The Vikings played extensively last Sunday with a secondary that featured two rookies, a cornerback with two surgically repaired knees and a guy who spent most of the season out of football.
No wonder Leslie Frazier had steam coming out of ears after watching Tim Tebow torch his defense by throwing into suburb-sized gaps in their coverages. A toxic combination of injuries, legal problems and ineffective play has left the Vikings completely overmatched and overwhelmed at a position that screams for quality depth. They are just trying to hang on for four more games.
This can't happen again next season. The Vikings to-do list is longer than Santa's, and fixing the secondary should be their top priority.
By fix, we mean implode. Scrap the entire thing and start over. Teams don't often make wholesale changes in their secondary from one season to the next, but these are desperate times for the Vikings. Status quo won't work. Tweaking isn't enough.
Other than Antoine Winfield, name one defensive back who should be an absolute lock to make the team next season. OK, we'll grant exceptions to rookies Mistral Raymond and Brandon Burton because we haven't seen enough of them yet. But who else? The coaches like Asher Allen a lot, but the former third-round pick is a nickelback at best in a competent secondary.
The Vikings need four new starters in the secondary, three if they decide to keep Chris Cook, who remains on a paid leave of absence while he tends to his legal problems.
They should bring back Winfield and make him their full-time nickelback. That's still a prominent role, since the Vikings employ their nickel package about 50 percent of the time.
Injuries limited Winfield to five games this season before he was placed on injured reserve. He turns 35 next summer and is better suited to play in the slot than chase young receivers down the field all game. Winfield remains a reliable tackler who can blitz off the edge.