Seahawks (via Denver): Jalen Carter, DL, Georgia
6.   Detroit Lions (via Los Angeles Rams): Tyree Wilson, Edge, Texas Tech
7.   Las Vegas Raiders: Christian Gonzalez, CB, Oregon
8.   Atlanta Falcons: Bijan Robinson, RB, Texas
9.   Chicago Bears: Paris Johnson Jr., OT, Ohio State
10. Philadelphia Eagles (via New Orleans): Devon Witherspoon, CB, Illinois
11. Tennessee Titans: Anthony Richardson, QB, Florida
12. Houston Texans (via Cleveland): Lukas Van Ness, Edge, Iowa
13. Green Bay Packers (via New York Jets): Jaxon Smith-Njigba, WR, Ohio State
14. New England Patriots: Peter Skoronski, OT, Northwestern
15. New York Jets (via Green Bay Packers): Broderick Jones, OT, Georgia
16. Washington Commanders: Deonte Banks, CB, Maryland
17. Pittsburgh Steelers: Darnell Wright, OT, Tennessee
18. Detroit Lions: Calijah Kancey, DT, Pittsburgh
19. Tampa Bay Buccaneers: Nolan Smith, Edge, Georgia
20. Seattle Seahawks: Zay Flowers, WR, Boston College
21. Los Angeles Chargers: Dalton Kincaid, TE, Utah
22. Baltimore Ravens: Joey Porter Jr., CB, Penn State
23. Minnesota Vikings: Hendon Hooker, QB, Tennessee
24. Jacksonville Jaguars: O’Cyrus Torrence, G, Florida
25. New York Giants: Brian Branch, CB, Alabama
26. Dallas Cowboys: Michael Mayer, TE, Notre Dame
27. Buffalo Bills: Jordan Addison, WR, USC
28. Cincinnati Bengals: Jahmyr Gibbs, RB, Alabama
29. New Orleans Saints (via SF thru Miami): Mazi Smith, DT, Michigan
30. Philadelphia Eagles: Adetomiwa Adebawore, DL, Northwestern
31. Kansas City Chiefs: Myles Murphy, Edge, Clemson

Finally. 


Wednesday, April 26, 2023

All-Draft Team

One more day. To pass the one day in front of the 2023 NFL Draft, here’s an All-Draft Team. It’s a team of some of the best players in the 2023 NFL Draft. 

All-Draft Team

Offense 

Quarterback
Bryce Young, Alabama

Running Backs
Bijan Robinson, Texas
Jahmyr Gibbs, Alabama

Wide Receivers
Jaxon Smith-Njigba, Ohio State
Zay Flowers, Boston College

Tight End
Dalton Kincaid, Utah

Offensive Tackles
Peter Skoronski, Northwestern
Paris Johnson Jr., Ohio State

Guards
Steve Avila, TCU
O’Cyrus Torrence, Florida

Center
John Michael Schmitz, Minnesota

Defense

Edge
Will Anderson Jr., Alabama
Tyree Wilson, Texas Tech

Defensive Tackles
Jalen Carter, Georgia
Mazi Smith, Michigan

Linebackers
Nolan Smith, Georgia
Jack Campbell, Iowa
Daiyan Henley, Washington State

Cornerbacks
Christian Gonzalez, Oregon 
Devon Witherspoon, Illinois

Safeties
Brian Branch, Alabama
Sydney Brown, Illinois

One more day….

Tuesday, April 25, 2023

Minnesota Vikings Dream Draft

The days before the NFL Draft are the days to dream. The Minnesota Vikings currently have only five picks in the 2023 NFL Draft. It’s tough to dream big with only five picks. My guess is that Kwesi Adofo-Mensah will find a way to come out of the draft with more than five players. For now, there are only five picks. 

The picks:

Round 1 (23)
Round 3 (87)
Round 4 (119)
Round 5 (158)
Round 6 (211)

The Dream:

Round 1 (#23)
Hendon Hooker, QB, Tennessee

Round 3 (#87)
Darius Rush, CB, South Carolina

Round 4 (#119)
Karl Brooks, DL, Bowling Green

Round 5 (#158)
Marte Mapu, LB, Sacramento State

Round 6 (#211)
Bryce Ford-Wheaton, WR, West Virginia

***

A dream draft for the Vikings would include a franchise quarterback. The dream would be that Hendon Hooker becomes that quarterback. His age (25) is a worry to some. Those that worry about his age don’t like that he’d be a 26-year old first time starter in 2024. For comparison, Aaron Rodgers was going into his 25th year when he became the starting quarterback of the Green Bay Packers. He did fairly well. Kurt Warner was a 28-year old, first-time starter for the St. Louis Rams. He did fairly well. Both won Super Bowls. Warner even won as a 28-year old, first-rime starter. 

A problem with selecting Hooker in the first round is that it ignores more immediate needs and the Vikings have several immediate needs. Cornerback, receiver, linebacker, and defensive line sit atop the list of needs. Selecting a quarterback in the first and having no second-round pick forces the Vikings to start addressing those needs in the third round. That’s a late start. A more dreamy Vikings draft would include a trade back in the first round and still be able to select Hooker. I believe that would be a very optimistic dream. In fact, it might be overly optimistic that he’ll even be available at #23.

For this draft dream, I’m dreaming that Hooker is the Vikings pick at #23. That will force the Vikings to start addressing those more immediate needs with their third-round pick.

I really like the four dream picks. What I don’t like about those picks is that Washington State linebacker Daiyan Henley, North Carolina receiver Josh Downs, Oklahoma receiver Marvin Mims, Mississippi receiver Jonathan Mingo, and Wake Forest receiver A.T. Perry aren’t among them. The Vikings will miss out on a lot of talented players without a second-round pick. Darius Rush, Karl Brooks, and Marte Mapu are three of my favorite players in this draft. Selecting those players in their respective rounds forces the Vikings to not address receiver until the sixth round. The hope in this dream is that Bryce Ford-Wheaton will become the Vikings next late-round receiver to excel in the league. 

Two more sleeps until draft day. 


Monday, April 24, 2023

This Year’s Picks Through The Years

This is a silly draft game to pass some time. Here are some of the Minnesota Vikings best players selected over the years with the picks (or near the picks) that they have this year. 

2023 Draft Picks
#23
#87
#119
#158
#211

The Players:
23. Christian Darrisaw, OT, Virginia Tech (2021)

88. Danielle Hunter, DE, LSU (2015)

119. Mewelde Moore, RB, Tulane (2004)

157. Tyler Conklin, TE, Central Michigan (2018)

210. Wade Wilson, QB, East Texas State (1981)

It’s silly. It’s especially silly when I’m tapping players selected a pick away from the picks that the Vikings have this year. At least it got me a couple hours closer to the 2023 NFL Draft. 




Sunday, April 23, 2023

Top 10 Minnesota Vikings First Round Picks

During this time, most of my football thoughts are on this year’s fast-approaching draft. Every now and then I think about drafts of the past. Those thoughts brought this. 

The Top 10 Minnesota Vikings First Round Picks

10. Robert Smith, RB, Ohio State, 21st pick 1993
Robert Smith is one of the biggest “what ifs” in Vikings franchise history. Just about every malady from chicken pox to a torn ACL slowed his NFL start. Once he finally got his footing in the NFL he was rarely slowed. In fact, the only thing that slowed him was his early retirement at 28. If he’d put up the numbers in his first four seasons that he put up his final four seasons, Smith would be honored in Canton. 

10. Keith Millard, DT, Washington State, 13th pick 1984
Through his first five seasons with the Vikings, Keith Millard was on an all-timer pace. He routinely had his way with the blocking schemes designed to slow him. It was a blast to watch. 1989 was his best season. 18 sacks, NFL Defensive Player of the Year, NFC Player of the Year. The attention paid to Millard that year helped defensive end Chris Doleman reach 21 sacks. Injuries sadly shortened Millard’s great career.

10. Harrison Smith, S, Notre Dame, 29th pick 2012
Harrison Smith has been a playmaking force all over the Vikings defense since his first game. He plays everywhere. He can do everything. In my book, he’s been the best safety in football over the past decade. He should get Hall of Fame consideration five years after his retirement. 

10. Kevin Williams, DT, Oklahoma State, 9th pick 2003
When I think of Kevin Williams I often think of a play he made against the Kansas City Chiefs. At the snap, he flashed through Will Shields, dispatched Tony Richardson as if he wasn’t there, and tackled Priest Holmes at a spot closer to the quarterback than the line of scrimmage. At the time, each of those players was among the best in the game at their position. Shields is a Hall of Famer. Williams made each look like they didn’t belong in his league. He’s the sort of defensive tackle that the Vikings have been seeking since he departed Minnesota. Defensive tackles like Kevin Williams don’t come around too often. 

9. Joey Browner, S, USC, 19th pick 1983
After Joey Browner took apart his Los Angeles Rams team, head coach John Robinson called him the game’s best defensive player. As with Millard, injuries shortened Browner’s career. If not for those injuries he’d be in the Hall of Fame. Despite an injury-shortened career, he has a legitimate Hall of Fame case. Especially after safety peer Kenny Easley made it. There are many Vikings fans of a certain age that consider Joey Browner their favorite player. He was a great, fun football player. 

8. Chuck Foreman, RB, Miami, 12th pick 1973
For his first five years, Chuck Foreman was one of the best, if not the best, running back in the league. He was certainly the most versatile back. In 1975, he was seven rushing yards shy of leading the NFC in rushing, receptions, and touchdowns. There was no talk of a Triple Crown because there was never a thought that a running back could lead those three categories. Only Hall of Famers rank higher than Foreman on this list. There’s a legitimate argument that he should join them in Canton. 

7. Chris Doleman, DE, Pittsburgh, 4th pick 1985
Just like I have that particular memory of Kevin Williams, I have a particular memory of Chris Doleman. It’s a game against the Cincinnati Bengals. It’s a game against Anthony Munoz. Some consider Munoz the best offensive tackle the game’s ever seen. Doleman made him look pedestrian. He made a lot of very good offensive linemen look pedestrian. 

6. Ron Yary, OT, USC, 1st pick 1968
Ron Yary was arguably the best offensive tackle of his era. First pick in the draft, six time first-team All-Pro, two time second-team All-Pro, seven Pro Bowls, 1970s All-Decade Team. 

5. Carl Eller, DE, Minnesota, 6th pick 1964
Carl Eller’s playing size is listed as 6’6” and 247 lbs. As a little, California kid falling for the Vikings in the early 1970s, Eller seemed twice that size. He was a beast of a football player and one of the reasons I’ve been a Vikings fan since the early 1970s. 

4. Adrian Peterson, RB, Oklahoma, 7th pick 2007
Adrian Peterson was a beast of a back. One of the best I’ve ever seen. He has the greatest rushing game in NFL history. He was eight yards from the greatest rushing season in NFL history. Three-time rushing champ, five time first-team All-Pro, seven Pro Bowls, 2010s All-Decade Team, 2012 MVP. Adrian Peterson is a Hall of Famer five years after he retires. 

3. Randall McDaniel, OG, Arizona State, 19th pick 1988
His funky stance was noticeable. His athleticism and ability to dominate defenders was even more noticeable. He’s one of the best guards to ever play in the league. Nine time first-team All-Pro, 12 Pro Bowls, 1990s All-Decade Team, NFL 100th Anniversary All-Time Team, Pro Football Hall of Fame. 

2. Randy Moss, WR, Marshall, 21st pick 1998
Randy Moss scared defenses more than any receiver I’ve ever seen. Blanket double, even triple, coverage often wasn’t enough coverage to keep him from catching a pass. He’s arguably the most physically gifted receiver that’s ever played. Four time first-team All-Pro, six Pro Bowls, 2000s All-Decade Team, NFL 100th Anniversary All-Time Team, Pro Football Hall of Fame. 

1. Alan Page, DT, Notre Dame, 15th pick 1967
Alan Page gets the #1 spot because he was a fantastic football player. He’s also my favorite all-time player. Page was the first defensive football player to be named the league’s MVP. For the young folk, he was the Aaron Donald of his day. Page was so quick off the snap. He just tore up offensive lines. Six time first-team All-Pro, three time second-team All-Pro, nine Pro Bowls, two time NFL Defensive Player of the Year, 1971 MVP, 1970s All-Decade Team, NFL 100th Anniversary All-Time Team. 

***

Is it too early to add Justin Jefferson to this list? Christian Darrisaw is on his way to also earning a spot. 

Hall of Famers
Alan Page
Randy Moss
Randall McDaniel
Carl Eller
Ron Yary
Chris Doleman

Will be a Hall of Famer
Adrian Peterson

Have a Hall of Fame Case
Chuck Foreman
Joey Browner
Kevin Williams
Harrison Smith

If not for the injuries that dismantled his career, Keith Millard would be in the Hall of Fame company of fellow Vikings defensive linemen Page, Eller, Doleman, John Randle, eventually Jared Allen, and hopefully Kevin Williams. 





Saturday, April 22, 2023

Looking Back At The 1975 NFL Draft

The 1975 NFL Draft was the first draft that I can recall following. It started on a Tuesday. It wasn't televised. It was actually a little hard to follow. I was very hard to follow for a young Minnesota Vikings fan living in California. Until ESPN televised the draft for the first time in 1980, it was always hard to follow. Newspaper coverage was pretty much the only coverage and that wasn't until the next day. I was somewhat aware of the 1973 and 1974 NFL Drafts but that was more after the fact. I knew that the Minnesota Vikings didn't have running back Chuck Foreman in 1972 and then they had him in 1973. He was something called a "rookie" and he hadn't played professional football before. Perhaps because of Foreman I had to find out about this thing called the NFL Draft.

The 1975 NFL Draft was unique in that it was the first time that a player from Cal was selected with the first overall pick. The Atlanta Falcons selected quarterback Steve Bartkowski with that pick. He was a decent quarterback on a shitty team. He might have been a great quarterback on a better team. I quickly learned that’s the purpose of the draft. Access to the great players is supposed to help the shitty teams get better. It doesn’t always work that way as many of the shitty teams can’t get away from being shitty. As for 1975, Randy White and Walter Payton turned out to be the stars of this draft. White was selected second by the Dallas Cowboys. Payton was selected fourth by the Chicago Bears. Each was among the best players of their generation and earned well-deserved busts in the Pro Football Hall Fame. Robert Brazile and Fred Dean also played their way into Canton. Brazile was selected sixth by the Houston Oilers. Dean was selected in the second round by the San Diego Chargers. Eleven of the 26 players taken in the first round received Pro Bowl recognition at some point in their careers. Not bad. Besides Payton, White, Dean, and Brazile some of the prominent NFL players from the 1975 NFL Draft were Gary Johnson, Dennis Harrah, Russ Francis, Louis Wright, Doug France, Monte Jackson, Louis Kelcher, Doug English, Cleveland Elam, Rick Upchurch, and Pat Haden.

Highlighted by Walter Payton and Robert Brazile, the 1975 draft was a banner draft for Jackson State. Payton and Brazile were selected early. Running back Rickey Young, linebacker John Tate, and defensive back Charles James were selected later. Nowhere near the heights of Payton and Brazile, Young had a very productive, nine-year NFL career. After three years with the Chargers, he was a very good, pass-catching back for six seasons for the Vikings. In 1975, itty-bitty Jackson State was the rival of the big schools for football talent.

As for the Vikings, the 1975 NFL Draft can be best described as disappointing. No player made a Chuck Foreman-like impact. The Vikings selected Colorado St. defensive end Mark Mullaney in the first round. Mullaney had some moments, actually some pretty good moments, in his NFL career. Those moments didn't happen often enough. This was a bad time to come to Minnesota if you were a defensive lineman. With Alan Page, Carl Eller, and Jim Marshall, the Vikings defensive line was one of the best in league history. Marshall and Eller were tough to follow for a defensive end. Unfortunately for Mullaney, he was drafted to do so. The Vikings didn’t get much from the 1975 NFL Draft.

1.   Mark Mullaney, DE, Colorado State
2.   Art Riley, DT, USC
4.   Champ Henson, RB, Ohio State
4.   Bruce Adams, WR, Kansas
5.   Robert Miller, RB, Kansas
6.   Bubba Broussard, LB, Houston
7.   Henry Greene, RB, Southern
8.   Joe Hollimon, DB, Arkansas State
9.   John Passananti, G, Western Illinois
10. Neil Clabo, P, Tennessee
11. Ike Spencer, RB, Utah
12. Autry Beamon, DB, East Texas State
13. Mike Hurd, WR, Michigan State
14. Mike Strickland, RB, Eastern Michigan
15. Ollie Bakken, LB, Minnesota
16. Tom Goedjen, K, Iowa State
17. Adolph Bellizeare, RB, Pennsylvania

Only Mark Mullaney, Robert Miller, Neil Clabo, and Autry Beamon earned a spot on the Vikings 1975 roster. Clabo had the biggest immediate impact. He was the team’s punter for three seasons. Miller and Beamon provided depth and saw some playing time. That was about it from a draft that brought in 17 players. Six of the 17 players played running back. It was a very different time. People would be fired if a team selected six running backs today. 

The 1975 NFL Draft didn't do much for the Minnesota Vikings but it was the beginning of my growing interest in the draft. Fortunately, the 1976 NFL Draft was more fun and much better for the Vikings.



Friday, April 21, 2023

Flea Flicker Top 5 Draft Prospects By Position

The 2023 NFL Draft is inside a week away. Here’s a final look at some of the best prospects by position. 

Quarterbacks
1. Bryce Young, Alabama
2. C.J. Stroud, Ohio State
3. Hendon Hooker, Tennessee
4. Anthony Richardson, Florida
5. Will Levis, Kentucky

Running Backs
1. Bijan Robinson, Texas
2. Jahmyr Gibbs, Alabama
3. Devon Achane, Texas A&M
4. Tyjae Spears, Tulane
5. Zach Charbonnet, UCLA

Wide Receivers
1. Jaxon Smith-Njigba, Ohio State
2. Zay Flowers, Boston College
3. Jordan Addison, USC
4. Quentin Johnston, TCU
5. Josh Downs, North Carolina

Tight Ends
1. Michael Mayer, Notre Dame
2. Dalton Kincaid, Utah
3. Darnell Washington, Georgia
4. Luke Musgrave, Oregon State
5. Sam LaPorta, Iowa

Offensive Tackles
1. Peter Skoronski. Northwestern
2. Paris Johnson Jr., Ohio State
3. Broderick Jones, Georgia
4. Anton Harrison, Oklahoma
5. Darnell Wright, Tennessee

Interior Offensive Linemen
1. Steve Avila, TCU
2. John Michael Schmitz, Minnesota
3. O’Cyrus Torrence, Florida
4. Joe Tippmann, Wisconsin
5. Andrew Vorhees, USC

Edge Rushers
1. Will Anderson Jr., Alabama
2. Tyree Wilson, Texas A&M
3. Lukas Van Ness, Iowa
4. Keion White, Georgia Tech
5. Myles Murphy, Clemson

Defensive Tackles
1. Jalen Carter, Georgia
2. Bryan Bresee, Clemson
3. Calijah Kancey, Pittsburgh
4. Adetomiwa Adebawore, Northwestern
5. Maxi Smith, Michigan

Linebackers
1. Nolan Smith, Georgia
2. Daiyan Henley, Washington State
3. Drew Sanders, Arkansas
4. Trenton Simpson, Clemson
5. Jack Campbell, Iowa

Cornerbacks
1. Christian Gonzalez, Oregon
2. Devon Witherspoon, Illinois
3. Joey Porter Jr., Penn State
4. Deonte Banks, Maryland
5. Emmanuel Forbes, Mississippi State

Safeties
1. Brian Branch, Alabama
2. Antonio Johnson, Texas A&M
3. Sydney Brown, Illinois
4. Ji’Ayir Brown, Penn State
5. Jammie Robinson, Florida State



Thursday, April 20, 2023

Minnesota Vikings Depth Chart

The 2023 NFL Draft is a week from today. Even a quick glance at the Minnesota Vikings roster reveals the needs scattered across it. Here’s that roster. 

Minnesota Vikings Depth Chart

Offense

Quarterback
Kirk Cousins
Nick Mullens

Running Back
Dalvin Cook
Alexander Mattison 
Kene Nwangwu
Ty Chandler

Fullback 
C.J. Ham

Wide Receiver
Justin Jefferson
K.J. Osborn
Jalen Reager
Jalen Nailor
Brandon Powell
Trishton Jackson
Blake Proehl

Tight End
T. J Hockenson
Josh Oliver
Johnny Mundt
Ben Ellefson
Nick Muse

Left Tackle
Christian Darrisaw
Blake Brandel
Vederian Lowe

Left Guard
Ezra Cleveland

Center
Garrett Bradbury
Austin Schlottman
Josh Sokol

Right Guard
Ed Ingram
Chris Reed

Right Tackle
Brian O’Neill
Oli Udoh

Defense

Defensive End
Dean Lowry
James Lynch
Jonathan Bullard
Ross Blacklock
Esezi Otomewo
Kenny Willekes
Sheldon Day

Nose Tackle
Harrison Phillips
Khyiris Tonga
T.J. Smith

Outside Linebacker
Danielle Hunter
Marcus Davenport
Za’Darius Smith
D.J.Wonnum
Patrick Jones
Luiji Vilain
Benton Whitley
Curtis Weaver

Inside Linebacker
Brian Asamoah
Jordan Hicks
Troy Dye
Troy Reeder
William Kwenkeu

Cornerback
Byron Murphy Jr.
Akayleb Evans
Andrew Booth Jr.
Joejuan Williams
Tay Gowan
Kalon Barnes

Safety
Harrison Smith
Lewis Cine
Camryn Bynum
Josh Metellus
Theo Jackson

Special Teams

Kicker
Greg Joseph

Punter
Ryan Wright

Long Snapper
Andrew DePaola

Kick Returner
Kene Nwangwu
K.J. Osborn

Punt Returner
Jalen Reagor
K.J. Osborn

Receiver, defensive line, linebacker, and cornerback are the top needs. If the roster/contract situations of Dalvin Cook and Za’Darius Smith turn a particular way in the next week, running back and outside linebacker join that list of positional needs. 

Cornerback and receiver typically top most lists of Vikings needs. There’s no doubt that those positions need some solid additions but defensive line might be the team’s greatest need. In Justin Jefferson, the Vikings have arguably the best receiver in the league. When given opportunities, K.J. Osborn has been very good and very productive. The release of Adam Thielen should increase those opportunities. Second-year Jalen Nailor has intriguing potential. As for cornerback, Byron Murphy Jr. was an excellent free agent addition. Due to injuries, Andrew Booth Jr. and Akayleb Evans had “incomplete” rookie seasons. Evans played well when on the field. He just wasn’t on the field for long. What they are as player is still a complete unknown but they were drafted in the second- and fourth-rounds to be impact players. Both have the talent. They just have to stay on the field. The Vikings have some players at receiver and cornerback. One of those players is a superstar. They just don’t have enough players at those positions. They definitely don’t have enough proven players. The Vikings really have no players on the defensive line that might truly worry an offense. Harrison Phillips and free agent addition Dean Lowry are solid players. They can make plays, have nice snaps, and strong games. The Vikings don’t have a player on the defensive line that can take over a game. It’d be nice to have that sort of player. I really like what I saw from Esezi Otomewo late in his rookie season. Maybe he develops into a high level player. Right now, he isn’t. No one is on the defensive line. A defense can still be very good with a bunch of “lunch-pail-type” players at the front of it. Especially if there are difference-making edge rushers like Danielle Hunter, Za’Darius Smith, and Marcus Davenport terrorizing offenses. It’d be nice to have a menace on the interior of the defensive line. Is that the team’s biggest need? It might be. 

The Vikings have several needs and currently hold only five draft picks to fill them. Unless general manager Kwesi Adofo-Mensah takes a huge swing to get a quarterback, I think that it’s likely the Vikings end up selecting more than five players in the draft. 






Wednesday, April 19, 2023

A Final Look At The Minnesota Vikings Visits

The 2023 NFL Draft is just over a week away. Today is the last day for prospect visits. Here’s the list of prospects that have reportedly visited the Minnesota Vikings. 

Minnesota Vikings Visits

Jordan Addison, WR, USC
Calvin Avery, DT, Illinois
Jarrick Bernard-Converse, CB, LSU
Mekhi Blackmon, CB, USC
Isaiah Bolden, CB, Jackson State
Nico Bolden, S, Kent State
Anthony Bradford, OT, LSU
Brian Branch, DB, Alabama
Karl Brooks, DT, Bowling Green
Mohamoud Diabate, LB, Utah
Emmanuel Forbes, CB, Mississippi State
Xavier Gipson, WR, Stephen F. Austin
Jordan Howden, S, Minnesota 
Evan Hull, RB, Northwestern
D.J. Ivey, CB, Miami
Nash Jensen, OG, North Dakota State
Quentin Johnston, WR, TCU
Isaiah Land, Edge/OLB, Florida A&M
Marte Mapu, S, Sacramento State
DeWayne McBride, RB, UAB
Tanner McKee, QB, Stanford
Trey Palmer, WR, Nebraska
John Michael Schmitz, C, Minnesota
Terell Smith, CB, Minnesota 
Jaxon Smith-Njigba, WR, Ohio State
Colby Sorsdal. OL, William & Mary
Starling Thomas V, CB. UAB
Keion White, Edge, Georgia Tech

As Minnesota Golden Gophers, Jordan Howden, John Michael Schmitz, and Terrell Smith probably do not count against the 30-prospect limit. As residents within the Vikings “metropolitan area,” Evan Hull and Nash Jensen also probably do not count against the 30-prospect limit. 

As far as I’ve seen, there have been 28 reported visits. At minimum, 23 of those count against the 30 visit limit. 

Cornerback is one of the Vikings biggest needs in the 2023 NFL Draft. It’s no surprise that several populate the visit list. 

Jarrick Bernard-Converse, CB, LSU
Mekhi Blackmon, CB, USC
Isaiah Bolden, CB, Jackson State
Brian Branch, DB, Alabama
Emmanuel Forbes, CB, Mississippi State
D.J. Ivey, CB, Miami
Terrell Smith, CB, Minnesota
Starling Thomas V, CB, UAB

About a third of the Vikings visits are cornerbacks. Branch played mostly safety at Alabama. He’d be an ideal nickel corner in the Vikings defense.

Receiver is also a significant need. Five are visiting with the Vikings.

Jordan Addison, WR, USC
Xavier Gipson, WR, Stephen F. Austin
Quentin Johnston, WR, TCU
Trey Palmer, WR, Nebraska
Jaxon Smith-Njigba, WR, Ohio State

Three of the five, Jordan Addison, Quentin Johnston, and Jaxon Smith-Njigba are expected to be selected in the first round and the 23rd pick is widely considered to be the “hot spot” for them. 

The Vikings are visiting with a quarterback! Despite being much bigger, at 6’6” and 231lbs, Tanner McKee is the quarterback in this draft that might draw comparisons to Kirk Cousins. That might mean something. Or nothing. 



Tuesday, April 18, 2023

Minnesota Vikings Free Agency Ledger. Again.

The Minnesota Vikings appeared to be done with pre-draft free agency. That changed on Monday when the Vikings added cornerback Joejuan Williams to the roster. The New England Patriots traded up 11 spots in the second round of the 2019 NFL Draft to select Williams. The Patriots clearly saw great potential in the big cornerback out of Vanderbilt. At 6’3” and 212lbs, Williams is a uniquely sized corner. It’s safe to say that he didn’t live up that potential in New England. He never could crack the starting lineup and he missed all of last season with a shoulder injury suffered in the first preseason game. The good is that Williams is only 25, he still has that unique size, he still has the talent that he showed in college, and he’s familiar with the defense that Brian Flores is likely to install in Minnesota. The Vikings need cornerback depth and Williams provides it. 

Minnesota Vikings Free Agency Ledger

Players re-signed:
Nick Mullens, QB
Alexander Mattison, RB
Garrett Bradbury, C
Ben Ellefson, TE
Blake Brandel, OT
Khyiris Tonga, DT
Kenny Willekes, DE
Greg Joseph, K
Andrew DePaola, LS
Austin Schlottman, C
Olisaemeka Udoh, OT
Jonathan Bullard, DT

Players signed:
Josh Oliver, TE
Marcus Davenport. Edge
Byron Murphy Jr., CB
Dean Lowry, DE
Brandon Powell, WR
Troy Reeder, LB
JoeJuan Williams, CB

Players signed elsewhere:
Eric Kendricks, LB - Los Angeles Chargers
Adam Thielen, WR - Carolina Panthers
Patrick Peterson, CB - Pittsburgh Steelers
Dalvin Tomlinson, DT - Cleveland Browns
Duke Shelley, CB - Las Vegas Raiders
Irv Smith Jr., TE - Cincinnati Bengals
Kris Boyd, CB - Arizona Cardinals

The Vikings started the offseason with 4 restricted and 15 unrestricted free agents. Eric Kendricks and Adam Thielen were released before the start of free agency and added to the list. Thomas Hennigan was released later in the offseason. 12 of the Vikings free agents have been re-signed. Kendricks, Thielen, Peterson, Tomlinson, Shelley, Smith, and Boyd have settled in with new teams. Two of the unrestricted free agents remain unsigned. Hennigan makes it three former Vikings still on the open market. 

Unsigned free agents:
Chandon Sullivan, CB
Olabisi Johnson, WR
Thomas Hennigan, WR

The Vikings are still uncomfortably close to the salary cap. For that reason, they have decisions to make on the contracts of Dalvin Cook and Za’Darius Smith. Depending on one’s perspective, the re-signing of Alexander Mattison either further complicates or makes easy the decision on Cook’s roster status. The same can be said of the signing of Marcus Davenport on Za’Darius Smith’s roster status. The thought of three elite pass rushers (Danielle Hunter, Davenport, and Smith) on the roster is intriguing but it’s tough to do when the team is so tight against the salary cap. I’m much more conflicted with Cook’s situation. I hate the thought of losing him. I don’t think that he’s regressed anywhere near as much as many people seem to believe. The Vikings issues with the run game last season were a team-thing rather than a Cook-thing. In a couple of the most memorable games in a very memorable season, it was an explosive play by Cook that ignited comebacks. He’s also a team leader. The Vikings have lost enough of those this offseason. Hopefully, we see a resolution with the Smith and Cook situations soon. 

The offseason continues to march on.



Monday, April 17, 2023

A Look At Last Year’s Final Flea Flicker Mock Draft

Here’s the Final Flea Flicker Mock Draft of the 2022 NFL Draft. 

1.   Jacksonville Jaguars: Aidan Hutchinson, Edge, Michigan
2.   Detroit Lions: Travon Walker, Edge, Georgia
3.   Houston Texans: Ikem Ekwonu, OT, North Carolina State
4.   New York Jets: Kayvon Thibodeaux, Edge, Oregon
5.   New York Giants: Evan Neal, OT, Alabama
6.   Carolina Panthers: Kenny Pickett, QB, Pittsburgh
7.   New York Giants: Ahmad Gardner, CB, Cincinnati
8.   Atlanta Falcons: Garrett Wilson, WR, Ohio State
9.   Seattle Seahawks: Charles Cross, OT, Mississippi State
10. New York Jets: Jameson Williams, WR, Alabama
11. Washington Commanders: Kyle Hamilton, S, Norte Dame
12. Minnesota Vikings: Derek Stingley Jr., CB, LSU
13. Houston Texans: Jermaine Johnson II, Edge, Florida State
14. Baltimore Ravens: Trent McDuffie, CB, Washington
15. Philadelphia Eagles: Devin Loyd, LB, Utah
16. New Orleans Saints: Trevor Penning, OT, Northern Iowa
17. Los Angeles Chargers: Tyler Smith, OT, Tulsa
18. Philadelphia Eagles: Drake London, WR, USC
19. New Orleans Saints: Jordan Davis, DT, Georgia
20. Pittsburgh Steelers: Malik Willis, QB, Liberty
21. New England Patriots: Dax Hill, S, Michigan
22. Green Bay Packers: Chris Olave, WR, Ohio State
23. Arizona Cardinals: George Karlaftis, Edge, Purdue
24. Dallas Cowboys: Treylon Burks, WR, Arkansas
25. Buffalo Bills: Breece Hall, RB, Iowa State
26. Tennessee Titans: Boye Mafe, Edge, Minnesota 
27. Tampa Bay Buccaneers: Kenyon Green, OG, Texas A&M
28. Green Bay Packers: Devonte Wyatt, DT, Georgia
29. Kansas City Chiefs: Jahan Dotson, WR, Penn State
30. Kansas City Chiefs: Andrew Booth, CB, Clemson
31. Cincinnati Bengals: Tyler Linderbaum, C, Iowa
32. Detroit Lions: Desmond Ridder, QB, Cincinnati

As a reminder, here’s the actual draft.

1.   Jacksonville Jaguars: Travon Walker, Edge, Georgia
2.   Detroit Lions: Aidan Hutchinson, Edge, Michigan
3.   Houston Texans: Derek Stingley Jr., CB, LSU
4.   New York Jets: Ahmad Gardner, CB, Cincinnati
5.   New York Giants: Kayvon Thibodeaux, Edge, Oregon
6.   Carolina Panthers: Ikem Ekonwu, OT, North Carolina State
7.   New York Giants: Evan Neal, OT, Alabama
8.   Atlanta Falcons: Drake London, WR, USC
9.   Seattle Seahawks: Charles Cross, OT, Mississippi State
10. New York Jets: Garrett Wilson, WR, Ohio State
11. New Orleans Saints: Chris Olave, WR, Ohio State
12. Detroit Lions: Jameson Williams, WR, Alabama
13. Philadelphia Eagles: Jordan Davis, DT, Georgia
14. Baltimore Ravens: Kyle Hamilton, S, Notre Dame
15. Houston Texans: Kenyon Green, OG, Texas A&M
16. Washington Commanders: Jahan Dotson, WR, Penn State
17. Los Angeles Chargers: Zion Johnson, OG, Boston College
18. Tennessee Titans: Treylon Burks, WR, Arkansas 
19. New Orleans Saints: Trevor Penning, OT, Northern Iowa
20. Pittsburgh Steelers: Kenny Pickett, QB, Pittsburgh
21. Kansas City Chiefs: Trent McDuffie, CB, Washington
22. Green Bay Packers: Quay Walker, LB, Georgia
23. Buffalo Bills: Kaiir Elam, CB, Florida
24. Dallas Cowboys: Tyler Smith, OT, Tulsa
25. Baltimore Ravens: Tyler Linderbaum, C, Iowa
26. New York Jets: Jermaine Johnson II, Edge, Florida State
27. Jacksonville Jaguars: Devin Lloyd, LB, Utah
28. Green Bay Packers: Devonte Wyatt, DT, Georgia
29. New England Patriots: Cole Strange, OG, Tennessee-Chattanooga 
30. Kansas City Chiefs: George Karlaftis, Edge, Purdue
31. Cincinnati Bengals: Dax Hill, S, Michigan
32. Minnesota Vikings: Lewis Cine, S, Georgia

Over the years, I’ve had a lot of poor mock draft performances. This may have been my worst. Only twice did I have right player, right team, right pick. 

9.   New York Giants: Charles Cross, OT, Mississippi State
28. Green Bay Packers: Devonte Wyatt, DT, Georgia

I did get right player, right team, wrong pick with the New Orleans Saints selection of Trevor Penning. 

I didn’t get any of the first few picks correct. Those are usually the easiest to get right. I was going with the assumption that the Jacksonville Jaguars would use the first pick on the best edge player in the draft. That was Michigan’s Aidan Hutchinson. He showed during his rookie season that he was and is a better player than Travon Walker. 

My mock draft was terrible mostly for the players that I had in the first round that weren’t selected in the first round. 

Malik Willis, QB, Liberty
Boye Mafe, Edge, Minnesota
Andrew Booth Jr., CB, Clemson
Desmond Ridder, QB, Cincinnati

My mock draft downfall was really with the quarterbacks. I really thought that a couple QB-needy teams would radically reach for Malik Willis and Desmond Ridder. I wasn’t too far off on Boye Mafe and Andrew Booth Jr. Each was selected at the top half of the second round. 

I didn’t have Zion Johnson, Quay Walker, Kaiir Elam, Cole Strange, and Lewis Cine being selected in the first round. 
 


 

Sunday, April 16, 2023

Flea Flicker Mock Draft 4.0

The real draft is less than two weeks away. Here’s one more stab at a mock of the real one. 

1.   Carolina Panthers: Bryce Young, QB, Alabama
2.   Houston Texans: C.J. Stroud, QB, Ohio State
3.   Arizona Cardinals: Will Anderson Jr., Edge, Alabama
4.   Indianapolis Colts: Anthony Richardson, QB, Florida
5.   Seattle Seahawks (via Denver): Jalen Carter, DL, Georgia
6.   Detroit Lions (via Los Angeles Rams): Tyree Wilson, Edge, Texas Tech
7.   Las Vegas Raiders: Peter Skoronski, OT, Northwestern
8.   Atlanta Falcons: Lukas Van Ness, Edge, Iowa
9.   Chicago Bears: Paris Johnson Jr., OT, Ohio State
10. Philadelphia Eagles: (via New Orleans): Devon Witherspoon, CB, Illinois
11. Tennessee Titans: Will Levis, QB, Kentucky
12. Houston Texans (via Cleveland): Jaxon Smith-Njigba, WR, Ohio State
13. New York Jets: Darnell Wright, OT, Tennessee
14. New England Patriots: Christian Gonzalez, CB, Oregon
15. Green Bay Packers: Dalton Kincaid, TE, Utah
16. Washington Commanders: Brian Branch, DB, Alabama
17. Pittsburgh Steelers: Broderick Jones, OT, Georgia
18. Detroit Lions: Calijah Kancey, DT, Pittsburgh
19. Tampa Bay Buccaneers: Quentin Johnston, WR, TCU
20. Seattle Seahawks: Will McDonald IV, Edge, Iowa State
21. Los Angeles Chargers: Bijan Robinson, RB, Texas
22. Baltimore Ravens: Nolan Smith, Edge, Georgia
23. Minnesota Vikings: Hendon Hooker, QB, Tennessee
24. Jacksonville Jaguars: O’Cyrus Torrence, G, Florida
25. New York Giants: Jordan Addison, WR, USC
26. Dallas Cowboys: Michael Mayer, TE, Notre Dame
27. Buffalo Bills: Zay Flowers, WR, Boston College
28. Cincinnati Bengals: Deonte Banks, CB, Maryland
29. New Orleans Saints (via SF thru Miami): Joey Porter Jr., CB, Penn State
30. Philadelphia Eagles: Darnell Washington, TE, Georgia
31. Kansas City Chiefs: Adetomiwa Adebawore, Edge, Northwestern

Due to dirty deeds, the Miami Dolphins forfeited the 21st pick in the first round pick of the 2023 NFL Draft. So, there will only be 31 picks in the first round. 

Saturday, April 15, 2023

A Couple More Minnesota Vikings Mock Drafts

We’re less than two weeks from the 2023 NFL Draft. Here are a couple more Minnesota Vikings mock drafts from the PFF Mock Draft Simulator. 

Without a trade:

Round 1 (#23)
Bryan Bresee, DL, Clemson

Round 3 (#87)
Darius Rush, CB, South Carolina

Round 4 (#119)
Dorian Thompson-Robinson, QB, UCLA

Round 5 (#158)
Jalen Moreno-Cropper, WR, Fresno State

Round 6 (#211)
Aubrey Miller Jr., LB, Jackson State

With a trade:
I traded #23 to the Pittsburgh Steelers for #32, #80, and #120.

Round 2 (#32)
Hendon Hooker, QB, Tennessee

Round 3 (#80)
Garrett Williams, CB, Syracuse

Round 3 (#87)
Jayden Reed, WR, Michigan State

Round 4 (#119)
Karl Brooks, DL, Bowling Green

Round 4(#120)
Isaiah McGuire, Edge, Missouri

Round 5 (#158) 
Cory Trice, CB, Purdue

Round 6 (#211)
Mohamoud Diabate, LB, Utah

More picks is much better than fewer picks. Imagine that.

Through too damn many of these simulations, I find that I’ve grown fond of Karl Brooks. Each time I don’t select Bryan Bresee or Northwestern’s Adetomiwa Adebawore in the first round, I find myself looking for him as early as the third round. 

PFF doesn’t like Hendon Hooker. I got an “F” for picking him with the 32nd pick. I like him. If the Vikings like him, I’m fine with Hooker being the pick at #23. I think that it’s a near certainty that he doesn’t make out of the first round. 



Friday, April 14, 2023

NFL Draft Invites

Seventeen of the top prospects in the 2023 NFL Draft will be in Kansas City to hear their name called.

Jordan Addison, WR, USC
Will Anderson Jr., Edge, Alabama
Brian Branch, DB, Alabama
Jalen Carter, DL, Georgia
Zay Flowers, WR, Boston College
Christian Gonzalez, CB, Oregon
Paris Johnson Jr., OT, Ohio State
Will Levis, QB, Kentucky
Joey Porter Jr., CB, Penn State
Antony Richardson, QB, Florida
Bijan Robinson, RB, Texas
Jaxon Smith-Njigba, WR, Ohio State
C.J. Stroud, QB, Ohio State
Keion White, Edge, Georgia Tech
Tyree Wilson, Edge, Texas Tech
Devon Witherspoon, CB, Illinois
Bryce Young, QB, Alabama

Breakdown by college:
Alabama (3)
-Will Anderson Jr.
-Brian Branch
-Bryce Young

Ohio State (3)
-Paris Johnson Jr.
-Jaxon Smith-Njigba
-C.J. Stroud

By conference:
SEC (6)
-Will Anderson Jr.
-Brian Branch
-Jalen Carter
-Will Levis
-Anthony Richardson
-Bryce Young

Big 10 (5)
-Paris Johnson Jr.
-Joey Porter Jr.
-Jaxon Smith-Njigba
-C.J. Stroud
-Devon Witherspoon

Big 12 (2)
-Bijan Robinson
-Tyree Wilson

ACC (2)
-Zay Flowers
-Keion White

Pac-12 (2)
-Jordan Addison
-Christian Gonzalez

By position:
Quarterback (4)
-Will Levis
-Anthony Richardson
-C.J. Stroud
-Bryce Young

Defensive back (4)
-Brian Branch
-Christian Gonzalez
-Joey Porter Jr.
-Devon Witherspoon

Edge (3)
-Will Anderson Jr.
-Keion White
-Tyree Wilson

Receiver (3)
-Jordan Addison
-Zay Flowers
-Jaxon Smith-Njigba

All prospects attending the draft hope for a short stay. The shorter the better. Last year, 21 prospects attended the draft. Malik Willis, Matt Corral, and Nakobe Dean were still waiting in the third round. And Aaron Rodgers thought that he had a long wait. Clown. Here’s hoping that all of the 17 prospects attending this year’s draft have a short stay in Kansas City. 





Thursday, April 13, 2023

Another Look At The Minnesota Vikings Visits

The 2023 NFL Draft is two weeks away. The Minnesota Vikings continue to visit with the draft’s prospects. 

Minnesota Vikings Visits

Jordan Addison, WR, USC
Jarrick Bernard-Converse, CB, LSU
Mekhi Blackmon, CB, USC
Isaiah Bolden, CB, Jackson State
Nico Bolden, S, Kent State
Anthony Bradford, OT, LSU
Brian Branch, S, Alabama
Karl Brooks, DT, Bowling Green
Mohamoud Diabate, LB, Utah
Emmanuel Forbes, CB, Mississippi State
Jordan Howden, S, Minnesota 
Evan Hull, RB, Northwestern
D.J. Ivey, CB, Miami
Nash Jensen, OG, North Dakota State
Quentin Johnston, WR, TCU
Isaiah Land, Edge/OLB, Florida A&M
Marte Mapu, S, Sacramento State
DeWayne McBride, RB, UAB
Tanner McKee, QB, Stanford
Trey Palmer, WR, Nebraska
John Michael Schmitz, C, Minnesota
Terell Smith, CB, Minnesota 
Colby Sorsdal. OL, William & Mary
Starling Thomas V, CB. UAB
Keion White, Edge, Georgia Tech

As Minnesota Golden Gophers, Jordan Howden, John Michael Schmitz, and Terrell Smith probably do not count against the 30-prospect limit. As residents within the Vikings “metropolitan area,” Evan Hull and Nash Jensen also probably do not count against the 30-prospect limit. 

As far as I’ve seen, there have been 25 reported visits. At minimum, 20 of those count against the 30 visit limit. 

One of the curiosities of the Vikings visits is the cornerbacks and the receivers. Other than Brian Branch and Emmanuel Forbes, the cornerbacks coming to Minnesota are probably considered Day 2 or 3 prospects.

Jarrick Bernard-Converse, CB, LSU
Mekhi Blackmon, CB, USC
Isaiah Bolden, CB, Jackson State
D.J. Ivey, CB, Miami
Terrell Smith, CB, Minnesota
Starling Thomas V, CB, UAB

Including Branch and Forbes, about a third of the Vikings visits are cornerbacks. That’s no surprise as the Vikings need cornerbacks.

As for the receivers, Jordan Addison and Quentin Johnston are two of the four receivers expected to be selected in the first round. Trey Palmer is the third receiver on the visit list. While three is a small sample size, it’s interesting that the Vikings aren’t bringing Day 2 or 3 receivers in numbers similar to the cornerbacks. If I was to be so foolish as to pull draft plans from the draft visits, the Vikings are looking to find their needed receiver in the first round and their needed cornerback in a later round.

The Vikings are visiting with a quarterback! Despite being much bigger, at 6’6” and 231lbs, Tanner McKee is the quarterback in this draft that might draw comparisons to Kirk Cousins. That might mean something. Or nothing. 

A potential draft from the visits:

Round 1 (23)
Jordan Addison, WR, USC

Round 3 (87)
Karl Brooks, DL, Bowling Green

Round 4 (119)
Starling Thomas V, CB, UAB

Round 5 (158)
Mohamoud Diabate, LB, Utah

Round 6 (211)
Colby Sorsdal, OL, William & Mary 

I might like this one a little better.

Round 1 (23)
Brian Branch, DB, Alabama

Round 3 (87)
Karl Brooks, DL, Bowling Green

Round 4 (119)
Trey Palmer, WR, Nebraska

Round 5 (158)
Mohamoud Diabate, LB, Utah

Round 6 (211)
Colby Sorsdal, OL, William & Mary

The visits continue…


Wednesday, April 12, 2023

Top 20 SEC Prospects of the 2023 NFL Draft

It was easier to select 20 top prospects from the Big 10 than the Pac-12. It’s even easier to select 20 top prospects from the SEC than the Big 10. Here are some of the best prospect in the 2023 NFL Draft from the SEC. 

Top 20 SEC Prospects of the 2023 NFL Draft

1.   Jalen Carter, DT, Georgia
2.   Bryce Young, QB, Alabama
3.   Will Anderson Jr., Edge, Alabama
4.   Nolan Smith, Edge, Georgia
5.   Anthony Richardson, QB, Florida
6.   Broderick Jones, OT, Georgia
7.   Brian Branch, DB, Alabama
8.   Darnell Wright, OT, Tennessee
9.   Hendon Hooker, QB, Tennessee
10. Darnell Washington, TE, Georgia
11. Will Levis, QB, Kentucky
12. Jahmyr Gibbs, RB, Alabama
13. Drew Sanders, LB, Arkansas
14. Jalen Hyatt, WR, Tennessee
15. O’Cyrus Torrence, G, Florida
16. Cam Smith, CB, South Carolina
17. B.J. Ojulari, Edge, LSU
18. Derek Hall, Edge, Auburn
19. Kelee Ringo, CB, Georgia
20. Devon Achane, RB, Texas A&M


Tuesday, April 11, 2023

Top 20 Big 10 Prospects of the 2023 NFL Draft

Yesterday, I gathered the Top 20 Prospects of the 2023 NFL Draft from the Pac-12. That was a challenge as it took digging through the top 200 or so prospects to find 20. I didn’t have to dig as deep for the best of the Big 10.

Top 20 Big 10 Prospects of the 2023 NFL Draft

1.   C.J. Stroud, QB, Ohio State
2.   Peter Skoronski, OT, Northwestern
3.   Devon Witherspoon, CB, Illinois
4.   Paris Johnson Jr., OT, Ohio State
5.   Lukas Van Ness, Edge, Iowa
6.   Jaxon Smith-Njigba, WR, Ohio State
7.   Joey Porter Jr., CB, Penn State
8.   Deonte Banks, CB, Maryland
9.   Mazi Smith, DT, Michigan
10. Adetomiwa Adebawore, DL, Northwestern
11. John Michael-Schmitz, C, Minnesota
12. Joe Tippman, G, Wisconsin
13. Jack Campbell, LB, Iowa
14. D.J. Turner, CB, Michigan
15. Sydney Brown, S, Illinois
16. Ji’Ayir Brown, S, Penn State
17. Luke Wypler, C, Ohio State
18. Dawand Jones, OT, Ohio State
19. Keeanu Benton, DT, Wisconsin
20. Chase Brown, RB, Illinois



Monday, April 10, 2023

Top 20 Pac-12 Prospects Of The 2023 NFL Draft

As a Cal alum and fan, I’m most familiar with the teams and players of the Pac-12. Here’s a look at some of the best prospects of the 2023 NFL Draft from the conference. There’s been a bit of a football talent void in Berkeley recently. That’s about to change! Only one Golden Bear is likely to be drafted this year. He’s on this list.

Best Pac-12 Prospects Of The 2023 NFL Draft

1.   Christian Gonzalez, CB, Oregon
2.   Dalton Kincaid, TE, Utah
3.   Jordan Addison, WR, USC
4.   Luke Musgrave, TE, Oregon State
5.   Daiyan Henley, LB, Washington State
6.   Tuli Tuipulotu, DL, USC
7.   Zach Charbonnet, RB, UCLA
8.   Dorian Thompson-Robinson, QB, UCLA
9.   Andrew Vorhees, OG, USC
10. Daniel Scott, S, Cal
11. Clark Phillips III, CB, Utah
12. Tanner McKee, QB, Stanford
13. Noah Sewell, LB, Oregon
14. Kyu Blu Kelly, CB, Stanford
15. Mohamoud Diabate, LB, Utah
16. Michael Wilson, WR, Stanford
17. Braeden Daniels, G, Utah
18. Atonio Mofi, G, UCLA
19. Jaxson Kirkland, G, Washington
20. Jake Bobo, WR, UCLA

Perhaps the most amazing aspect of the above list is the absence of a Washington defensive back. U-Dub has been DBU in recent years. 


Sunday, April 9, 2023

Best Minnesota Vikings Draft Picks Through The Years

Here’s a look at the best pick from each of the 62 drafts of the Minnesota Vikings.

1961
3. Fran Tarkenton, QB, Georgia
No offense to Tommy Mason, the first pick in Vikings franchise history, but this one is easy. 

1962
Undrafted. Mick Tingelhoff, C, Nebraska
I’m going the undrafted route with the best pick of 1962. Mick Tingelhoff was the NFL’s best center throughout the 1960s and into the 1970s. He finally made it to Canton in 2015. 

1963
4. Paul Flatley, WR, Northwestern
Paul Flatley exploded out of the gate. He took home the league’s Rookie of the Year award in 1963. He earned a Pro Bowl nod in 1966. Flatley was the first in the Vikings great receiver tradition.

The one that got away. I sure wish that the Vikings had managed to wrestle second-round pick Bobby Bell from the Kansas City Chiefs. I have sleepless nights imagining Bell playing linebacker behind the Vikings great defensive line. 

1964
1. Carl Eller, DE, Minnesota 
Another easy one. Carl Eller is deservedly honored in Canton and is one of the franchise’s greatest football players. 

1965
13. Dave Osborn, RB, North Dakota
The 1965 draft is a bit of a hole in the Vikings early acquisition of talent. Top pick, receiver Jack Snow, never played for the Vikings. He was traded to the Los Angeles Rams before he could take a snap in Minnesota. None of that takes anything away from Dave Osborn. He was a very good, productive running back for all of his 11 years with the Vikings.

1966
5. Doug Davis, T, Kentucky
The 1966 draft was another bleak one for the Vikings. Doug Davis was the team’s primary right tackle from 1966-69.

1967
1. Alan Page, DT, Notre Dame
The 1965 and 1966 drafts weren’t great for the Vikings. The 1967 draft was great. It’s arguably the best in franchise history. It helped to have the first of the bounty of picks from the trade of Fran Tarkenton. Clinton Jones, Gene Washington, Alan Page, Bob Grim, Bobby Bryant, and John Beasley all came out of the 1967 draft. Page is arguably the best player in Vikings franchise history. 

1968
1. Ron Yary, OT, USC
This is another easy one. The Vikings had the first pick in the 1968 NFL Draft as a result of the Tarkenton trade. They did right with the pick. Ron Yary is honored in Canton. He’s one of the best offensive tackles in league history and arguably the best of his era. 

1969
2. Ed White, G, Cal
Ed White is the best Cal player to play for the Vikings. He was an outstanding defensive lineman in college but made a smooth transition to offense. Paired with Yary, the right side of the Vikings offensive line was dominant for about a decade. 

1970
10. Stu Voigt, TE, Wisconsin
As a young Vikings fan, I was annoyed by a preseason team evaluation that said that Stu Voigt was a mediocre tight end. It was probably accurate but this young Vikings fan thought that Voigt was great. The 1970 draft wasn’t a good one for the Vikings but Voigt was better than mediocre for nearly all of his 11 years in Minnesota. He was an excellent blocker and reliable receiver. 

1971
15. Jeff Wright, S, Minnesota 
The 1971 draft was another poor draft for the Vikings. First round pick Leo Hayden is one of the most spectacular busts in franchise history. Hayden and Jeff Wright were the only picks that made the team. Wright formed a solid safety pairing with Paul Krause for about six years. 

1972
1. Jeff Siemon, LB, Stanford
Despite his Stanford origins, Jeff Siemon is one of the best middle linebackers in franchise history. He went to four Pro Bowls and probably should’ve gone to a couple more. If felt like he made every damn tackle in Super Bowl XI.

1973
1. Chuck Foreman, RB, Miami
This is another easy one. Chuck Foreman was great. It was so fun to watch him play football. For about five years he was arguably the best running back in the league. He was certainly the most versatile. In my opinion, he should have a bust in Canton. 

1974
2. Matt Blair, LB, Iowa State
The 1974 draft was a strong one for the Vikings. Fred McNeill and Steve Riley in the first round. Matt Blair in the second. Steve Craig in the third. It helps to have extra picks. It helps even more to take advantage of those extra picks. Blair was the best of the bunch. He’s also one of the best linebackers in franchise history.

1975
1. Mark Mullaney, DE, Colorado State
Mark Mullaney was the first of a couple on this list that had the unfortunate task of eventually replacing the Purple People Eaters. Carl Eller and Jim Marshall? No one was ever going to effectively replace either of those greats. Mullaney was a very good player for all of his 12 years in Minnesota.

1976
2. Sammy White, WR, Grambling
Sammy White was probably my first favorite Vikings receiver. He was the big play pass-catcher opposite the chain-mover Ahmad Rashad. The White-Rashad pairing was fun. White was the second Vikings receiver to take home Rookie of the Year honors. 

1977
9. Scott Studwell, LB, Illinois
The 1977 draft was a very good and very underrated draft for the Vikings. Tommy Kramer, Dennis Swilley, Tom Hannon, Scott Studwell. All four became impact players. Kramer would easily get the nod as best pick of the draft if he’d managed to stay on the field more consistently. When he was on the field, he was a lot of fun and sometimes great. Unfortunately, he was hurt so damn much. Studwell gets the nod because he was consistently available and consistently effective from 1977-90. Add to that his decades in the Vikings front office. 

1978
2. John Turner, CB, Miami
First-round pick Randy Holloway was another defensive lineman tasked with replacing legends. Fourth-round pick Jim Hough was a solid offensive lineman for a few years. Second-round pick John Turner gets the nod for solidly starting several more games than Hough.

1979
6. Joe Senser, TE, West Chester State
Joe Senser is one of the great “what ifs” in franchise history. What if an injury hadn’t ended his career? 42 catches for 442 yards and seven touchdowns in 1980. He ripped up the league in 1981. 79 catches for 1004 yards and eight touchdowns. He had more modest production during the 1982 strike-shortened season. An injury wiped out his 1983 season. He tried to come back in 1984 but wasn’t the same player. It was his final season. Senser was on the verge of joining Kellen Winslow and Ozzie Newsome as one of the best tight ends in the league. Then, his career was suddenly over. First-round pick Ted Brown and second-round pick Dave Huffman had longer and better overall careers than Senser but the sixth-round pick from itty bitty West Chester State had one of the most productive seasons in franchise history. 

1980
1. Doug Martin, DL, Washington
Doug Martin was the best of the defensive linemen drafted to replace legends. He led the league with 11.5 sacks during the strike-shortened (9 games) 1982 season. He had 13 sacks in 1983. He had a couple nine-sack seasons later in his career. Martin was a very good and underrated football player for the Vikings.

1981
3. Tim Irwin, OT, Tennessee
Tim Irwin is another underrated player for the Vikings. He was a fixture at right tackle for a decade. The Irwin-Gary Zimmerman tackle pairing is one of the team’s best. Irwin impacted the current generation of Vikings players as the youth football coach of Harrison Smith.

1982
7. Steve Jordan, TE, Brown
Steve Jordan is the greatest tight end in Vikings franchise history. The Pro Football Hall of Fame voters should have a discussion about Jordan’s inclusion in Canton. I doubt that he’ll get a bust but his great career should, at the very least, be discussed. 

1983
1. Joey Browner, S, USC
Steve Jordan’s career should be discussed by the Hall of Fame voters. Joey Browner should be in the Hall of Fame. He was one of the best safeties of his era. If not for injuries, he’d surely be in Canton. Even with an injury-shortened career, he should be. As a safety peer, Kenny Easley earned a bust based on fewer games played, fewer Pro Bowls, and as many All-Pros. In my opinion, Browner was the better player. At his best, Browner was the equal of Ronnie Lott. Just my opinion. As a side, I recently met Browner’s nephew at a Converse outlet near Sacramento. Had a fun conversation. 

1984
1. Keith Millard, DT, Washington State
Another great Vikings football player. Another great career cut short by injury. Another Hall of Fame-worthy player despite that shortened career. At the height of his football talents, Keith Millard routinely wrecked the plans of offenses throughout the league. Put simply, he was a beast. The Vikings had to wait on Millard as he went to the USFL before he stepped on an NFL field. He was worth the wait. 

1985
1. Chris Doleman, DE, Pittsburgh
Chris Doleman is deservedly honored in Canton. On a team with a fantastic pass-rushing tradition, he’s one of the best. 

1986
3. Kirk Lowdermilk, C, Ohio State
The Vikings have a great pass rushing tradition. They also have a very good center tradition. Kirk Lowdermilk followed in the footsteps of the great Mick Tingelhoff and the solid Dennis Swilley. Lowdermilk effectively carried the Vikings center tradition for six seasons.

1987
3. Henry Thomas, DT, LSU
Henry Thomas is one of the most underrated players in Vikings and recent league history. He was the glue of the great defensive line of Chris Doleman, Keith Millard, and Al Noga.

1988
1. Randall McDaniel, G, Arizona State
This one’s very easy. Randall McDaniel is the best guard that I’ve ever seen. Better than John Hannah. Better than Larry Allen. Better even than the great Steve Hutchinson. 

1989
4. Darryl Ingram, TE, Cal
This draft was terrible. Perhaps the nod should go to Mike Merriweather as the Vikings traded their first-round pick to the Pittsburgh Steelers for the linebacker. Of the actual draft picks, only second-round pick David Braxton and fourth-round pick Darryl Ingram made the team and neither made it to a second season. Darryl Ingram gets the nod for the two games that he started for the Vikings and for being a Cal classmate of mine. 

1990
Undrafted. John Randle, DT, Texas A&I
I’m again going the undrafted route. John Randle is one of the best, most fun players ever to play for the Vikings. His great career earned him a bust in Canton.

It’s no surprise that I had to go the undrafted route for the 1990 draft as it’s the first of three consecutive drafts depleted by the infamous Herschel Walker trade. 

1991
3. Jake Reed, WR, Grambling
Jake Reed is the second Grambling receiver on this list. Like Sammy White before him, Reed was the big-play receiver opposite a great chain-moving receiver. Reed and Cris Carter were a great pair. 

1992
5. Ed McDaniel, LB, Clemson
Ed McDaniel was a very underrated football player. He was also one of my favorite players from this era.

1993
1. Robert Smith, RB, Ohio State
Once Robert Smith shook the injury bug that plagued him over his first four seasons, he was an outstanding running back. After his eighth and best season, he suddenly retired. His final four seasons were a blast.

1994
1. Todd Steussie, OT, Cal
Another Cal player! Todd Steussie was a very good left tackle on an excellent offensive line. Steussie, Randall McDaniel, Jeff Christy, David Dixon, Korey Stringer. Oh my, that’s a dreamy offensive line.

1995
1. Korey Stringer, OT, Ohio State
Korey Stringer. RIP Big K. I’m still not over his sudden passing.

1996
3. Moe Williams, RB, Kentucky
Moe Williams is probably best known for taking a lateral from Randy Moss in for a score. Williams was a solid, versatile running back for nine seasons.

1997
7. Matthew Hatchette, WR, Langston
I’m picking Matthew Hattchette because I can’t stomach picking Dwayne Rudd. I was thrilled when the Vikings selected Rudd in the first round. He was supposed to be the explosive defensive playmaker that the Vikings desperately needed. Few Vikings players frustrated me more. I quickly grew tired of his excessive celebrations of routine plays. Hattchette was a nice fourth receiver on a loaded, explosive offense. 

1998
1. Randy Moss, WR, Marshall
Randy Moss is the most explosive, most physically gifted receiver I’ve ever seen. He’s the third Vikings receiver to be named Rookie of the Year. 

1999
2. Jim Kleinsasser, TE, North Dakota
A knee injury keeps Daunte Culpepper from being the pick. Jim Kleinsasser was a great football player. He didn’t have the production now expected from a tight end but he was a dominating blocker. I’ve never seen a better blocking tight end. 

2000
1. Chris Hovan, DT, Boston College
Chris Hovan might not have fulfilled all first round expectations but he was a solid interior presence on the Vikings defensive line for a few seasons.

2001
1. Michael Bennett, RB, Wisconsin
Michael Bennett was drafted to replace the suddenly retired Robert Smith. Bennett didn’t hit Smith’s highs but was pretty good for a few seasons. 

2002
1. Bryant McKinnie, OT, Miami
Bryant McKinnie could’ve been one of the greatest offensive tackles to ever play. He had the talent. Like Dwayne Rudd, McKinnie rarely did anything but annoy me. It never looked like he was much interested in playing football. Even with little effort he occasionally dominated. He had that much talent. Getting sent home from his lone Pro Bowl for being a dipshit was the perfect summation of his career. 

2003
1. Kevin Williams, DT, Oklahoma State
Kevin Williams was arguably the best defensive tackle of his era. Paired with Pat Williams on the interior, teams could not run on the “Williams Wall.” Those two teamed with ends Jared Allen and Ray Edwards/Brian Robison to form an excellent defensive line. Kevin Williams had a Canton-worthy career. The top of the Viking 2003 draft class was strong: Williams, E.J. Henderson, and Nate Burleson. 

2004
4. Mewelde Moore, RB, Tulane
If leukemia hadn’t ended his career, first-round pick Kenechi Udeze might’ve been the choice for best 2004 pick. Fortunately, Udeze beat the shit out of the leukemia but his career was over. He continued his football life as a coach. Mewelde Moore was a solid, versatile back and returner. 

2005
None
This draft sucked. Thanks to the sad trade of Randy Moss, the Vikings had two first round picks and blew them both. Troy Williamson was the pick to replace Moss. Huge miss. Erasmus James was supposed to be a pass rushing solution. Another miss. Perhaps making matters worse, the Vikings passed on Aaron Rodgers twice. Considering the clown that he’s become or maybe always was, that doesn’t feel like a mistake. Besides, Daunte Culpepper still had intact knees at the time. If the Vikings were to do the 2005 first round again, DeMarcus Ware and Roddy White would be the picks. 

2006
1. Chad Greenway, LB, Iowa
Chad Greenway’s rookie season was erased by a preseason knee injury. He hit the 2007 season running and kept running for the next 10 years. He’s one of the best linebackers in franchise history.

2007
1. Adrian Peterson, RB, Oklahoma
Adrian Peterson is one of the best running backs I’ve ever seen. He could make defenders look silly with speed, moves, and power. 296 yards against the San Diego Chargers as a rookie. 2,097 yards and an MVP award in 2012. He’ll be honored in Canton in a few years. 

2008
6. John Sullivan, C, Notre Dame
The Vikings traded a first- and two third-round picks in the 2008 NFL Draft to the Kansas City Chiefs for Jared Allen. So this draft was a bit depleted before it started. It was worth it as Allen was an awesome addition. The selection of John Sullivan was a very good addition. In 2009, he took his place in the Vikings strong center tradition. 

2009
1. Percy Harvin, WR, Florida
Percy Harvin was a blast to watch. The only disappointing aspect of his Vikings career was the trade to the Seattle Seahawks after the 2012 season. Harvin was the fourth Vikings receiver to be named Rookie of the Year. 

2010
4. Everson Griffen, DE, USC
Everson Griffen spent his first four seasons playing sparingly in the long shadow of Jared Allen. When he took the field full time in 2014, he immediately started terrorizing quarterbacks. He was a fun, great football player.

2011
2. Kyle Rudolph, TE, Notre Dame
If Steve Jordan isn’t the best tight end in Vikings franchise history, Kyle Rudolph is. He was an excellent player and leader for a decade. 

2012
1. Harrison Smith, S, Notre Dame
In consecutive years, the Vikings hit twice on Notre Dame players. Harrison Smith has been brilliant since his rookie season. He should’ve been one of the safeties on the 2010s All-Decade team. He will have a Hall of Fame discussion five years after he retires.

2013
1. Xavier Rhodes, CB, Florida State
For a stretch of 2-3 years, Xavier Rhodes was one of the best cover corners in the league. His best games were those against the best receivers in the league. Undrafted Adam Thielen deserves mention here. His great, long career with the Vikings probably makes him a more deserving choice than Rhodes. 

2014
1. Anthony Barr, LB, UCLA
I wish that this choice was Teddy Bridgewater as it’d be nice if the Vikings had drafted a franchise quarterback. That takes nothing away from Anthony Barr. Even if he wasn’t always respected for all that he did on the field, Barr was a very good player and leader for a long time. 

2015
3. Danielle Hunter, DE, LSU
The 2015 draft was one of the best in franchise history. Trae Waynes, Eric Kendricks, Danielle Hunter, and Stefon Diggs. Each became a starter and most were impact starters. Kendricks, Hunter, or Diggs could be the pick here. The only knock on Hunter’s excellent career are the two seasons he missed to injury. When healthy, he’s one of the league’s best pass rushers.

2016
7. Stephen Weatherly, DE, Vanderbilt
The 2016 draft wasn’t very productive. First-round pick Laquon Treadwell can safely be called a bust for the Vikings. I’m reluctantly going with Stephen Weatherly as the best pick of this sad draft. Second-round pick Mackensie Alexander might’ve had more and greater highs. In 2018 and 2019, he was one of the better nickel corners in the league. I’m leaning Weatherly because of his decent production as a rotational pass rusher relative to his seventh-round selection. I find it interesting that both players left and returned to the Vikings despite the supposed toxic environment surrounding the team.

2017
2. Dalvin Cook, RB, Florida State
Dalvin Cook’s play makes him an easy choice. The lack of anyone else from the 2017 draft class doing much of anything makes the choice even easier. Cook is a really fun back. I feel like I’m one of the few fans that hopes his Vikings career continues for at least another season. 

2018
2. Brian O’Neill, OT, Pittsburgh
Brian O’Neill has developed into one of the best right tackles in the league. The Vikings have had many offensive line issues in recent years. O’Neill isn’t one of them.

2019
3. Alexander Mattison, RB, Boise State
It’d be best for the Vikings if Garrett Bradbury had developed into the center that he was drafted to be. He got an extension, maybe he’ll hit the level expected of a first round pick. Until that happens, Alexander Mattison is the best pick from the 2019 draft. He’s been a reliable #2 to Cook. Like Bradbury, Mattison received a contract extension this offseason. Even if Cook still tops the depth chart, I expect many more carries for Mattison. 

2020
1. Justin Jefferson, WR, LSU
What can be said that hasn’t been said about Justin Jefferson. Three years in and he’s the league’s most productive receiver. He’s also one of the league’s most likable players. Jefferson is simply a brilliant football player. He should’ve been the fifth Vikings receiver to be named Rookie of the Year. 

2021
1. Christian Darrisaw, OT, Virginia Tech
It’s happened so fast but Justin Jefferson and Christian Darrisaw are probably the best, most important, and most valuable players on the Vikings roster. Darrisaw’s highlights are a riot. He’s a bully. It’s beautiful. 

2022
3. Brian Asamoah, LB, Oklahoma
It’s really too early to make this pick. Undrafted punter Ryan Wright probably had the best rookie season. Ed Ingram was the only draft pick to earn a starting role. I’m going with Brian Asamoah because of his fine but scattered rookie moments. He’s penciled in as a starter going into his second season and I expect big things. I also expect big things from Lewis Cine, Andrew Booth Jr., Akayleb Evans, Esezi Otomewo, Ty Chandler, and Jalen Nailor. I expect continued big things from Ryan Wright and great improvement from Ed Ingram. 

Here’s hoping that the 2023 draft class of the Minnesota Vikings is filled with elite talent and contributors.