chicagopurple wrote: ↑Tue Feb 09, 2021 10:03 am
it is delusional to think we are "near the cusp".
we have NO OL
We have a out dated Head Coach who doesnt take advise and alienates his players
We have an aging defense and some of the best components have injuries which may be long term
We have a HUGE financial commitment to a middling QB who has shown no ability to lead when it matters
We have aGM who has a decade of evidence proving he is incapable of building an OL or wisely finding a top teir QB
Had we crawled into the post season, we would have been embarrassed in the first game and sent home to lick our wounds....AGAIN
Look at it this way:
The season before this, Tampa Bay finished 3rd in their division with (you guessed it) a 7-9 record...
That 7-9 Bucs team sans-Brady finished 3rd in the NFL in offensive yards per game and 15th in defensive yards allowed per game.
A year later with some tweaks here and some tweaks there, the Brady Bucs (sorry, couldn't help it) finished 7th in the NFL in offensive yards per game, but improved to 6th overall in defensive yards allowed per game.
And for context, the passing rankings for the 2019 Bucs offense sans-Brady was 1st in the NFL... When they became the Brady Bucs in 2020 (sorry again...), they finished 2nd in passing (KC was first).
Looking at that, it's hard to say that Brady really was the secret sauce that took the Bucs from a very Vikings-like 7-9, barely-out-of-the-playoffs result in 2019 to and 11-5 wildcard qualifier and a Superbowl championship the following year. More than likely it was their defensive tweaks and maturation that enabled that, plus they got hot at the right time (at one point they were 7-5 in 2020 IIRC). They also avoided critical injuries and were relatively healthy. All of which contributed to their eventual rise.
The 7-9 Vikings of the 2020 season finished 4th in the NFL in offensive yards per game. It was their 27th-ranked defensive performance that largely did them in, a performance heavily influenced, BTW, by a rash of key injuries/COVID opt-outs coupled with the lack of a necessary full offseason program for their rookie CBs who ended up starting from Day 1.
The Vikings are not that far away. One could argue the offense is already Top 5. If they improve the defensive side of the ball, which is reasonable to believe will happen, they don't need to acquire major new pieces - they just need the pieces they have to stay healthy and mature, why wouldn't they be capable of being in the mix next year?
Provided Spielman makes the right moves (meaning he doesn't fix what isn't broken and instead makes sound moves to address real needs), the team stays healthy overall during the 2021 season, and they get hot in December and play their best football late in the season, the Vikings can easily be in the Superbowl conversation next year.