Vikings General Manager Rick Spielman headed to Indianapolis for the scouting combine armed with the question that ultimately helped paint just enough leaguewide doubt as to what he would do with the third overall pick.
"Is the left tackle that important or is it more important to have playmakers on offense?" he asked then and at numerous other times over the next two months.
If actions speak louder than words, Spielman's answer was emphatic. The playmaking receivers were trounced in a landslide.
On Saturday, three rounds and 114 picks after he selected Southern California left tackle Matt Kalil, Spielman finally turned his attention to the receiver position. Within 16 picks in the fourth round, Spielman grabbed University of Arkansas teammates Jarius Wright (118th) and Greg Childs (134th).
By that point, however, 16 additional receivers had been drafted since Oklahoma State's Justin Blackmon -- one of the two other players Spielman feigned strong interest in the first round -- was taken fifth overall.
Now it becomes a matter of whether this receiver class is truly as deep as Spielman claimed it was. Of course, the pressure for that answer to be yes isn't as great as it was before Spielman covered himself by signing former Bengals receiver Jerome Simpson in free agency two days before the draft. Simpson has the attributes to be the potential No. 1 receiver the Vikings lack and is young enough (26) that he's virtually another draft pick.
"That was huge," Spielman said. "That was a big sign for us to get Jerome in here."
But that doesn't mean the expectations are low for Wright and Childs. Friends since third grade and teammates since junior high in Warren, Ark., Wright and Childs come to Minnesota with a common background and different skill sets that might be able to help one of the worst receiving corps in the league last year.