Vikings coach Leslie Frazier said several times this season, in choosing a starting quarterback, that Christian Ponder gave his team the "best chance to win."
Frazier acknowledged after a 14-13 victory against Detroit in the season finale Sunday that every quarterback change was a "collective decision" among himself, General Manager Rick Spielman and ownership.
"In this position, when you're talking about the quarterback position, you don't make these decisions alone," Frazier said. "The quarterback position, this is a franchise position. It's a collective decision. At the end of the day, I'm the head coach, but when it comes to the quarterback, it's not like inserting an offensive guard or a wide receiver or tight end. That's a completely different matter, so believe me there were discussions in each one of those situations."
The Vikings' quarterback carousel this season prompted questions about who actually had final say on the matter. Ponder started nine games; Matt Cassel started six, including the final four; and Josh Freeman had one disastrous start against the Giants.
Cassel outperformed Ponder, but the team didn't make him the full-time starter until December.
"When we made those decisions early in the season regarding our quarterback, you're making decisions based on — in my mind — the short term and the long term," Frazier said. "When we decided to stay with Christian, there was a reason why we did that at that time. Now in retrospect, you can look back and say, 'Well, maybe you should have done this.' But we've talked about why we did what we did and if it worked out there would be no second-guessing."
Frazier reiterated that he discussed every quarterback change with his bosses.
"You don't want to make decisions regarding the quarterback without ownership and the general manager being involved in some degree," he said. "You can make suggestions, but they need to sign off on it. This is the franchise. So yeah, we discussed each one of those moves."