Monday, December 1, 2025

Vikings - Seahawks

It didn’t seem possible but the Minnesota Vikings season dropped even deeper in the dumpster with a 26-0 loss to the Seattle Seahawks. The Vikings hadn’t been shut out since 2007. With the way the offense is playing, it feels like the next one could come before this season is finally done.

There was some optimism built through the week for the first start of undrafted rookie quarterback Max Brosmer. With starter J.J. McCarthy out with a concussion and Carson Wentz done for the year, the rookie was next. Despite having one fewer year in the league than McCarthy, Brosmer is two years older. Since being signed after going undrafted, Brosmer has shown to be a quick study of the Vikings offense and looked advanced in preseason work. Perhaps the pre-game optimism was simply hope, desperate hope. Any young quarterback, especially an undrafted, rookie quarterback, needs everything around him to be right. With left guard Donovan Jackson ruled out for the game on Friday and left tackle Christian Darrisaw declared inactive on Sunday, things weren’t right around Brosmer against the Seahawks. It showed early and it showed throughout the game.

Vikings first five possessions:

5 plays, 7 yards - punt
4 plays, 21 yards - punt
3 plays, 2 yards - punt
4 plays, 18 yards - punt

The only good thing about the start of the game was the play of the Vikings defense. Sam Darnold and the Seahawks offense did little throughout the game. They managed a field goal on their first possession of the second quarter. It turned out that was the only score the Seahawks would need. That wasn’t known early in the second quarter. The Vikings offense followed the big field goal with another punt. Then the defense forced their first turnover in nearly a month. Dallas Turner sacked Darnold and forced a fumble. Jalen Redmond recovered at the Seahawks 13-yard line. Just when the game looked like it was about to turn the Vikings way, it turned the other way.

Last week, the Vikings were in a tight, tense, defensive-heavy game against the Green Bay Packers. Just when that game felt like it might flip the Vikings way, a mind-numbing mistake handed the Packers a gift touchdown. The game sadly drifted away after that moment. Yesterday, the Vikings had a glorious scoring opportunity on the Seahawks 13-yard line. On 4th-and-1 from the four-yard line, head coach Kevin O’Connell opted to put the ball in Max Brosmer’s hands. Pressured by DeMarcus Lawrence, Brosmer underhanded the ball right to linebacker Ernest Jones IV. What followed was an easy 85-yard stroll to the end zone and a 10-0 lead. 

10-0 with about three minutes to play in the first half and this game felt like it was done. An excellent effort by the Vikings defense couldn’t cover for another four turnovers by the offense. 

The Vikings offense was terrible. One might even say that they were worse than terrible. The defense was terrific. Of course, everyone wants to point the finger at a single person to blame for a loss like this, a shut out loss like this. The offense was clearly the problem in this game and in recent games. When the offense isn’t working, it’s always the quarterback or the coach/play-caller. I wish that Kevin O’Connell had called a run on that fourth-and-one. I believed at the time, and certain now, that Jordan Mason up the middle had a much better chance of success than Max Brosmer passing for a yard. If Mason is stuffed, the Seahawks get the ball at their own five and the game is still 3-0. That “bad” call wasn’t the biggest of the offense’s problems in this game, and recent games. In my opinion, the biggest problem throughout this fast-becoming really sad season has been the merry-go-round offensive line. Every game has been a different group. Hell, sometimes it feels like every play is a different group. One of the biggest reasons for optimism this season was the rebuilt offensive line. The group of five put together in the offseason started their first game together last week against the Packers. The Vikings starting offensive line didn’t start a game together until Week 12. Week 12! That group lasted just over a half. There has been zero consistency on the offensive line. Zero consistency in who’s out there. Zero consistency in play. Yesterday, with an undrafted rookie quarterback under center, the Vikings could not run the ball. With Brosmer often running for his life, they could not pass the ball. Game announcers Joe Davis and Greg Olson proclaimed that the offense probably wouldn’t look any better if J.J. McCarthy was playing. I have my doubts about that but also question whether any quarterback would be proficient behind a line that can’t run block or protect. 

Because it’s the only good thing about this game, the Vikings defense deserves praise. More praise than they’re certainly going to get after a shutout loss. Perhaps reaching for talking-points in a game mostly over in the third quarter, Joe Davis and Greg Olson talked of the Seahawks place among the best in the league. The duo said the team had no weakness. I was a little surprised by this as the Seahawks offense really did nothing against the Vikings defense. Sam Darnold was running for his life throughout the game. He completed under 54% of his 26 passes for 128 yards. If you can ignore the interceptions, Max Brosmer had as many yards and a much better completion percentage. Jaxon Smith-Njigba came into the game seriously challenging the 2,000-yard barrier. He finished this game with two catches for 23 yards. 17 of those yards came on a late screen probably called just to get him off of a one-catch for six yards game. For the game, the Seahawks averaged only 3.5 yards per play. That was just a bit better the 3.2 yards per play of the Vikings offense. Which offense was broken yesterday? The Vikings defense had quite the hold on the Seahawks offense. 

I seriously hoped that I’d never again face a Vikings season as frustrating as the 1984 and 2010 seasons. The 2025 Vikings are very much heading in that direction. After the past four weeks, it’s a little shocking that a winning season is still mathematically possible. With five games to play, there’s an opportunity to flip this shit. The Washington Commanders are next. 


Sunday, November 30, 2025

Flea Flicker Week 13 Predictions

It’s Week 13. Here are some guesses at the games.

Minnesota Vikings @ Seattle Seahawks
Pick: Vikings
Things felt pretty nice when the Vikings defeated the Lions in Detroit. That feels so long ago. After three straight losses, the Vikings must start winning. It starts in Seattle. 

San Francisco 49ers @ Cleveland Browns
Pick: 49ers
With all of their injuries, it’s truly shocking the 49ers have managed to win eight games.

Jacksonville Jaguars @ Tennessee Titans
Pick: Jaguars
This is as much predicting the Titans to lose as predicting the Jaguars to win.

Houston Texans @ Indianapolis Colts
Pick: Colts
The Colts rebound from their late fade to the Chiefs.

New Orleans Saints @ Miami Dolphins
Pick: Dolphins
The Dolphins have a bit more.

Atlanta Falcons @ New York Jets
Pick: Falcons
Kirk Cousins tops the team that once courted him.

Arizona Cardinals @ Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Pick: Buccaneers
Buccaneers health might be the only standing in the way of a win. 

Los Angeles Rams @ Carolina Panthers
Pick: Rams
The Rams continue their roll.

Buffalo Bills @ Pittsburgh Steelers
Pick: Bills
Hopefully the Bills show.

Las Vegas Raiders @ Los Angeles Chargers
Pick: Chargers
Can the Chargers rebound from that Jaguars game?

Denver Broncos @ Washington Commnaders
Pick: Commanders
The Commanders snap their six games losing streak.

New York Giants @ New England Patriots
Pick: Patriots
Rematch of Super Bowls XLII and XLVI. Different outcome.


Saturday, November 29, 2025

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
Jaxon Smith-Njigba

This might be a bit early for Jaxon Smith-Njigba. Following his “breakout” 2024 season, Smith-Njigba’s 1313 receiving yards, in only 11 games this year, has already topped the best season of contenders Doug Baldwin and DK Metcalf. 

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

Friday, November 28, 2025

46 Minnesota Vikings Starting Quarterbacks

Once they crawled out of their early expansion days, the Minnesota Vikings have been a remarkably consistent and contending team. Over the past seven decades, losing seasons have been few and winning seasons have been many. The consistent success can be considered remarkable because the Vikings have been looking for a franchise quarterback for decades. The only franchise quarterback in team history was Fran Tarkenton. He was drafted in the third round of the 1961 NFL Draft, the first draft in franchise history. Tarkenton was great. He was so great that the Vikings traded him away after the 1966 season. It’s rare for a team with no titles to have “glory days” but the Vikings had some. Those great years started not so much with Tarkenton’s departure as Bud Grant’s arrival as head coach. Within three years, Grant had the Vikings in the Super Bowl. They didn’t win Super Bowl IV but the team’s future was bright. During the late ‘60s and early ‘70s, the Vikings were among the best teams in the league. The only thing missing from those teams was a franchise quarterback. To fix that problem, the Vikings traded for Fran Tarkenton. The only franchise quarterback in team history guided the Vikings to three more Super Bowls. Tarkenton retired after the 1978 season. He retired as the holder of every league career passing record. He held those records longer than any quarterback ever has. He has a bust in Canton. The Vikings have been looking for their next franchise quarterback since Tarkenton retired in 1978. Whenever it looked like they’d found that quarterback, an incredible run of bad luck took that quarterback away. 

Since their first season in 1961, the Vikings have selected five quarterbacks in the first round of the NFL Draft. 

Tommy Kramer (1977)
Daunte Culpepper (1999)
Christian Ponder (2011)
Teddy Bridgewater (2014)
J.J. McCarthy (2024)

Tommy Kramer was always fun and often great when he was on the field. He wasn’t on the field enough. Daunte Culpepper was on an upward trajectory until a knee injury ended his time in Minnesota. Christian Ponder was drafted to be a quarterback that he never had the talent to be. As with Culpepper, a horrible knee injury ended whatever future Teddy Bridgewater might’ve had with the Vikings. Each of those four quarterbacks was drafted to be the next great Vikings quarterback. Three showed great potential and the fourth was Ponder. Now, we come to J.J. McCarthy. He lost his rookie season to a torn meniscus last summer. At least publicly, the plan wasn’t for McCarthy to start as a rookie. At least publicly, the plan was for former high-pick, now journeyman Sam Darnold to be the starting quarterback in 2024. That was then. The plan was for J.J. McCarthy to be the Vikings starting quarterback this year and the 44th starting quarterback in franchise history To be the team’s first franchise quarterback since Fran Tarkenton retired, he must stay on the field. Through 11 games this season, McCarthy has played in only six games. He was injured by a Kaden Ellis hip-drop tackle during the Week 2 game against the Atlanta Falcons. The ankle injury kept him out of five games. In his place, Carson Wentz became the Vikings 45th starting quarterback. Against the Green Bay Packers last week, McCarthy suffered a concussion. He’s currently in the concussion protocol and his availability for Sunday’s game against the Seattle Seahawks is very much in doubt. Undrafted rookie Max Brosmer is in line to become the Vikings 46th starting quarterback. 

46 quarterbacks. Here are those quarterbacks listed by their annual starts. 

1961:
George Shaw (4)
Fran Tarkenton (10)

1962
Fran Tarkenton (14)

1963:
Fran Tarkenton (13)
Ron Vander Kelen (1)

1964:
Fran Tarkenton ((14)

1965:
Fran Tarkenton (14)

1966:
Fran Tarkenton (12)
Ron Vander Kelen (1)
Bob Berry (1)

1967:
Joe Kapp (11)
Ron Vander Kelen (3)

1968:
Joe Kapp (14)

1969:
Joe Kapp (13)
Gary Couzzo (1)

1970:
Gary Couzzo (12)
Bob Lee (2)

1971:
Gary Couzzo (8)
Bob Lee (4)
Norm Snead (2)

1972:
Fran Tarkenton (14)

1973:
Fran Tarkenton (14)

1974:
Fran Tarkenton (13)
Bob Berry (1)

1975:
Fran Tarkenton (14)

1976:
Fran Tarkenton (13)
Bob Lee (1)

1977:
Fran Tarkenton (9)
Bob Lee (4)
Tommy Kramer (1)

1978:
Fran Tarkenton (16)

1979:
Tommy Kramer (16)

1980:
Tommy Kramer (15)
Steve Dils (1)

1981:
Tommy Kramer (14)
Steve Dils (2)

1982:
Tommy Kramer (9)

1983:
Steve Dils (12)
Tommy Kramer (3)
Wade Wilson (1)

1984:
Tommy Kramer (9)
Wade Wilson (5)
Archie Manning (2)

1985:
Tommy Kramer (15)
Wade Wilson (1)

1986:
Tommy Kramer (13)
Wade Wilson (3)

1987:
Wade Wilson (7)
Tony Adams (3) - replacement games
Tommy Kramer (5)

1988:
Wade Wilson (10)
Tommy Kramer (6)

1989:
Wade Wilson (12)
Tommy Kramer (4)

1990:
Rich Gannon (12)
Wade Wilson (4)

1991:
Rich Gannon (11)
Wade Wilson (5)

1992:
Rich Gannon (12)
Sean Salisbury (4)

1993:
Jim McMahon (12)
Sean Salisbury (4)

1994:
Warren Moon (15)
Sean Salisbury (1)

1995:
Warren Moon (16)

1996:
Warren Moon (8)
Brad Johnson (8)

1997:
Brad Johnson (13)
Randall Cunningham (3)

1998:
Randall Cunningham (14)
Brad Johnson (2)

1999:
Jeff George (10)
Randall Cunningham (6)

2000:
Daunte Culpepper (16)

2001:
Daunte Culpepper (11)
Spergon Wynn (2)
Todd Bouman (3)

2002:
Daunte Culpepper (16)

2003:
Daunte Culpepper (14)
Gus Frerotte (2)

2004:
Daunte Culpepper (16)

2005:
Daunte Culpepper (7)
Brad Johnson (9)

2006:
Brad Johnson (14)
Tarvaris Jackson (2)

2007:
Tarvaris Jackson (12)
Kelly Holcomb (3)
Brooks Bollinger (1)

2008:
Gus Frerotte (11)
Tarvaris Jackson (5)

2009:
Brett Favre (16)

2010:
Brett Favre (13)
Tarvaris Jackson (1)
Joe Webb (2)

2011:
Donovan McNabb (6)
Christian Ponder (10)

2012:
Christian Ponder (16)

2013:
Christian Ponder (9)
Josh Freeman (1)
Matt Cassel (6)

2014:
Matt Cassel (3)
Teddy Bridgewater (12)
Christian Ponder (1)

2015:
Teddy Bridgewater (16)

2016:
Shaun Hill (1)
Sam Bradford (15)

2017:
Sam Bradford (2)
Case Keenum (14)

2018:
Kirk Cousins (16)

2019:
Kirk Cousins (15)
Sean Mannion (1)

2020:
Kirk Cousins (16)

2021:
Kirk Cousins (16)
Sean Mannion (1)

2022:
Kirk Cousins (17)

2023:
Kirk Cousins (8)
Jaren Hall (2)
Josh Dobbs (4)
Nick Mullens (3)

2024:
Sam Darnold (17)

2025 (so far):
J.J. McCarthy (6)
Carson Wentz (5)
Max Brosmer

46 Quarterbacks:
George Shaw
Fran Tarkenton
Ron Vander Kelen
Bob Berry
Joe Kapp
Gary Couzzo
Bob Lee
Norm Snead
Tommy Kramer
Steve Dils
Wade Wilson
Archie Manning
Tony Adams - replacement games
Rich Gannon
Sean Salisbury
Jim McMahon
Warren Moon
Brad Johnson
Randall Cunningham
Jeff George
Daunte Culpepper
Spergon Wynn
Todd Bouman
Gus Frerotte
Tarvaris Jackson
Kelly Holcomb
Brooks Bollinger
Brett Favre
Joe Webb
Donovan McNabb
Christian Ponder
Josh Freeman
Matt Cassel
Teddy Bridgewater
Shaun Hill
Sam Bradford
Case Keenum
Kirk Cousins
Sean Mannion
Jaren Hall
Josh Dobbs
Nick Mullens
Sam Darnold
J.J. McCarthy
Carson Wentz
Max Brosmer


Thursday, November 27, 2025

Throwback Thursday: Thanksgiving 1962

This Flicker was originally posted May 22, 2014. And several times since. 

The Detroit Lions have struggled for most of the past fifty years. Those struggles have made it difficult to imagine a time when the team was great. There really was a time when they were pretty great. The Lions were one of the dominant teams of the 1950s. They played in four NFL Championship games in the decade, winning three of them in 1952, '53, and '57. The Lions nearly carried the success of the 1950s into the 1960s.

In the 1960s, Vince Lombardi built the Green Bay Packers into one of the greatest teams in NFL history. From 1961-67, the Packers won five NFL titles. The Packers lost to the Philadelphia Eagles in the 1960 NFL Championship game. In the locker room after the game, Lombardi promised his team that they would never again lose a postseason game while he was coaching the team. They never did. This was a great football team. Thirteen Hall of Fame players. One Hall of Fame coach. The Packers of the 1960s were so great that it's easy to forget about the other teams in the league. The Packers greatest challenge in the first three years of their dynasty came from within their own conference. In particular, it came from the Detroit Lions. In 1960, the Packers won the Western Conference with an 8-4 record. The Lions were second at 7-5. In 1961, the Packers won the Western Conference with an 11-3-1 record. The Lions were second at 8-5-1. In 1962, the Packers won the Western Conference with a 13-1 record. The Lions were second at 11-3. In each of the seasons, the Packers and Lions split their season series. The 1962 Green Bay Packers are considered by many the greatest team of the great Lombardi teams. On October 7, the Packers defeated the Lions 9-7 in Green Bay. This was a game that the Lions strongly felt should have been theirs. So much so that the team was about to explode when the Packers came to Detroit for the Thanksgiving Day rematch. The Packers entered that game with an 18-game winning streak. They had won 11 straight league games, a championship game, and six exhibition games. The Packers were 10-0 on the season. The Lions were 8-2. The Lions defense swarmed all over the Packers runners, passers, and blockers on that Thanksgiving Day. 23-0 at the half with the defense scoring a touchdown and a safety. The 26-14 final score made the game seem much closer than it was. Packers quarterback Bart Starr was sacked 11 times in the game. The Packers offense was physically beaten in this game. It was a beating so thorough that receiver Max McGee asked of Starr in the Packers huddle, "Why don't you throw an incomplete pass and nobody will get hurt." His battered teammates were left laughing in the huddle. It was all that they could do. This was one of the few times during the Lombardi years that the Packers failed to match the intensity of their opponent. The beatdown by the Lions didn't keep the Packers down for long. They won the rest of their regular season games and defeated the New York Giants for their second straight championship. The Lions had to settle for another second place finish in the conference.

The Detroit Lions of the early 1960s were a very good team that happened to play in the long shadow of a truly great team. From 1960-62, they might have been the only team to give Lombardi's team a tough time on a consistent basis. The two teams split their games during that time. If not for those Packers teams, the Detroit Lions might have followed their great 1950s with an excellent start to the 1960s.

Happy Thanksgiving. 


Wednesday, November 26, 2025

2026 Pro Football Hall of Fame Semifinalists

Last week, the Pro Football Hall of Fame released a disappointing list of Senior Semifinalists. Yesterday, the list of 26 Modern-era Semifinalists was released. As is often the case, the list is topped by those in their first year of eligibility.

Drew Brees
Larry Fitzgerald
Philip Rivers
Frank Gore
Jason Witten
Eli Manning
Fred Taylor
Torry Holt
Steve Smith Sr.
Hines Ward
Reggie Wayne
Willie Anderson 
Lomas Brown
Jahri Evans
Richmond Webb
Steve Wisniewski 
Marshall Yanda
Robert Mathis
Vince Wilfork
Kevin Williams
Luke Kuechly
Terrell Suggs
Rodney Harrison
Earl Thomas
Darren Woodson
Adam Vinatieri

Drew Brees, Larry Fitzgerald, Philip Rivers, Frank Gore, and Jason Witten are a strong first-year group. In particular, Brees and Fitzgerald can probably start making plans for being in Canton in August. Of the remaining 21 Semifinalists, a robust 19 reached this stage of the process last year. Lomas Brown and Kevin Williams are the only newcomers. After plucking the cream of the first-year crop, it’s easy to focus on those that got close the previous year. This year, that would be a mistake. Kevin Williams is deserving of a Pro Football Hall of Fame bust. It’s ridiculous that it’s taken until his sixth-year of eligibility for him to make it to this stage. Williams is one of only five eligible players in NFL history (the entire history of the NFL!) with an All-Decade honor and and five or more first-team All-Pro selections who is not in the Pro Football Hall of Fame. The others:

Lavvie Dilweg: five-time first-team All-Pro selections, 1920s All-Decade
Ox Emerson: five-time first-team All-Pro selections, 1930s All-Decade
Del Shofner: five-time first-team All-Pro Selections, 1960s All-Decade
Luke Kuechly: five-time first-team All-Pro Selections, 2010s All-Decade

Lavvie Dilweg and Ox Emerson have yet to gain their deserved place in the Hall for the sad reason that too many of the voters have no clue, and refuse to gain a clue, about players that played before the 1960s. Luke Kuechly somehow didn’t make it last year in his first year. He should make it in his second. 

The biggest obstacle for many of the Semifinalists is the revised voting process. Implemented last year for the simple reason that the voters had a tendency to force through too many players in their first-year of eligibility. If a change wasn’t made, the Class of 2026 would probably be the five players in their first-year of eligibility. The new voting process has made it more difficult to get through. That’s why there were only three modern-era players made it last year. It’s why Luke Kuechly is still waiting. 

If the voting was up to me, I’d go with a five-member Pro Football Hall of Fame Class of 2026. Otherwise, the backlog of deserving players will grow and the voters have repeatedly shown they have no idea how to deal with long-waiting, Hall-deserving former players. 

My Pro Football Hall of Fame Class of 2026

Drew Brees
Larry Fitzgerald
Luke Kuechly
Willie Anderson
Kevin Williams

That’s a fine Class. That’s a Class that would get me to Canton in August. I love Canton in August. I believe that the first three are easy, automatic picks. Personally, Kevin Williams is also an automatic pick. The fifth player is tough. The receiver logjam is looking like it did when Cris Carter, Andre Reed, and Tim Brown were banging on the door. I’d like to get one of Torry Holt, Reggie Wayne, Hines Ward, and Steve Smith Sr. in this Class. With Larry Fitzgerald an automatic pick, I went away from a second receiver and with offensive lineman Willie Anderson. 

Tuesday, November 25, 2025

MInnesota Vikings Week 12 Superlatives

Against the Green Bay Packers in Week 12, the Minnesota Vikings played one of the worst halves of football in recent memory. That horrible second half resulted in the 23-6 loss. It was a game to forget. It also makes for a sad, but easy, chore in selecting the Week 12 Superlatives. 

Offensive Player of the Game
None

Defensive Player of the Game
None

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

Will Reichard has been awesome all year. He provided all of the scoring against the Packers with 52 and 59 yard bombs. 

Ryan Wright had one of his best punting days in his four years as the Vikings punter. He twice pinned the Packers inside their own 10-yard line with punts of over 50 yards.