Sunday, December 31, 2023

Flea Flicker Week 17 Predictions

Here are some guesses at the Week 17 games. 

Green Bay Packers @ Minnesota Vikings
Pick: Vikings
The Vikings sweep the Packers in 2023.

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

Atlanta Falcons @ Chicago Bears
Pick: Bears
Just going with the home team.

Las Vegas Raiders @ Indianapolis Colts
Pick: Colts
The Colts continue their surprising season.

Los Angeles Rams @ New York Giants
Pick: Giants
The Giants surprise.

Arizona Cardinals @ Philadelphia Eagles 
Pick: Eagles
The Eagles should win out with their soft final games.

New Orleans Saints @ Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Pick: Buccaneers
The Buccaneers should wrap up the league’s weakest division. 

San Francisco 49ers @ Washington Commanders
Pick: 49ers
The 49ers should rebound nicely from last week’s rough loss to the Baltimore Ravens.

Carolina Panthers @ Jacksonville Jaguars
Pick: Panthers
The Panthers stun the Jaguars.

Miami Dolphins @ Baltimore Ravens
Pick: Ravens
The Dolphins return to their losing ways against good teams. 

Tennessee Titans @ Houston Texans
Pick: Texans
The Texans take the division lead from the Jaguars.

Pittsburgh Steelers @ Seattle Seahawks
Pick: Steelers
The Steelers stun the Seahawks.

Los Angeles Chargers @ Denver Broncos
Pick: Chargers
Sean Payton gets his look at Jarrett Stidham. This game might have a handful of interested fans. 

Cincinnati Bengals @ Kansas City Chiefs
Pick: Chiefs
This game was huge when the schedule was released. 



Saturday, December 30, 2023

The Athletic‘s Top 100 Players in NFL History, By Position

Lifted from The Athletic’s terrific book, Football 100, here’s a look at their Top 100 Players broken down by the position they played. 

The Athletic’s Top 100 Players in NFL History, By Position

Quarterback (19)
  1. Tom Brady
  6. Joe Montana
  7. Peyton Manning
  9. Johnny Unitas
11. Otto Graham
15. John Elway
18. Dan Marino
21. Aaron Rodgers
24. Brett Favre
25. Sammy Baugh
43. Drew Brees
49. Sid Luckman
50. Steve Young
62. Bart Starr
70. Terry Bradshaw
79. Roger Staubach
89. Bobby Layne
98. Patrick Mahomes
100. Fran Tarkenton

Running Back (16)
  2. Jim Brown
  8. Walter Payton
23. Barry Sanders
29. Emmitt Smith
33. Bronko Nagurski
40. Eric Dickerson
41. Marshall Faulk
46. Gale Sayers
52. O.J. Simpson
54. Adrian Peterson
67. Earl Campbell
71. LaDanian Tomlinson
73. Marion Motley
92. Lenny Moore
94. Steve Van Buren
99. Marcus Allen

Receiver (8)
  3. Jerry Rice
13. Don Hutson
38. Randy Moss
56. Julio Jones
64. Steve Largent
75. Lance Alworth
93. Elroy “Crazy Legs” Hirsch
96. Paul Warfield

Tight End (5)
47. Rob Gronkowski
57. John Mackey
81. Tony Gonzalez
82. Kellen Winslow
97. Mike Ditka

Offensive Tackle (6)
12. Anthony Munoz
36. Forrest Gregg
42. Jim Parker
61. Jonathan Ogden
65. Walter Jones
76. Art Shell

Guard (4)
27. John Hannah
44. Bruce Matthews
45. Larry Allen
68. Gene Upshaw

Center (4)
58. Mike Webster
84. Mel Hein
85. Clyde “Bulldog” Turner
95. Jim Otto

Defensive End (6)
  5. Reggie White
16. Deacon Jones
20. Bruce Smith
34. Gino Marchetti
35. J.J. Watt
91. Willie Davis

Defensive Tackle (8)
14. Joe Greene
26. Aaron Donald
30. Merlin Olsen
31. Bob Lilly
32. Alan Page
48. Randy White
83. Leo Nomellini
86. Buck Buchanan

Linebacker (12)
  4. Lawrence Taylor
10. Dick Butkus
17. Ray Lewis
37. Jack Lambert
53. Bobby Bell
55. Jack Ham
60. Joe Schmidt
63. Junior Seau
66. Ray Nitschke
74. Chuck Bednarik
77. Ted Hendricks
80. Willie Lanier

Cornerback (10)
22. Deion Sanders
28. Rod Woodson
51. Dick “Night Train” Lane
59. Herb Adderley
69. Charles Woodson
72. Mel Blount
78. Mike Haynes
87. Champ Bailey
88. Darrell Green 
90. Willie Brown

Safety (2)
19. Ronnie Lott
39. Ed Reed


Friday, December 29, 2023

The Athletic’s Top 100 Players in NFL History, By Team

The Athletic recently put together a list of the Top 100 Player in NFL history. A terrific book, The Football 100, soon followed. This book is terrific because it includes a significant write-up for each of the 100 players. Here’s a look at The Athletic’s Top 100 Players broken down by the teams for which they played the bulk of their career.

The Athletic’s Top 100 Players in NFL History, By Team

Minnesota Vikings 
32.   Alan Page
38.   Randy Moss
54.   Adrian Peterson
100. Fran Tarkenton

If there’s a criticism of The Athletic’s terrific work, it’s the omission of Cris Carter and Randall McDaniel. Perhaps John Randle as well. 

San Francisco 49ers
  3. Jerry Rice
  6. Joe Montana
19. Ronnie Lott
50. Steve Young
83. Leo Nomellini

Chicago Bears
  8. Walter Payton
10. Dick Butkus
33. Bronko Nagurski
46. Gale Sayers
49. Sid Luckman
85. Clyde “Bulldog” Turner
97. Mike Ditka

Cincinnati Bengals
12. Anthony Munoz

Buffalo Bills
20. Bruce Smith
52. O.J. Simpson

Denver Broncos
15. John Elway
87. Champ Bailey

Cleveland Browns
  2. Jim Brown
11. Otto Graham
73. Marion Motley
96. Paul Warfield

Los Angeles Chargers
63. Junior Seau
71. LaDanian Tomlinson
75. Lance Alworth
82. Kellen Winslow

Kansas City Chiefs
53. Bobby Bell
80. Willie Lanier
82. Tony Gonzalez
86. Buck Buchanan
98. Patrick Mahomes

Indianapolis Colts
  7. Peyton Manning
  9. Johnny Unitas
34. Gino Marchetti
42. Jim Parker
57. John Mackey
92. Lenny Moore

Washington Commanders
25. Sammy Baugh
88. Darrell Green

Dallas Cowboys
29. Emmitt Smith
31. Bob Lilly
45. Larry Allen
48. Randy White
79. Roger Staubach

Miami Dolphins
18. Dan Marino

Philadelphia Eagles
  5. Reggie White
74. Chuck Bednarik
94. Steve Van Buren

Atlanta Falcons
22. Deion Sanders
56. Julio Jones

New York Giants
  4. Lawrence Taylor
84. Mel Hein

Detroit Lions
23. Barry Sanders
51. Dick “Night Train” Lane
60. Joe Schmidt
89. Bobby Layne

Tennessee Titans
44. Bruce Matthews
67. Earl Campbell

Green Bay Packers
13. Don Hutson
21. Aaron Rodgers
24. Brett Favre
36. Forrest Gregg
59. Herb Adderley
62. Bart Starr
66. Ray Nitschke
91. Willie Davis

New England Patriots
  1. Tom Brady
27. John Hannah
47. Rob Gronkowski

Las Vegas Raiders
68. Gene Upshaw
69. Charles Woodson
76. Art Shell
77. Ted Hendricks
78. Mike Haynes
90. Willie Brown
95. Jim Otto
99. Marcus Allen

Los Angeles Rams
16. Deacon Jones
26. Aaron Donald
30. Merlin Olsen
40. Eric Dickerson
41. Marshall Faulk
93. Elroy “Crazy Legs” Hirsch

Baltimore Ravens
17. Ray Lewis
39. Ed Reed
61. Jonathan Ogden

New Orleans Saints
43. Drew Brees

Seattle Seahawks
64. Steve Largent
65. Walter Jones

Pittsburgh Steelers
14. Joe Greene
28. Rod Woodson
37. Jack Lambert
55. Jack Ham
58. Mike Webster
70. Terry Bradshaw
72. Mel Blount

Houston Texans
35. J.J. Watt


Thursday, December 28, 2023

Pro Football Hall of Fame Class of 2024 Finalists

The 15 finalists for the Pro Football Hall of Fame Class of 2024 were revealed yesterday. In any given year, the finalists are always highlighted by those in their first year of eligibility. This year, those players are Antonio Gates and Julius Peppers. 

The Pro Football Hall of Fame Class of 2024 Finalists
  • Eric Allen, Cornerback — 1988-1994 Philadelphia Eagles, 1995-97 New Orleans Saints, 1998-2001 Oakland Raiders
  • Jared Allen, Defensive End — 2004-07 Kansas City Chiefs, 2008-2013 Minnesota Vikings, 2014-15 Chicago Bears, 2015 Carolina Panthers
  • Willie Anderson, Offensive Tackle — 1996-2007 Cincinnati Bengals, 2008 Baltimore Ravens
  • Jahri Evans, Guard — 2006-2016 New Orleans Saints, 2017 Green Bay Packers
  • Dwight Freeney, Defensive End/Outside Linebacker — 2002-2012 Indianapolis Colts, 2013-14 San Diego Chargers, 2015 Arizona Cardinals, 2016 Atlanta Falcons, 2017 Seattle Seahawks, 2017 Detroit Lions
  • Antonio Gates, Tight End — 2003-2018 San Diego/Los Angeles Chargers
  • Rodney Harrison, Safety — 1994-2002 San Diego Chargers, 2003-08 New England Patriots
  • Devin Hester, Punt Returner/Kick Returner/Wide Receiver — 2006-2013 Chicago Bears, 2014-15 Atlanta Falcons, 2016 Baltimore Ravens
  • Torry Holt, Wide Receiver — 1999-2008 St. Louis Rams, 2009 Jacksonville Jaguars
  • Andre Johnson, Wide Receiver — 2003-2014 Houston Texans, 2015 Indianapolis Colts, 2016 Tennessee Titans
  • Julius Peppers, Defensive End — 2002-09, 2017-18 Carolina Panthers, 2010-13 Chicago Bears, 2014-16 Green Bay Packers
  • Fred Taylor, Running back — 1998-2008 Jacksonville Jaguars, 2009-2010 New England Patriots
  • Reggie Wayne, Wide Receiver — 2001-2014 Indianapolis Colts
  • Patrick Willis, Linebacker — 2007-2014 San Francisco 49ers
  • Darren Woodson, Safety — 1992-2003 Dallas Cowboys

Like Antonio Gates and Julius Peppers, the quartet of Eric Allen, Jahri Evans, Rodney Harrison, and Fred Taylor are finalists for the first time. Unlike Gates and Peppers, they are finalists after a combined 40 years of eligibility. 

The 15 finalists will join Coach/Contributor nominee Buddy Parker and Senior nominees Art Powell, Randy Gradishar, and Steve McMichael for final discussions by the 50-person Selection Committee in advance of Super Bowl LVIII in Las Vegas. The Pro Football Hall Fame Class of 2024 will be announced live on the “NFL Honors” telecast on February 8. 

Times as a Finalist

Eric Allen: 1, 2024
Jared Allen: 4, 2021-24
Willie Anderson: 3: 2022-24
Jahri Evans: 1, 2024
Dwight Freeney: 2, 2023-24
Antonio Gates: 1, 2024
Rodney Harrison: 1, 2024
Devin Hester: 3, 2022-24
Tory Holt: 5, 2020-24
Andre Johnson: 3, 2022-24
Julius Peppers: 1, 2024
Fred Taylor: 1, 2024
Reggie Wayne: 5, 2020-24
Patrick Willis: 3, 2022-24
Darren Woodson: 2, 2023-24

Years of Eligibility

1st: Antonio Gates, Julius Peppers
2nd: Jahri Evans, Dwight Freeney
3rd: Devin Hester, Andre Johnson
4th: Jared Allen
5th: Reggie Wayne, Patrick Willis
9th: Fred Taylor
10th: Torry Holt
11th: Rodney Harrison, Willie Anderson
16th: Darren Woodson
18th: Eric Allen

What I think the Selection Committee should do with any group of Hall of Fame finalists and what they will do is always different. The voters repeatedly show an urgency to jam through players in their first year of eligibility. I feel that making it in the first year should be reserved for the players for which there are no doubts. If there’s even the slightest hint of a debate, the player waits. In my opinion, only Julius Peppers should make it in his first year. I’m pretty sure that the voters will push both Peppers and Antonio Gates through. After that, Jared Allen makes it in his fourth year of eligibility. If had been able to wrestle that Defensive Player of the Year award from Terrell Suggs in 2011, Allen would’ve made it earlier. His frustrating four year wait should end. Patrick Willis finally makes it to Canton. I still don’t understand how he wasn’t through in his first or second year. He wasn’t even a finalist until his third year. Willis was more deserving of first year consideration in 2020 than Gates is this year. Willis was the best in the league at his position for nearly all of his eight-year career. I never once thought that Gates was the best at his position. Tony Gonzalez pretty much had that title. Jason Witten was in there as well. Willis was the best off-the-ball linebacker I’d seen since Jack Ham. His Hall of Fame journey has been a complete mystery to me. Anyway, a receiver should round out the modern-era class. Unfortunately, the two receivers that I feel are most deserving didn’t make it to the finalist stage. That would be Steve Smith Sr. and Hines Ward. Of the actual receiver finalists, I feel that the voters will go with Andre Johnson. 

So, that gives us a Pro Football Hall of Fame Class of 2024 that looks something like this:

Julius Peppers
Antonio Gates
Jared Allen
Patrick Willis
Andre Johnson
Randy Gradishar
Steve McMichael
Art Powell
Buddy Parker

That’s a fine Class. With Allen it, I’ve gotta start making plans to be in Canton in August. 





Wednesday, December 27, 2023

Minnesota Vikings Injury Woes Continue

I’ve never seen a Minnesota Vikings season quite like this one. Injuries have been the season’s theme. It started with Justin Jefferson’s strained hamstring, ran through Kirk Cousins’ torn Achilles, and Jordan Hicks’ thigh bruise that turned into compartment syndrome that required immediate surgery. Yesterday brought news that T.J. Hockenson tore his ACL and MCL and D.J. Wonnum tore his quadriceps tendon during Sunday’s game against the Detroit Lions. Both will undergo season-ending surgery and be placed on injured reserve. They’ll have plenty of company. 

Jordan Addison and Mekhi Blackmon also left the Lions game with ankle and shoulder injuries respectively. Both are considered day-to-day as the Vikings prepare for their Week 16 game against the Green Bay Packers.

10 Players currently populate the Vikings injured reserve list.

Kirk Cousins
T.J. Hockenson
Cam Akers
Marcus Davenport
D.J. Wonnum
Malik Knowles
William Kwenkeu
Dean Lowry
James Lynch
Olisaemeka Udoh

Justin Jefferson and Jordan Hicks had stints on injured reserve. Jefferson missed nearly two months. Hicks missed about a month. 

Another group of players have missed games with injuries that didn’t require stays on injured reserve.

Christian Darrisaw
Brian O’Neill
Garrett Bradbury
Alexander Mattison
Byron Murphy Jr.
Akayleb Evans

Right guard Ed Ingram is the only offensive lineman to play every game. With Hockenson now heading to injured reserve, Ingram, Ty Chandler, and Jordan Addison are the only offensive regulars that have played every game. Addison’s availability for the Packers game is now a question. Other than the safety position and Danielle Hunter, the players available at all levels of the defense has varied weekly. I don’t think that the Vikings have played a single game this season with every player that tops their respective depth charts. 

Injuries will always be an unfortunate part of football. What the Vikings have been through this season is beyond that. It’s remarkable that they have still managed to be in to the end of every game. Every loss has been by a single score. Without the injuries, especially the injury to Cousins, the Vikings would probably have a record as sparkling as 11-4. Unfortunately, that’s a fantasy. The injuries have been an unfortunate part of this frustrating season. Somehow, with two games to go, the Vikings remain in the chase for a spot in the playoffs. 



 

Tuesday, December 26, 2023

Minnesota Vikings Week 16 Superlatives

The Minnesota Vikings did far more to lose the game on Sunday than the Detroit Lions did to win. The 30-24 loss handed the Lions the NFC North title. Anyway, a couple Vikings players shined brightly in the devastating loss. 

Offensive Player of the Game
Justin Jefferson, WR

Justin Jefferson is definitely back from the hamstring injury that took him off the field for half the season. He was the best player on the field and it wasn’t remotely close. 

His numbers:
6 catches 
144 yards 
1 TD (26 yards)

He had 10 targets. He should’ve had 20 targets. If he had 20 targets, the Vikings probably win this game. 

Defensive Player of the Game
Patrick Jones II, OLB

Patrick Jones II made the splashiest plays for a Vikings defense that needed a few more.

His numbers:
6 tackles
1 sack
3 tackles for loss

The sack would’ve been more of a game-changer if he hadn’t been called for a very dubious roughing the passer penalty on the next player. What should’ve been a Lions punt became a drive that ended with a field goal. Those were three points that the Lions never should’ve been able to add. 






Monday, December 25, 2023

Vikings - Lions

The Minnesota Vikings handed the win and the NFC North title to the Detroit Lions, 30-24. 

It came down to the same issues that have consistently wrecked this Vikings season. Turnovers and injuries. Turnovers and injuries. Damn turnovers and injuries. 

In addition to the players that populate the injured reserve list, the Vikings entered the game without right tackle Brian O’Neill and cornerback Byron Murphy Jr. If no other players were taken from the field, everything would’ve been fine. The Vikings would’ve won this game and remained in contention for the NFC North title. Nope. That didn’t happen. The Vikings lost receiver Jordan Addison in the first half to an ankle injury. They lost tight end T.J. Hockenson to a knee injury, cornerback Mekhi Blackmon to a shoulder injury, and outside linebacker D.J. Wonnum to a quad injury. Without Murphy and Blackmon the Vikings were forced to plumb the depth of their cornerback group. It even forced them to use safeties to cover some of the Lions fleet of receivers one on one on some snaps. 

The injuries hurt. The turnovers hurt even more. Nick Mullens threw four interceptions. The fourth interception was a wobbly toss that was easily caught on the goal line. It was a game-clinching interception for the Lions. The ball floated and fluttered like it was tipped. It wasn’t tipped. It simply slipped out of his Mullins’ hand. A good throw would’ve been a 30-yard, game-winning touchdown toss to Justin Jefferson. He was open. Then again, as he’s routinely shown, Jefferson is open even when he’s covered. 

The Lions had no answer for Justin Jefferson. That was never more evident than the 28-yard catch he made on third-and-27 from the Vikings own 16-yard line with 1:26 to play. Much like he did against the Buffalo Bills last year, he was so much better than those trying to stop him. That play got what should’ve been the game-winning drive going. Two plays later, the Vikings were at the Lions 30-yard line with 1:05 to play. It was the Vikings game. Then, Mullins gave the ball, the game, and the division title to the Lions. 

Jefferson is definitely back from the hamstring injury that took him off the field for half the season. He was the best player on the field and it wasn’t remotely close. He had six catches for 141 yards and a touchdown. Even when Hockenson and Addison weren’t on the field to take some attention away, the Lions couldn’t handle Jefferson. He should’ve had twice as many catches. It would’ve been a very different game if Jefferson had twice as many catches. 

The playoffs are still alive for the Vikings. They just need help and some luck. One thing they’ve had nothing of this season is luck. They’ve had plenty of turnovers and injuries but they’ve had very little luck. 





Sunday, December 24, 2023

Minnesota Vikings 57-Man Roster

A couple unfortunate things have been a staple of the Minnesota Vikings 2023 season. Injuries and turnovers. Without even one of those unfortunate things, the Vikings record would be a whole lot better than current 7-7. Well, the Vikings got a little bit more healthy this week. Linebacker Jordan Hicks is back. He returned from injured reserve during the week, practiced, and was moved to the active roster yesterday. To make room for Hicks, linebacker Nick Vigil was released. It’s probably a safe bet that Vigil is signed to the practice squad next week.

Welcome back Jordan Hicks. 

Due to a somewhat idiotic scheduling quirk, the Vikings play the division-leading Detroit Lions twice over the final three weeks of the season. If the Vikings sweep the three games, they win the NFC North. If they stumble even once, the playoffs might drift away. That’s the situation when a team loses as many game as they win. Getting Hicks back is huge. Losing cornerback Byron Murphy Jr. for this game hurts. To deal with the loss of Murphy, Jaylin Williams was promoted from the practice squad for the game. Receiver Lucky Jackson was also promoted. That move was made to supplement a receiver group that will be missing Jalen Nailor. The moves give the Vikings a bloated 57-man roster for gameday. 

In advance of today’s big game against the Lions, here’s a look at the Vikings current roster. 

Minnesota Vikings 57-Man Roster

Offense (29)

Quarterback (3)
12 Nick Mullens
16 Jaren Hall
15 Joshua Dobbs

Running Back (4)
32 Ty Chandler
  2 Alexander Mattison
26 Kene Nwangwu
37 Myles Gaskin

Fullback (1)
30 C.J. Ham

Wide Receiver (7)
18 Justin Jefferson
17 K.J. Osborn
  3 Jordan Addison
19 Brandon Powell
  9 Trishton Jackson
81 Lucky Jackson
83 Jalen Nailor

Tight End (4)
87 T. J. Hockenson
84 Josh Oliver
86 Johnny Mundt
34 Nick Muse

Offensive Linemen (10)
71 Christian Darrisaw
66 Dalton Risner
56 Garrett Bradbury 
67 Ed Ingram
75 Brian O’Neill
76 David Quessenberry
64 Blake Brandel
62 Chris Reed
65 Austin Schlottman
78 Hakeem Adeniji

Defense (25)

Defensive Line (5)
95 Khyiris Tonga
97 Harrison Phillips
93 Jonathan Bullard
78 Jaquelin Roy
52 Sheldon Day

Outside Linebacker (4)
99 Danielle Hunter
91 Patrick Jones
98 D.J.Wonnum
55 Andre Carter II

Inside Linebacker (4)
58 Jordan Hicks
40 Ivan Pace Jr. 
33 Brian Asamoah
45 Troy Dye 

Cornerback (6)
  7 Byron Murphy Jr.
21 Akayleb Evans
11 Mekhi Blackmon
23 Andrew Booth Jr.
36 Najee Thompson
38 Jaylin Williams  

Safety (6)
22 Harrison Smith
24 Camryn Bynum
44 Josh Metellus
25 Theo Jackson
20 Jay Ward
  6 Lewis Cine

Special Teams (3)

Kicker (1)
  1 Greg Joseph

Punter (1)
14 Ryan Wright

Long Snapper (1)
42 Andrew DePaola

Practice Squad (13)

73 Junior Aho, DL
54 Anthony Barr, LB
41 Austin Bryant, OLB
68 Henry Byrd, OL
63 Coy Cronk, OL
82 Troy Fumagalli, TE
13 N’Keal Harry, WR
27 DeWayne McBride, RB
79 Tyrese Robinson, OL
48 Quincy Roche, OLB
50 T.J. Smith, DL
89 Thayer Thomas, WR
29 Joejuan Williams. CB

Injured Reserve (Still Too Many)

  8 Kirk Cousins, QB
  0 Marcus Davenport, OLB
31 Cam Akers, RB
94 Dean Lowry
81 Malik Knowles, WR
47 William Kwenkeu, LB
92 James Lynch, DL
74 Oli Udoh, OT

Saturday, December 23, 2023

Flea Flicker Week 16 Predictions

Here are some guesses at the Week 16 games. 

Detroit Lions @ Minnesota Vikings
Pick: Vikings
The Vikings can not afford any more stumbles. 

Cincinnati Bengals @ Pittsburgh Steelers
Pick: Bengals
The Bengals continue their run with Jake Browning.

Buffalo Bills @ Los Angeles Chargers
Pick: Bills
This was probably a highlight game when the NFL schedule was released. 

Indianapolis Colts @ Atlanta Falcons
Pick: Colts
It feels like these teams are heading in opposite directions. 

Seattle Seahawks @ Tennessee Titans
Pick: Titans
The Seahawks are still celebrating their win over the Eagles.

Washington Commanders @ New York Jets
Pick: Commanders
Two teams racing to the offseason. 

Green Bay Packers @ Carolina Panthers
Pick: Packers
The Packers finally win a game.

Cleveland Browns @ Houston Texans
Pick: Browns
Without C.J. Stroud, it’s the Browns. 

Jacksonville Jaguars @ Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Pick: Jaguars
Battle for Florida

Dallas Cowboys @ Miami Dolphins
Pick: Dolphins
Both teams have to prove that they can beat good teams. 

Arizona Cardinals @ Chicago Bears
Pick: Bears
The NFL’s Oldest Rivalry.

New England Patriots @ Denver Broncos
Pick: Patriots
Just a hunch.

The NFL jams three games on Christmas Day. Looks like two laughers and a possible Super Bowl preview.

Las Vegas Raiders @ Kansas City Chiefs
Pick: Chiefs
Chiefs roll.

New York Giants @ Philadelphia Eagles
Pick: Eagles
Eagles roll. 

Baltimore Ravens @ San Francisco 49ers
Pick: 49ers
Super Bowl preview?



Friday, December 22, 2023

All - Time Detroit Lions Team

The Minnesota Vikings host the Detroit Lions on Sunday. In a bit of a scheduling quirk the Vikings and Lions play each other twice over the season’s final three games. The NFC North is up for grabs. The Lions got their NFL start as the Portsmouth Spartans in 1930. The franchise moved to Detroit and became the Lions in 1934. The Lions won their first NFL title in 1935. They really had some fun in the 1950s. Winning NFL titles in 1952, 53, and 57, the Lions were one of the best teams in one of the most competitive decades in the history of the league. Things haven’t been so fun in the years since. In advance of the big game, here’s a look at some of the great players in the fairly long history of the Detroit Lions. 

Offense

Quarterback 
Bobby Layne

Running Back
Barry Sanders

Fullback
Nick Pietrosante

Tailback
Dutch Clark

Dutch Clark must be on a Detroit Lions All-Time Team.

Wide Receivers
Calvin Johnson
Herman Moore

Tight End
Charlie Sanders

Tackles
Lou Creekmur
Lomas Brown

Guards
Ox Emerson
Dick Stanfel

Center
Alex Wojciechowicz

Defense

Defensive Ends
Al Baker
Robert Porcher

Defensive Tackles
Alex Karras
Roger Brown

Linebackers
Chris Spielman
Joe Schmidt
Wayne Walker

Cornerbacks
Dick “Night Train” Lane
Lem Barney

Safeties
Jack Christiansen
Yale Lary

Special Teams

Kicker
Jason Hanson

Punter
Yale Lary

Kick Returner
Mel Gray

Punt Returner
Jack Christiansen





Thursday, December 21, 2023

Throwback Thursday: Orban “Spec” Sanders

This Flicker was originally posted March 1, 2012. 

Orban Eugene Sanders was born on January 26, 1918. Everyone saw that mass of freckles on young Orban's face and started calling him "Spec." The name just stuck.

Buddy Young, who saw a lot of football as a player and later as a league official, once described Spec Sanders as being in a class with just a handful of other backs, including Jim Brown, Gale Sayers, Hugh McIlhenney and Lenny Moore. That's a pretty select group. All but Sanders are honored in the Pro Football Hall of Fame. Sanders lost the early years of his career to World War II. His best years were in the All America Football Conference with the New York Yankees. So his efforts have mostly been ignored by the NFL. That's unfortunate as his 1947 season was one of the best ever. He led the AAFC with 231 carries, 114 points and his 18 rushing touchdowns was a professional record that stood until Jim Taylor rushed for 19 in 1962. His 1432 yards rushing established a record that stood until 1958 when Jim Brown ran for 1527 yards. Sanders could throw the ball as well, completing 93 passes for 1442 yards and 14 more touchdowns. He also returned kicks, taking one kickoff back for another score. Although he was used sparingly on defense, he intercepted three passes. He also averaged 42.1 yards on 46 punts. In a game against the Chicago Rockets, Sanders gained 250 yards rushing, a mark that went untouched for more than 25 years. He was removed from the game after only three quarters. If he'd remained in the game, Adrian Peterson's 296 yards against the San Diego Chargers might still be looking up at Sanders. It was an incredible season. When viewing season statistics of this era, Spec Sanders' 1947 season is so outlandish it strikes one as a misprint.

At a time when most players did a lot of things on the football field Sanders did everything better than pretty much everyone. His versatility might be matched only by the great Sammy Baugh.

Sanders suffered from knee woes and retired after the 1948 season. Despite playing only three seasons, he finished as the AAFC's second leading all-time rusher, leader in touchdowns, fourth in total points, and still found time to finish eighth in passing.

Sanders was lured out of retirement to play in the NFL in 1950 with a different but similarly named New York Yanks. Because of the knee problems, he opted to play only defense that year. In his one year in the NFL Sanders was named to the Pro Bowl after his record setting 13 interception season.

Spec Sanders had only a four year career with only one in the NFL. World War II and knee problems kept it brief. It's unfortunate that his three incredible years in the AAFC are largely forgotten. Those that saw Sanders play football never forgot him.


Wednesday, December 20, 2023

Minnesota Vikings Coaches

One of the mysteries of the Minnesota Vikings coaching staff has been the season-long absence of outside linebackers/pass rush specialist coach Mike Smith and the multi-game absence of defensive line coach Chris Rumph. When questioned by the nosey media, head coach Kevin O’Connell described both absences as personal leaves. As such, both absences were and are none of our business. However, a couple weeks ago, it was announced that Rumph was named Clemson’s defensive ends coach. With that career change, his absence became something of a curiosity. Smith’s absence remains personal and none of our business.

In Smith’s absence, assistant head coach Mike Pettine has been coaching the outside linebackers. In Rumph’s absence, assistant defensive line coach Patrick Hill has been coaching the position group. I would imagine that defensive assistant Imarjaye Albury is assisting Hill. Albury had previously assisted Andre Patterson with the Vikings defensive line. 

Smith is still listed as the Vikings outside linebackers/pass rush specialist coach. I hope that’s a positive sign as to his situation. 

In-season changes are unusual for an NFL coaching staff. Norv Turner’s curious mid-season departure in 2016 comes to mind. As a result of this year’s coaching tweaks, here’s a late-season look at the Minnesota Vikings coaches. 

2023 Minnesota Vikings Coaching Staff

Head Coach: Kevin O’Connell

Assistant Head Coach/Outisde Linebackers Coach: Mike Pettine

Offensive Coordinator: Wes Phillips
Defensive Coordinator: Brian Flores
Special Teams Coordinator: Matt Daniels

Offense:

Quarterbacks: Chris O’Hara
Assistant Quarterbacks/Chief of Special Projects: Grant Udinski
Run Game Coordinator/Running Backs: Curtis Modkins
Receivers: Keenan McCardell
Assistant Receivers/Quality Control: Tony Sorrentino
Pass Game Coodinator/Tight Ends: Brian Angelichio
Offensive Line: Chris Kuper
Assistant Offensive Line: Justin Rascati
Pass Game Specialist/Game Management Coordinator: Ryan Cordell
Quality Control: Derron Montgomery

Defense:

Assistant Defensive Line: Patrick Hill
Outside Linebackers/Pass Rush Specialist: Mike Smith
Inside Linebackers: Mike Siravo
Assistant Inside Linebackers: Thad Bogardus
Defensive Backs: Daronte Jones
Assistant Defensive Backs: Michael Hutchings
Defensive Assistant: Imarjaye Albury
Quality Control: Lance Bennett

Special Teams:

Assistant Special Teams: Dalmin Gibson





Tuesday, December 19, 2023

Minnesota Vikings 2021 Third Round Picks

Due to draft pick dealings the Minnesota Vikings had four third round picks in the 2021 NFL Draft. They had dropped back in the first round from #14 to #23 in a trade with the New York Jets. With the 23rd pick, the Vikings selected offensive tackle Christian Darrisaw out of Virginia Tech. Through 2+ seasons, Darrisaw looks every bit, and then some, the franchise left tackle that he was drafted to be. He’s been brilliant. An occasional missed game is the only knock on his play. 

It was the four third round picks (and three fourth round picks) that were supposed restock the talent and point the Vikings in the right developmental direction. After only 2+ years, it’s fairly safe to say that the Vikings decision-makers failed. In particular, they failed miserably with their selections in the third round of the 2021 NFL Draft. It’s a failure that may have helped lead to the firings of general manager Rick Spielman and head coach Mike Zimmer following the 2021 season. 

Those Third Round Picks
3 (66) Kellen Mond, QB, Texas A&M
3 (78) Chazz Surratt, LB, North Carolina
3 (86) Wyatt Davis, OG, Ohio State
3 (90) Patrick Jones II, Pittsburgh

My knee-jerk reactions to each:
Mond - intrigued by the first quarterback selected with a “high-end” pick since Teddy Bridgewater
Surratt - high-effort linebacker that started his college career as a quarterback
Davis - liked the bulking up of the interior of the offensive line
Jones - exciting pass rusher

This was a third round disaster. At least the Vikings added Christian Darrisaw. Only Patrick Jones II is still on the team. 

Current whereabouts of the others:
Mond - Indianapolis Colts practice squad
Surratt - New York Jets
Davis - last seen on the New York Giants injured reserve

General manager Kwesi Adofo-Mensah, head coach Kevin O’Connell and the rest of the Vikings new decision-makers rid themselves of this third-round disaster as soon as they could. Mond, Surratt, and Davis were waived after their second training camp with the Vikings. Only Patrick Jones II made an impression on the team’s new coaches. 

While thinking about this unfortunate third round, I started thinking about what might’ve been. Here’s a look at the third round the Vikings could’ve had. Hindsight can be a bitch. 

3 (66) Alim McNeill, DT, North Carolina State
   -or- Paulson Adebo, CB, Stanford

3 (78) Quinn Meinerz, OG, Wisconsin-Whitewater

3 (86) Amon-Ra St. Brown, WR, USC

I’m certain that McNeill/Adebo, Meinerz, and St. Brown would’ve been impact players through their 2+ seasons with the Vikings. They certainly wouldn’t be on their second, third, or fourth teams only one year later. 

Imagine this 2021 Minnesota Vikings Draft Class

1. Christian Darrisaw
3. Alim McNeill/Paulson Adebo
3. Quinn Meinerz
3. Amon Ra-St. Brown
3. Patrick Jones II
4. Kene Nwangwu
4. Camryn Bynum

Now, it’s back to reality. 






Monday, December 18, 2023

Minnesota Vikings Week 15 Superlatives

The Minnesota Vikings were once again in a giving mood. They gave the Cincinnati Bengals a Week 15 win. Here are some of the players that did some good things in a very disappointing loss. 

Offensive Players of the Game
Ty Chandler, RB

Alexander Mattison’s sprained ankle last week against the Las Vegas Raiders gave Ty Chandler the starting opportunity against the Bengals.

23 carries 
132 yards
1 TD
3 catches 
25 yards

Chandler was terrific in his first start. It was a statement game. From my comfy couch, he should be starting even when Mattison returns. 

Jordan Addison, WR

Jordan Addison had been pretty quiet since Kirk Cousins was lost for the season. He returned to the spotlight and stardom with Nick Mullens at quarterback. 

6 catches 
111 yards
2 TDs (37,1)

Addison made the Bengals pay for the attention paid to Justin Jefferson and T.J. Hockenson. That’s the way it was supposed to be when the Vikings selected Addison in the first round of the 2023 NFL Draft. The Jefferson-Addison duo will be one of the league’s best for years. 

Defensive Player of the Game
Danielle Hunter, OLB

The Vikings defense continued its recent outstanding play into the second half against the Bengals. Then the Bengals got them on their heels in the fourth quarter. Just as they did in losses to the Denver Broncos and Chicago Bears, the Vikings defense gave up a couple “fluky” big plays against the Bengals. Those plays were the difference. It was ultimately a disappointing performance by the Vikings defense. Despite that, as he’s done all season, Danielle Hunter shined. 

2 sacks
5 tackles
3 tackles for loss





Sunday, December 17, 2023

Vikings - Bengals

Late game failures turned into an overtime loss. The Minnesota Vikings came up short against the Cincinnati Bengals, 27-24. It’s the same overtime score as when the two teams opened the 2021 season. 

The Vikings must learn how to close out games. Offense, defense, special teams. If they make a single play, this game is a win. The fourth quarter opened with the Bengals down 17-3. For three quarters, the Vikings had pretty much done anything they wanted. Red zone turnovers kept the halftime score at a modest 7-3 Vikings lead. It could so easily have been 21-3. At least, 13-3. Other than an opening field goal, the Bengals spent the first half punting. The Vikings spent the first half moving the ball. As they have been all season, turnovers were the difference in this game. They usually are. 

In a game decided by a single overtime field goal, one offensive conversion or defensive stop at any point in the final 22 minutes would’ve flipped this loss to a win. Perhaps the biggest moment was a coaching decision at the end of the Vikings only overtime possession. On 3rd & 1 from the Bengals 42, head coach Kevin O’Connell called for a Nick Mullens quarterback sneak. Close but not quite. Fine. On 4th & less than 1 from inside the Bengals 42, O’Connell called for another quarterback sneak. Mullens bobbled the snap and lost yardage. Now, I get going for it rather than attempting a 59-yard Greg Joseph field goal. I don’t get running the same play over a Ty Chandler run or even a play-action pass. It’s so much easier to make this, or any, in-game decision from a comfy couch but I just don’t get sneaking the ball twice with Mullens. On this side of the play, every option is better than the one that didn’t work. Still, it comes down to execution, an NFL offense, especially a good NFL offense, should be able move the ball one yard. Especially when they have two attempts at that one yard. 

The Vikings win this game if they convert that first down. I believe that. That doesn’t much matter as it didn’t happen. 

The Bengals took advantage of their gifted overtime opportunity. Five plays later, they kicked the winning field goal. 

After a five game win streak that put them in playoff position, the Vikings have lost three of four games. They’ve lost those three games by a total of six points. All six points have been scored on their opponents final play. 

One play. The Vikings must find a way to close out games. They must find a way to make one play. Better yet, they must find a way to not put themselves in a position where one play is required to decide the game. 

Scrambling since Kirk Cousins was lost for the season with an Achilles injury, Nick Mullens was the fourth quarterback to start a game for the Vikings. The offense looked its best since Cousins was lost. 

Mullens’ day:
26 completions
33 attempts
303 yards
2 TDs

Unfortunately, he tossed two interceptions. The second was a mind-numbing decision to avoid a sack. Both interceptions ended scoring opportunities that passed the Bengals 20-yard line. 3 points, 6 points, 10 points, 14 points. Points, points, points. The Vikings pissed away points in a game that went to overtime. 

Welcome back Justin Jefferson.

I’ve missed Jefferson so much. So have the Vikings. He’d missed seven games and eight weeks to a hamstring injury. He returned last week against the Las Vegas Raiders but left to a chest injury so early that it felt like he never played. He returned against the Bengals and he his return was beautiful. 

Jefferson’s day:
7 catches 84 yards

He even attempted a pass. If only he’d been able to set his feet. The play pass, catch, and run might’ve ended in with a touchdown. The play was there but the Bengals pressure forced Jefferson to rush the throw. 

Mullens and Jefferson’s first game together was promising. 

Also promising was rookie receiver Jordan Addison. Since Cousins was forced to the sideline, Addison had mostly disappeared from the Vikings offense. He returned big against the Bengals.

Addison’s day:
6 catches
111 yards
2 TDs (37,1)

His two touchdowns were brilliant plays. Jefferson and Addison are going to form a dynamite duo for hopefully a very long time. 

Also promising was Ty Chandler running the ball. Alexander Mattison’s sprained ankle gave Chandler the starting opportunity. He had a statement game. The statement saying that he should be the starter even with Mattison available.

Chandler’s day:
23 carries
132 yards
1 TD
3 catches
25 yards

Tight end T.J. Hockenson chipped in with 6 catches for 63 yards. The bulk of his catches moved the chains. 

The Vikings offense consistently and effectively moved the ball.

How in the hell did they lose this game?

One play. 

The Vikings drop to 7-7. They continue to control their playoff situation. With only three games to play, they can not afford another stumble. Especially since their final three games are against division foes.

Detroit Lions
Green Bay Packers
@Detroit Lions

Close out those games. Close out the season. Get ready for the playoffs. 





Saturday, December 16, 2023

Flea Flicker Week 15 Predictions

Here are some guesses at the Week 15 games. 

Minnesota Vikings @ Cincinnati Bengals
Pick: Vikings
Nick Mullens vs Jake Browning!

Pittsburgh Steelers @ Indianapolis Colts
Pick: Colts
Mitchell Trubisky vs Gardner Minshew!

Denver Broncos @ Detroit Lions
Pick: Lions
Russell Wilson vs Jared Goff!

Chicago Bears @ Cleveland Browns
Pick: Browns
Justin Fields vs Joe Flacco!

Tampa Bay Buccaneers @ Green Bay Packers
Pick: Buccaneers
Baker Mayfield vs Jordan Love!

Houston Texans @ Tennessee Titans 
Pick: Texans
C.J. Stroud vs Will Levis!

New York Jets @ Miami Dolphins 
Pick: Dolphins
Zach Wilson vs Tua Tagavailoa!

Kansas City Chiefs @ New England Patriots
Pick: Chiefs
Patrick Mahomes vs Bailey Zappe!

New York Giants @ New Orleans Saints
Pick: Saints
Tommy DeVito vs Derek Carr!

Atlanta Falcons @ Carolina Panthers
Pick: Panthers
Desmond Ridder vs Bryce Young!

Washington Commanders @ Los Angeles Rams
Pick: Rams
Sam Howell vs Matthew Stafford!

San Francisco 49ers @ Arizona Cardinals
Pick: 49ers
Brock Purdy vs Kyler Murray!

Dallas Cowboys @ Buffalo Bills
Pick: Bills
Dak Prescott vs Josh Allen!

Baltimore Ravens @ Jacksonville Jaguars
Pick: Ravens
Lamar Jackson vs Trevor Lawrence!

Philadelphia Eagles @ Seattle Seahawks
Pick: Eagles
Jalen Hurts vs Geno Smith!

***

It’s Week 15. There are loads of playoff-impacting games. There’s like two, maybe three, scintillating quarterback matchups. Strange season. 





Friday, December 15, 2023

Cincinnati Bengals All - Time Team

The Minnesota Vikings travel to Cincinnati for an early Saturday game against the Bengals. Paul Brown “founded” two professional football teams. The Cleveland Browns were the first. The Cincinnati Bengals were the second. He’s an Ohio guy. When it comes to football, he’s The Ohio Guy. The Bengals joined the rival American Football League in 1968. Technically, the AFL and NFL were no longer rivals in 1968 as the two professional football leagues had agreed to merge in 1966. They had a combined draft and played a championship game but the two league’s were still kept separate during the regular season. The Bengals have an interesting history. The team has had some disappointing stretches. Mostly the 1990s. They had two great runs to the Super Bowl in the 1980s. Both were ended by the San Francisco 49ers. Those losses felt like a “Bill Walsh Curse.” The great 49ers coach was a Bengals offensive assistant to Paul Brown from 1968-75. The origins of the “West Coast Offense” can be found in Cincinnati in the late 1960s. After a serious injury to uber-talented, strong-armed Greg Cook, Walsh had to adjust the offense to relatively weak-armed Virgil Carter. That offense became the offense that defined Walsh’s great coaching career. When Paul Brown stepped away from coaching his team in 1975, Walsh expected to be named the Bengals head coach. He wasn’t and bolted to the west coast and other coaching options. His relationship with his mentor was never the same after the snub. It felt fitting that the Bengals and 49ers would meet for titles. Walsh got the better of Brown both times. Fast forward to today. Under the guidance of head coach Zac Taylor and quarterback Joe Burrow,  the Bengals have returned to annual contender status. They lost Super Bowl LVI to the Los Angeles Rams. It felt kinda weird to see the Bengals in the big game and not see the 49ers on the other sideline. On the eve of their big game against the Vikings, here are some of the best players in Cincinnati Bengals franchise history. 

Offense

Quarterback
Ken Anderson

Running Back
Corey Dillon

Fullback
Pete Johnson

Wide Receivers
A.J. Green 
Chad Johnson

Tight End
Dan Ross

Tackles
Anthony Munoz
Willie Anderson

Guards
Dave Lapham
Max Montoya

Center
Bob Johnson

Defense

Defensive Ends
Coy Bacon
Eddie Edwards

Defensive Tackles
Tim Krumrie
Mike Reid

Linebackers
Reggie Williams
Jim LeClair
Takeo Spikes

Cornerbacks
Ken Riley
Lamarr Parrish

Safeties
David Fulcher
Tommy Casanova

Special Teams

Kicker
Jim Breech 

Punter
Pat McInally

Returner
Lamarr Parrish



Thursday, December 14, 2023

Throwback Thursday: Minnesota Vikings All - Time Underrated Team

Watching Brian Flores get so much out of what many consider a marginally talented group got me thinking about some of the underrated players in franchise history. This is an all-time Minnesota Vikings team made up of players that might not receive the attention that they deserve for the great career that they had. All-time teams are always a very subjective thing. This one has another layer of subjectivity to it. Just as not everyone will agree whether a player is an All-Timer, not everyone will agree whether a player’s career was underrated. 

Minnesota Vikings All - Time Underrated Team

Offense 

Quarterback
Tommy Kramer 

Tommy Kramer was great. If injuries hadn’t popped up throughout his career, he wouldn’t be on this team.

Running Back
Tommy Mason

Tommy Mason was much more than the first pick in franchise history. Injuries cut his career short. In his six years in Minnesota, Mason was named All-Pro once and went to three Pro Bowls. When I visited the Vikings Museum at TCO, I was surprised and thrilled to find a Tommy Mason exhibit. I was surprised because I felt that history had forgotten him and thrilled because it hadn’t. 

Fullback
Rick Fenney

In today’s NFL, fullbacks are always underrated. Rick Fenney was the last Vikings fullback that got more than the token carry. 

Receivers
John Gilliam
Jake Reed

The Vikings have been blessed with a load of terrific receivers. John Gilliam was one of the league’s most explosive playmakers during the early 1970s. Jake Reed had four consecutive 1000-yard seasons. Unfortunately, he played with Cris Carter and lost his starting job to Randy Moss. 

Tight End
Joe Senser

A knee injury ended Joe Senser’s career before it really got started. Seven touchdowns as a rookie. 1,004 yards and eight touchdowns as a sophomore. Senser was on the verge of joining the league’s first wave of great tight ends. Kellen Winslow, Ozzie Newsome, Dave Casper. Senser was in their league. Then he was suddenly and sadly done. 

Offensive Tackles
Grady Alderman
Tim Irwin

Both were named 50 Greatest Vikings. Grady Alderman was recently inducted in the Pro Football Researchers Association’s Hall of Very Good. Neither was really underrated but each played a chunk of their career in the shadow of the best tackles in Vikings franchise history. Ron Yary and Gary Zimmerman.

Guards
Milt Sunde
David Dixon

Like fullbacks, guards are often underrated. Unless you’re Randall McDaniel or Steve Hutchinson. Milt Sunde and David Dixon weren’t McDaniel or Hutchinson but they were fine football players. 

Center
Dennis Swilley

It isn’t the equal of receivers and defensive line but the Vikings have an excellent center tradition. It helps that Mick Tingelhoff played about 100 years. Dennis Swilley had the unfortunate task of replacing Tingelhoff. A team can’t have a strong tradition at a position with a single player. In that sense, Swilley started the Vikings excellent center tradition. 

Defense

Defensive Ends
Doug Martin
Brian Robison

Doug Martin was the best of the players tasked with replacing the Purple People Eaters. He had two seasons of more than 10 sacks and two seasons of nine sacks. His 11.5 sacks in nine games during the strike-shortened 1982 season led the league. Brian Robison was much more than a fan-favorite. He might’ve received more attention league-wide if he didn’t play all of his career opposite Jared Allen and then Everson Griffen. 

Defensive Tackles
Henry Thomas
Keith Millard

Henry Thomas and Keith Millard aren’t underrated. They just happened to play for a franchise that had Alan Page and John Randle. Thomas and Millard have Hall of Fame cases. Millard would already be in Canton if injuries hadn’t whittled away at his career. 

Linebackers
Ed McDaniel
Lonnie Warwick
Ben Leber

All three were fun football players. Ed McDaniel was the best player on his Vikings defense not named John Randle. Lonnie Warwick played middle linebacker during the era of Dick Butkus, Ray Nitschke, and Joe Schmidt. Ben Leber simply made big plays. 

Cornerbacks
Bobby Bryant
Nate Wright

Bobby Bryant and Nate Wright were the cornerbacks of my youth. I love them.

Safeties
Karl Kassulke
Tom Hannon

Karl Kassulke’s physicality was an excellent compliment to Paul Krause’s finesse. Kassulke’s football career ended with a motorcycle accident on this way to the Vikings 1973 training camp. The accident left him paralyzed. Tom Hannon had the unfortunate task of replacing Krause at the back of the Vikings defense. 

Special Teams

Kicker
Ryan Longwell

Ryan Longwell was one of the league’s most reliable kickers for nearly all of his 16 seasons. Six of those were in Minnesota. The Vikings have a history of kicking atrocities. The six Longwell years were bright years. 

Punter
Bobby Walden

Bobby Walden is better known for his time with the Pittsburgh Steelers. His first four seasons were in Minnesota. He led the league in yards/punt as a rookie. 

Punt Returner
Leo Lewis

Leo Lewis was a fun football player. He didn’t have the football in his hands often. When he did, it felt like something fun was about to happen. 

Kick Returner
Eddie Payton

Walter Payton’s older brother might’ve found his way to Minnesota because of what he did as a returner for the Detroit Lions. He returned a kick and a punt for touchdowns against the Vikings in 1977. He kept the Lions in a game that they had no business being in. Perhaps due to memories of that game, the Vikings signed him three years later. He led the league in kick return yards in 1980 and had a 99-yard kick return touchdown in 1981. 






Wednesday, December 13, 2023

It’s Nick Mullens Time

Minnesota Vikings head coach Kevin O’Connell announced yesterday that Nick Mullens will be the starting quarterback against the Cincinnati Bengals on Saturday. Josh Dobbs had a four-game run as the Vikings starter. The beginning of that run was great and fun. Two wins. Three, if you count the game he entered after Jaren Hall departed. The end of the run wasn’t so great or fun. Two losses. Mullens replaced Dobbs with about 10 minutes to play against the Las Vegas Raiders on Sunday. Mullens guided the team to a field goal on his second possession. Those three points were the only points that they needed to win. The Vikings offense was terrible and out of sync for nearly all of their Week 12 loss to the Chicago Bears. The Week 13 bye did nothing to get Dobbs back on track as the offense was terrible and out of sync against the Raiders. Mullens triggered a change. He brought a rhythm, some crispness. He was accurate and on time with his throws. It wasn’t difficult to see that the Vikings need Mullens on the field. It’s time. 

Nick Mullens was acquired just before the start of the 2022 season to be QB2. With a similar sort of play, he looked and felt like the perfect backup to Kirk Cousins. Seeing as the Vikings starting quarterback never misses a start, it seemed like a fairly insignificant move. That all changed when Cousins was lost for the season in Week 8. His Achilles popped on the spongy Lambeau turf. Mullens had been acquired to be the next man up if Cousins went down. Unfortunately, Mullens was dealing with a “tweaked” back. He’d been rehabbing that back while on injured reserve since Week 5. QB2 wasn’t available to be QB1. The Vikings had to scramble. Rookie fifth-round pick Jaren Hall was named the starter for the Week 9 game against the Atlanta Falcons. For depth and perhaps more, the Vikings acquired Josh Dobbs from the Arizona Cardinals at the trade deadline. Hall suffered a concussion at the end of his second possession against the Falcons and Dobbs was forced into the game. Initially, he played like a quarterback with only a handful of practices with his new team. He didn’t even know the names of most of his new teammates. It was ugly. Then, something flipped in the second half and he engineered a miracle comeback and win. He had an excellent game against the New Orleans Saints in the Week 10 win. Dobbs was becoming a legend and the Vikings were on fire. Then he and the team fell back to reality. Dobbs was so-so and turnover-prone in a loss to the Denver Broncos in Week 11. Since then, he and the Vikings offense have been terrible. Thankfully, the Vikings defense has been outstanding. 

During the good and bad run of Josh Dobbs, Nick Mullens had gotten healthy. By the time that he was needed, he was ready. This was the way it was supposed to be when Cousins was lost for the season. No team is ever ready to lose their starting quarterback. No matter the quality of QB2, things rarely end well when QB1 isn’t available. There are scattered success stories across league history. Earl Morrall, Doug Williams, Jeff Hostetler, and Nick Foles immediately come to mind. The Vikings made the best of a terrible situation. While his run ended ugly, Dobbs came through when the Vikings were desperate. Those improbable wins against the Falcons and Saints might’ve saved the season. His high moments were a lot of fun. The Vikings are 3-2 since they lost Cousins. It could easily have been 0-5. Dobbs is a big reason it isn’t. 

The Vikings have four remaining games.

@ Cincinnati Bengals
Detroit Lions
Green Bay Packers
@Detroit Lions

The Lions have a two-game lead over the Vikings in the NFC North. If the Vikings can win out, they win the division. It’s a difficult four-game stretch. Nick Mullens will guide his team through it. If the Vikings defense keeps playing like it has, he doesn’t have to light up the scoreboard. It sure would be nice if he does. 



Tuesday, December 12, 2023

Minnesota Vikings Week 14 Superlatives

The Minnesota Vikings squeaked by the Las Vegas Raiders by the robust score of 3-0. It’s a win. After consecutive losses, the Vikings desperately needed a win. Here are some of the players that made the big win possible.

Offensive Player of the Game
Nick Mullens, QB

Nick Mullens started the season as the Vikings QB2. He was acquired at the end of the 2022 preseason to back up Kirk Cousins. It’s felt like a perfect positional situation. Cousins and Mullens. Then again, what did it matter? Cousins never gets hurt. That changed on Lambeau’s spongy turf in Week 8. Cousins was lost for the season with a torn Achilles. The perfect positional situation wasn’t so perfect as Mullens was rehabbing an injured back. The Vikings were left with only fifth-round rookie Jaren Hall. That lead to the deadline deal for Josh Dobbs. Hall started in Week 9 and finished his second possession of the game with a concussion. Dobbs played on a handful of days of preparation and was a fun revelation. Consecutive wins and a legend was building. For two games and much of a third, Dobbs made necessary and occasionally spectacular plays. Then he and the Vikings offense crashed. Last week and against the Raiders, both were terrible. At least against the Raiders, Dobbs didn’t turn the ball over. That was huge in the 3-0 win. With just under 10 minutes to play, head coach Kevin O’Connell made the quarterback switch to Mullens. The quarterback that was acquired to back up Cousins finally took the field. 

That’s a quick rundown of the Vikings 2023 quarterback situation. 

The Vikings offense felt different with the first snap. Mullens hit tight end T.J. Hockenson for 26 yards with his first throw. His second possession ended with the game-winning points. Mullens was decisive with his throws. He was accurate. For about 10 minutes, the Vikings offense finally looked somewhat crisp. 

Mullens’ short day:
9 completions
13 attempts
83 yards

While I’d like to see Jaren Hall play, I’m guessing that Nick Mullens is the Vikings quarterback moving forward. They are firmly in a playoff chase. Going with the quarterback that was acquired to be QB2 is the right decision when QB1 is down. 

Defensive Player of the Game
Ivan Pace, Jr., LB

The undrafted rookie has been terrific all season. Ivan Pace Jr.’s role in the Vikings rapidly improving defense became even more significant when Jordan Hicks went down with an injury. That put the green dot on his helmet. Viking Nation has known about Pace since training camp. The greater NFL world might’ve learned about him with his game against the Raiders. He was hard to miss. 

Pace’s day:
13 tackles
1 sack
1 tackle for loss
1 interception

If he keeps doing what he’s doing, Pace is on the road to stardom. 

Special Teams Player of the Game
Ryan Wright, P

In a 3-0 game, field position was critical. Ryan Wright did all that he could to keep field position in the Vikings favor. 

Wright’s day:
8 punts
47.9 average
4 punts put the Raiders inside the 20 yard line. 

Wright’s second season as the Vikings punter hasn’t measured up to his excellent rookie season. While his average has been fine, he hasn’t put his punts inside the 20 like he did last year. His worst punt of the year might’ve been his last punt against the Chicago Bears in Week 12. He had the bye week to think about that punt. Against the Raiders, Wright finally looked like the punter that everyone loved last year. 





Monday, December 11, 2023

Vikings - Raiders

A scorcher! A barn-burner! The Minnesota Vikings defeated the Las Vegas Raiders by the score of 3-0. It’s a win. 

Tottenham Hotspur would’ve won this game with the four goals that they scored in their match with Newcastle earlier in the day. 

The Minnesota Vikings and Minnesota Wild won yesterday by identical 3-0 scores. That’s wild!

It’s a win and the Vikings desperately needed a win. 

The defenses of both teams played very well and the score was a direct reflection of that The offenses of both teams left a whole lot to be desired. Much of that was due to the fine defensive play. A lot of it was due to the respective offenses. The run of Josh Dobbs as the Vikings quarterback appears to have come to an end. Kevin O’Connell made the switch to Nick Mullens with 9:10 to play in the game. That’s when everything changed and brought the game-winning points. All three of them. 

The quarterback comparison:

Josh Dobbs: 10/23 for 63 yards
Nick Mullens: 9/13 for 83 yards

After the trade deadline deal that brought him to Minnesota, Dobbs was fun and effective in his first two games with the Vikings. Taken by themselves, those two wins might’ve saved the season immediately after the terrible loss of Kirk Cousins to injury. The three games since hasn’t been fun and effective. His last two games were terrible. At least he didn’t turn the ball over against the Raiders. In a 3-0 game, that was huge. It didn’t help Dobbs or the Vikings that superstar receiver Justin Jefferson was injured while making his second catch of the game. With 9:54 remaining in the second quarter, Dobbs threw high to Jefferson to convert a third down. Jefferson went high for the catch and was hit hard in the back by Raiders safety Marcus Epps. Jefferson had missed the past seven games with a hamstring injury. He lasted 26 minutes in his return. O’Connell had to scrap his game plan with the loss of his best and most explosive football player. Jefferson was only the first of several Vikings offensive players to depart the game with injuries. Right guard Ed Ingram was inactive with a hip injury that occurred in the final practice of the week. Right tackle Brian O’Neill left with a sprained ankle. Running back Alexander Mattison left with a sprained ankle. Left guard Dalton Risner left with a lower leg injury. At least, Risner was able to return to the game after a few snaps. Enough with these damn injuries. 

The Vikings offense felt different with Mullens on the field. He was decisive with his throws. He was on target with most of them. The few inaccurate throws may have been mostly due to rust. His first throw was a 26-yarder to tight end T.J. Hockenson. It was the longest play of the day for the Vikings. Mullens’ second possession ended with the winning points on the board. 3-0. 

The Vikings defense continued its terrific run. They’ve given up a single touchdown over the last three games. They gave up no touchdowns in the last game. They gave up no points in this game. The Vikings defense is very much a team defense. It’s all of the players working together. In the team defense that shut out the Raiders, rookie linebacker Ivan Pace Jr shined brightest. 

Pace’s day:
13 tackles
1 sack
1 tackle for loss
1 interception

His interception sealed the win. The undrafted rookie is on the fast road to stardom. He’s a fun football player.

For the game, the Vikings team defense:
4 sacks
5 tackles for loss
1 interception 
2 fumble recoveries
8 Raiders possessions ended in punts
4 of those were three-and-outs
3 Raiders possessions ended in turnovers
All 11 possessions ended without points

The Raiders were stymied all game. Their lone scoring threat ended with a fumble at the Vikings 16-yard line. It was a brief threat. 

In a game with so little offensive production, punting was very important. Vikings punter Ryan Wright had his best game of the season.

8 punts
47.9 average
4 punts put the Raiders inside the 20 yard line. 

In a game with a single field goal, field position was critical. Wright helped his defense and offense by often keeping field position in the Vikings favor.

It’s a win. The Vikings are now 7-6 and continue to control their playoff hopes. The Vikings travel to Cincinnati for a Saturday game against the Bengals. Hopefully, players get healthy. Especially Justin Jefferson.



 

Sunday, December 10, 2023

Flea Flicker Week 14 Predictions

Here are some guesses at the Week 14 games. 

Byes: Arizona Cardinals, Washington Commanders

Minnesota Vikings @ Las Vegas Raiders
Pick: Vikings
After consecutive losses, the Vikings must get back to winning. 

Tampa Bay Buccaneers @ Atlanta Falcons
Pick: Falcons
An NFC South scorcher. Just going with the home team.

Detroit Lions @ Chicago Bears
Pick: Lions
The Lions roll over the bad teams and struggle against the good teams. The Bears are a bad team.

Indianapolis Colts @ Cincinnati Bengals
Pick: Colts
Gardner Minshew vs Jake Browning. Leaning Minshew.

Jacksonville Jaguars @ Cleveland Browns
Pick: Jaguars
The Jaguars find a way with a hobbled Trevor Lawrence. 

Carolina Panthers @ New Orleans Saints
Pick: Panthers
Another NFC South scorcher.

Houston Texans @ New York Jets
Pick: Texans
The Texans roll. 

Los Angeles Rams @ Baltimore Ravens
Pick: Ravens
The Ravens roll.

Seattle Seahawks @ San Francisco 49ers
Pick: 49ers
The 49ers might not lose another game.

Denver Broncos @ Los Angeles Chargers
Pick: Chargers
The Broncos win streak was a charade.

Philadelphia Eagles @ Dallas Cowboys
Pick: Cowboys
The Eagles lose consecutive games.

Tennessee Titans @ Miami Dolphins
Pick: Dolphins
I want to pick the Titans. I can’t.

Green Bay Packers @ New York Giants
Pick: Packers
The NFL jams a second game into Monday night. Why? 



Saturday, December 9, 2023

Las Vegas/Oakland/Los Angeles Raiders All - Time Team

The Minnesota Vikings travel to Las Vegas this weekend for tomorrow’s game with the Raiders. Under the guidance of controversial owner Al Davis, the Raiders had something of a nomadic life. They got their start in Oakland as an original American Football League team. They played in Oakland from 1960-81. In something of a money grab, Davis took his team to Los Angeles and played there from 1982-94. Then, it was back to Oakland from 1995-2019. Davis’ kid, Marc Davis hauled the Raiders to Las Vegas in 2020. It’s been an interesting history. It’s also been a fairly successful history. The Raiders won an AFL title in 1967. They collected their first NFL title when they defeated the Vikings in Super Bowl XI. The Raiders collected titles two and three when they defeated the Philadelphia Eagles in Super Bowl XV and Washington Redskins in Super Bowl XVIII. The Raiders lost Super Bowl II to the Green Bay Packers and Super Bowl XXXVII to the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. Three Super Bowl wins in five Super Bowl appearances is a solid history. Their 1970s rivalry with the Steelers was a blast. Every game seemed to bring the best, and some of the worst, aspects of football to the field. The Vikings and Raiders have an interesting origin connection. In 1959, the Vikings were all set to become one of the original eight AFL teams. Shortly after participating in the inaugural draft of the new league, the Vikings were lured over to the NFL. A stunned AFL then turned to Oakland as a replacement for the Minnesota franchise. So, the Raiders existence is due to a decision made by the original Vikings owners. On the eve of the big game, here’s a look at some of the best players in the history of the Las Vegas/Oakland/Los Angeles Raiders.

Offense

Quarterback
Ken Stabler

Running Back
Marcus Allen

Fullback
Mark van Eeghen

Wide Receivers
Fred Biletnikoff 
Tim Brown

Tight End
Dave Casper

Tackles
Art Shell
Lincoln Kennedy

Guards
Gene Upshaw
Steve Wisniewski

Center
Jim Otto

Defense

Defensive Ends
Howie Long
Maxx Crosby

Defensive Tackles
Tom Keating
Chester McGolckton

Linebackers
Ted Hendricks
Matt Millen
Phil Villapiano 

Cornerbacks
Willie Brown
Mike Haynes

Safeties
Charles Woodson
Dave Grayson

Special Teams

Kicker
George Blanda 

Punter
Ray Guy

Returner
Tim Brown

Friday, December 8, 2023

Minnesota Vikings 53-man Roster

The best thing about this look at the 53-man roster of the Minnesota Vikings is that Justin Jefferson is on it. He’s been on injured reserve and rehabbing since he left the field in Week 5 with an injured hamstring. It’s been so long. With Jefferson sidelined, seven weeks and a bye felt like an eternity. He’s been missed. Somehow, the Vikings managed a 5-2 record without him. It should’ve been 7-0. He returns to the field this Sunday against the Las Vegas Raiders and the Vikings offense feels so much better. How could it not? Justin Jefferson is the best receiver in the league. 

Here’s hoping that Marcus Davenport and Jordan Hicks soon follow Jefferson back to the active roster. 

In advance of Sunday’s game against the Las Vegas Raiders, here’s a look at the 53-man roster of the Minnesota Vikings. 

Minnesota Vikings 53-Man Roster

Offense (26)

Quarterback (3)
15 Joshua Dobbs
16 Jaren Hall
12 Nick Mullens

Running Back (3)
  2 Alexander Mattison
32 Ty Chandler
26 Kene Nwangwu

Fullback (1)
30 C.J. Ham

Wide Receiver (5)
18 Justin Jefferson
17 K.J. Osborn
  3 Jordan Addison
19 Brandon Powell
83 Jalen Nailor

Tight End (4)
87 T. J. Hockenson
84 Josh Oliver
86 Johnny Mundt
34 Nick Muse

Offensive Linemen (10)
71 Christian Darrisaw
66 Dalton Risner
56 Garrett Bradbury 
67 Ed Ingram
75 Brian O’Neill
76 David Quessenberry
64 Blake Brandel
62 Chris Reed
65 Austin Schlottman
78 Hakeem Adeniji

Defense (24)

Defensive Line (5)
95 Khyiris Tonga
97 Harrison Phillips
93 Jonathan Bullard
78 Jaquelin Roy
52 Sheldon Day

Outside Linebacker (4)
99 Danielle Hunter
91 Patrick Jones
98 D.J.Wonnum
55 Andre Carter II

Inside Linebacker (4)
40 Ivan Pace Jr. 
33 Brian Asamoah
45 Troy Dye 
59 Nick Vigil

Cornerback (5)
  7 Byron Murphy Jr.
21 Akayleb Evans
11 Mekhi Blackmon
23 Andrew Booth Jr.
36 Najee Thompson

Safety (6)
22 Harrison Smith
24 Camryn Bynum
44 Josh Metellus
25 Theo Jackson
20 Jay Ward
  6 Lewis Cine

Special Teams (3)

Kicker (1)
  1 Greg Joseph

Punter (1)
14 Ryan Wright

Long Snapper (1)
42 Andrew DePaola

Practice Squad (17)

73 Junior Aho, DL
85 Daylen Baldwin, WR
54 Anthony Barr, LB
41 Austin Bryant, OLB
63 Coy Cronk, OL
82 Troy Fumagalli, TE
37 Myles Gaskin, RB
13 N’Keal Harry, WR
15 Lucky Jackson, WR
  9 Trishton Jackson, WR
27 DeWayne McBride, RB
79 Tyrese Robinson, OL
48 Quincy Roche, OLB
50 T.J. Smith, DL
89 Thayer Thomas, WR
38 Jaylin Williams, CB
29 Joejuan Williams, CB

Injured Reserve (Too Many)

  8 Kirk Cousins, QB
58 Jordan Hicks, LB
  0 Marcus Davenport, OLB
31 Cam Akers, RB
94 Dean Lowry
81 Malik Knowles, WR
47 William Kwenkeu, LB
92 James Lynch, DL
74 Oli Udoh, OT


Thursday, December 7, 2023

Throwback Thursday: Red Grange’s Football Tour

Through its first five years, the National Football League was a very shaky and questionable business. The most popular sports in the 1920s were baseball, boxing, college football, and horse racing. Some folks probably sprinkled in tennis and golf before they considered paying attention to professional football. Joe Carr, George Halas, Curly Lambeau, Chris O’Brien, Carl Storck, and the rest of the league’s leaders were scraping, scratching, doing everything they could to gain notice and traction with the media and public. Enter Harold “Red” Grange. 

The 1920s introduced the nation to sports celebrities. Babe Ruth, Jack Dempsey, Bobby Jones, Helen Wills, Lou Gehrig, Man o’ War, and Bill Tilden thrilled a public that finally had some spare time. In his three years at Illinois, Red Grange joined those sports celebrities. People flocked to the stadium to see him live and to theaters to see his highlights. The NFL needed him. They needed him bad. 1925 was 11 years before the first NFL Draft. Every potential professional football player was essentially a free agent. In an attempt to gain a bit of respect and credibility with the public, the NFL had established a policy of no tampering with college football players that still had remaining eligibility. Grange’s last football game as an innocent University of Illinois student-athlete was at Ohio State on November 21, 1925. A day later, he was sitting on the sidelines at Cubs Park for the Chicago Bears-Green Bay Packers game. He was watching his new teammates shut out the Packers 21-0. Four days later, he played for the Bears against the Chicago Cardinals on Thanksgiving. 120 hours after his final college football game, Red Grange played in his first NFL game. Perhaps he wasn’t so innocent. 

If the general public wasn’t so thrilled to see Red Grange play professional football, they might’ve been suspicious as to how Grange signed with the Bears in only a matter of hours. The reality was that it had been in the works for weeks, maybe months. All of that and all that was to come was crafted by Grange’s agent. A theater owner named C.C. Pyle had an expansive plan for Grange, the Bears, and himself. C.C. Pyle was a piece of work but this story isn’t really about him. This story is about the ridiculous football marathon that kicked off soon after Grange joined the Bears. 

It’s really no stretch to say that the addition of Red Grange to the roster of the Chicago Bears and the NFL put player, team, and league on a whole other trajectory. All three needed each other. All three looked to profit from the new union. What happened after Grange joined the Bears could never happen today. It shouldn’t have happened in 1925. Grange and his new teammates played a lot of football. 

Most of the following is taken from Chris Willis’ excellent and incredibly thorough Red Grange: The Life and Legacy of the NFL’s First Superstar.

Red Grange’s Football Tour:

After playing in his final eight-game season for the University of Illinois, Grange played in the final two games of the Chicago Bears 1925 schedule:

11/26/25: Chicago Cardinals
11/29/25: Columbus Tigers

That was just the beginning. With Grange on the team, George Halas and the Bears went on a tour. It was a barnstorming tour with two parts. Here’s the first part.

Wednesday, December 2, at St. Louis All-Stars
Saturday, December 5, at Frankford Yellow Jackets (NFL game)
Sunday, December 6, at New York Giants (NFL game)
Tuesday, December 8, at Washington All-Stars
Wednesday, December 9, Providence Steam Roller (NFL game)
Thursday, December 10, Pittsburgh All-Stars
Saturday, December 12, Detroit Panthers (NFL game)
Sunday, December 13, New York Giants (NFL game)

Over 11 days, Grange and the Bears played eight games. At one point in the tour, they played six games in eight days. It was an insane schedule. The Bears had 20 players on their roster for these games. In those days, players played offense, defense, and special teams. Much to the disappointment of the fans in the stands, Grange did not play every minute of every game. The highlight of the tour was the December 6 game in New York. Attendance for the game was estimated between 65,000 and 70,000. Those were unimagined numbers for the NFL. The Bears won that game, 19-7. The crowd was thrilled when Grange returned an interception for a score to clinch the win. A frequently told story from this tour is from the stop in Washington D.C. Grange and Halas met President Calvin Coolidge at the White House. Illinois senator William McKinley made the introductions. “Mr. President, this is George Halas and Red Grange with the Chicago Bears.” President Coolidge responded by saying, “Young men, I’m very happy to meet you. I always did like animal acts.” 

During the Pittsburgh game, Grange injured his left arm while throwing a block on an interception return. It would impact his play for the final two games of this part of the tour. 

After a week a week of rest, Grange and the Bears continued their tour. The second part of the tour hit the south and west. 

Friday, December 25, 1925, at Coral Gables (FL) All-Stars
Friday, January 1, 1926, at Tampa (FL) Cardinals
Saturday, January 2, 1926, at Jacksonville (FL) All-Stars
Sunday, January 10, 1926, at New Orleans All-Southerns
Saturday, January 16, 1026, at Los Angeles Tigers
Sunday, January 17, 1926, at San Diego California All-Stars
Sunday, January 24, 1926, at San Francisco Tigers
Saturday, January 30, 1926, at Portland All-Stars
Sunday, January 31, 1926, at Seattle Washington All-Stars

Again, four days after completing an eight-game college football season, Red Grange played in his first NFL game for the Chicago Bears. Over two months, from 11/26/25 to 1/31/26, Grange and the Bears played 19 football games. Several of those games were on zero days rest. This was the 60-minute era. Players didn’t have the luxury of sitting and resting while the defense, offense, or special teams took the field. It was a 60-minute grind. It was a grind that Grange and the Bears did over and over again for two months. The only real break over those two months was the 12 days between the two parts of the barnstorming tour. At least it was a little time for Grange to rest his injured arm. The first part of the tour was mostly against NFL teams. The second part was mostly against “all-star” lineups. Those “all-star” teams might’ve been a little short on “stars” but they weren’t always a bunch of slappies. Stanford great and future Pro Football Hall of Famer Ernie Nevers played in the Florida games. University of Washington All-American George “Wildcat” Wilson played in the west coast games. 

Red Grange collected $125,000 for his first season as a professional football player. That was an unfathomable amount for the time. C.C. Pyle did alright for himself as well. In some respects, this initial business relationship had George Halas working for Grange and Pyle. Halas didn’t see as much take-home cash as his partners but he saw enough to keep his young team afloat during very difficult times. More important than profits for Halas and the NFL was the attention ignited by Grange and the insane barnstorming tour. Not every game was a sellout but every game brought much-needed attention to professional football. Some historians and pundits have said that Grange saved the NFL. I wouldn’t go that far but it was the first big step in the right direction for professional football. 






Wednesday, December 6, 2023

Minnesota Vikings Midweek Draft Dip

I try to avoid draft thoughts until after the season is over. If I’m thinking about the draft, I feel like I’m writing off the season. It’s silly. With their Week 13 bye week, I couldn’t help having some draft thoughts. It probably helped that The Athletic’s Dane Brugler dropped his first mock draft last week. It also doesn’t help that the Minnesota Vikings will have a big quarterback decision to make this offseason. The 2024 NFL Draft projects to have a decent number of interesting quarterbacks. All of this was enough to take a midweek dip into the draft. 

The 2024 NFL Draft will be topped by two quarterbacks.

Caleb Williams, USC
Drake Maye, North Carolina

In his mock draft, Dane Brugler has Caleb Williams going to the Chicago Bears with the first pick and Drake Maye to the New England Patriots with the third pick. The Vikings would have to trade a boatload of picks to jump into the conversation for either quarterback. 

If the Vikings are looking for their future quarterback in this draft, the possibilities probably start with the following.

Jayden Daniels, LSU
J.J. McCarthy, Michigan

Twin Cities sports reporter Darren Wolfson has Vikings connections within TCO Performance Center. He recently revealed that some Vikings decision-makers are fans of Jayden Daniels and J.J. McCarthy. I liked hearing that as I’d be thrilled if either quarterback is on the Vikings roster next season. 

After Daniels and McCarthy:

Bo Nix, Oregon
Michael Penix Jr., Washington 

At the start of the college season, I was leaning Michael Penix Jr. In more recent weeks, I’ve been leaning Bo Nix. 

If the Vikings do select a quarterback in the first round of the 2024 NFL Draft, I’m glad that former quarterback and current Vikings head coach Kevini O’Connell will be a big part of making that decision. 

Outside of quarterback, and before they do anything in free agency, I see the following as the Vikings biggest offseason needs. 

Interior defensive line
Edge rusher
Cornerback
Left guard

Those needs translate into the following college players topping my non-quarterback wish list:

Jer’Zhan Newton, DT, Illinois
Cooper DeJean, CB, Iowa
Chop Robinson, Edge, Penn State
Graham Barton, OG, Duke

Brugler has the Vikings selecting Jer’Zhan Newton in the first round of his mock draft. 

Now, back to the Vikings Week 14 against the Las Vegas Raiders and the rest of the 2023 NFL season.