With attractive offers to trade down in the second round for the additional picks he always covets, Vikings General Manager "Trader Rick" Spielman kept his trigger finger holstered just long enough Friday night to select another UCLA player to fill another big need at linebacker for a second straight year.
A year after selecting Anthony Barr to be coach Mike Zimmer's three-down outside linebacker, Spielman used the 45th overall draft pick to select Eric Kendricks, Barr's old teammate, roommate and best friend with the Bruins. The goal for Kendricks is to step in immediately and become the first three-down middle linebacker the team has had since E.J. Henderson. But he also has the versatile skill set to serve as potential heir apparent to "will" linebacker Chad Greenway if necessary.
"We felt he was the most instinctive linebacker in this draft," Spielman said. "He's very good in coverage. He's very instinctive against the run. He plays very heavy-handed to shed and get off blocks and really locate the ball. He has great range sideline to sideline."
In the third round, Spielman failed to trade up before trading down twice from 76, acquiring the Chiefs' sixth-round pick (193rd) to move to 80 and the Lions' fifth-round pick (143rd) to move to 88. With the 88th pick, the Vikings didn't fill a particular need, but picked up LSU's 6-foot-5, 252-pound defensive end Danielle Hunter, a raw pass-rushing project whose skills match right defensive end, a strength with Everson Griffen, but were too good for Spielman to overlook.
"He's a project," Spielman said. "He only played two years of high school and three years of college. So there's tremendous upside with this kid. And character-wise, he was A-plus, off the charts."
The Vikings now have six picks in four rounds on Saturday and probably will turn to the offensive side of the ball with remaining needs at offensive line and receiver.
At 6-feet, 230 pounds, Kendricks doesn't have ideal size for a middle linebacker. But he's known for playing bigger than he is. If he's able to do that at a high level, he would replace Jasper Brinkley, who left for Dallas in free agency, in the base and Greenway in the sub packages.
"I think I'm ready immediately; definitely immediately," said Kendricks, the 2014 Butkus Award winner with a FBS-high 101 solo tackles. "I'm going to work for that. I'm not going to say I will because I have to work for that. But I'm going to prepare like I'm the starter and I'm going to prepare like I'm going to the Super Bowl."