Mothman wrote:How about an approach that yields a Super Bowl win and the kind of stability at the QB position that can lead to more than one? Green's approach yielded a 4-8 playoff record over a 10 year period. It was frustrating as hell. Meanwhile, in Green Bay, where Mike Holmgren was hired at the same time as Green, they developed a QB, went to back-to-back Super Bowls and won one of them. I'm not suggesting anything as extreme as the idea that a veteran free agent couldn't provide a temporary solution to the Vikings QB problems but I'm opposed to the passive approach you seem to be endorsing.
Wait a minute - the QB Green Bay developed and won that Superbowl with was a guy they didn't even draft IIRC. They got Favre in trade, and, IMHO, had a nice bit of luck on their side to boot when Rodgers fell to them. In neither case did they reach or otherwise have to pull off some stunt to force it.
Mothman wrote:
The '98 season was great (most of it anyway) but I don't want another decade-long stretch of postseason disappointment like the one the Vikings had under Green. Continually cycling through whatever QBs the Vikings can sign off the free agent scrap heap while they hope the "right situation presents itself in the draft" sounds way too passive to me.
Its not passive if its the right approach under the circumstances, "circumstances" being the key. If the best the team can do without mortgaging its future in a given offseason is the FA vet, then maybe that's the best they can do while they attempt to line up better options the following season.
Mothman wrote:
It's an approach I think would likely doom the team to mediocrity, occasionally punctuated by a season like '98 or '09 in which they get close but fail to to get the job done. Haven't we seen enough of that? Maybe they'd be able to pull off what the Bucs and Ravens did and win a Super Bowl with a tremendous defense and a solid veteran free agent at QB but that shouldn't be the plan.
The plan is to find the long-term answer at every position every offseason where the team lacks that answer IMHO. However, plans have to be based in the reality that doing that in any given offseason is not always possible given the talent available, draft position, etc.
In my view, the thing you're saying you don't want to see, that being mediocrity, is *assured* for teams that reach and force things when circumstances dictate another direction, maybe at positions of less apparent immediate "need". We hear a lot about successful offenses that take what the defense gives them. The same applies to the offseason for successful teams IMHO. Sometimes things just don't line up, but the kiss of death is convincing oneself they can make something work despite that reality.
Mothman wrote:
As for the draft: I get that you don't want to see them repeat the Ponder experiement. Are you open to them drafting a QB in R2 or R3 as a possible solution?
Is "it depends" an acceptable answer? Round 2, especially early where the Vikings are picking, is still a good place to catch a falling 1st round talent, especially at an underrated position like guard, for example, and the Vikings have a need there too. Would I rather see Spielman pass over a solid prospect at guard in Round 2 to gamble on a QB prospect? I would not, and that logic extends to the first pick in Round 3. After that, Spielman could gamble a bit on a guy like Murray who will fall due to his injury and I wouldn't be too upset.
Mothman wrote:
You might also consider the possibility that your personal assessment of the QBs in this draft may not be 100% accurate and that a QB you think would be a reach and a bust might prove to be neither. I don't mean that to sound sarcastic. I mean it literally.You're posting with a distinct assuredness about the quality of some of these QBs and what their value will be as pros but we all know that it's impossible to predict that accurately.
My personal assessment is just based on what I've seen of them, in many cases watching limited snaps, and read about them from sources I believe have a solid track record with player evaluations like WalterFootball. I base most of where I rank players on the questions that remain about them. The fewer questions about what will happen to them as pros is the best barometer I know to evaluating which players belong at the top of a draft and which don't. Players who have not demonstrated enough over enough time or that still have huge questions around them should not be considered for an early pick no matter what their measurables may say, how fast they run the 40, or how big their hands are. IMHO, Bortles, Carr, Garappolo, all have unanswered questions that make them unacceptably high risk at #8 no matter how dire the immediate need is at QB. Now, do I know for sure that they can't or won't be able to answer those questions with enough time in the pros? Of course not. Its very possible they will answer them and prove to be excellent QB's. Its just not a risk I think a team can take with such a high pick. Spielman needs to go for guys that don't have major question marks early (and by early, I mean his first 3 picks if at all possible). Know to the degree he can what he's getting for his investment, then take gambles in the later rounds on guys who could hit big under the right circumstances (Griffen is a great example of that kind of pick in Round 4). Honestly, I'd be perfectly content with Spielman taking Garappolo in Round 4 this year. That's an acceptable round for a guy who still has major questions to answer and yet could rise to the occasion.
Mothman wrote:
Instead of going into the draft with a full head of steam about what the Vikings should or shouldn't do, why not just keep an open mind? Maybe Spielman will trade down and draft a QB later in the first or maybe he'll grab one at 8 and instead of that QB being a reach, he'll be pleasant surprise.
An open mind without a framework to evaluate the likelihood of possible outcomes is just blind hope. Unless Bridgewater or Manziel is there at #8, Spielman would prove beyond a shadow of a doubt that his evaluation framework is either completely whacked or non-existent IMHO. Whatever led him to draft and attempt to force Ponder, then sign and try to force Freeman, has to go ASAP. He needs a new plan because if he makes the same mistake again the most likely outcome will be he follows Frazier out the door.