Heading into this weekend's draft, there was a line of thinking outside the walls of Winter Park that the Vikings should do all they could to surround quarterback Teddy Bridgewater with offensive talent, perhaps one of the premier pass-catchers of this class and a lineman or two early.
The Vikings' top decision-makers had other plans, waiting to tackle offensive needs during the final day of the draft and instead using their first three selections to further strengthen coach Mike Zimmer's defense.
"I don't know if Coach Zimmer ever gets excited," General Manager Rick Spielman said Saturday after the draft. "But I know he is very happy we were able to get the defensive guys."
They started with cornerback Trae Waynes, the top-rated defensive back in the draft, on Thursday and then tripled down on the defensive side of the ball Friday.
Zimmer was mostly pleased with the progress his defense made in 2014, but the team's actions in this draft are proof that he feels there is still plenty of work to be done.
By adding a pair of players who could make an immediate impact to an impressive core of young defenders and taking on a longer-term high-upside project on that side of the ball, Zimmer and Spielman took more steps to stamp Zimmer's identity on the defense, one that could soon become one of the NFL's best.
"The nucleus here is one of the best in the NFL," Bleacher Report draft analyst Matt Miller said. "[The defense has] young talent the Vikings can build around for the next decade. It's an exciting time with so much talent on both sides of the ball and a coaching staff that has a proven track record of developing players."
Zimmer to mold Waynes
With the reigning NFL MVP, another 4,000-yard quarterback, five 1,000-yard receivers and a brand-new top-10 draft pick at wide receiver residing in the NFC North, the Vikings jumped at the chance to grab another gifted cornerback to pair with Xavier Rhodes.