A reporter asked Captain Munnerlyn what his concerns are about leaving the NFL's "No. 3-ranked" defense in Carolina for a Vikings outfit that ranked considerably more putrid during a nightmarish 2013 season.
"Actually," said the 5-8, 195-pound cornerback, "we were the No. 2-ranked defense in Carolina. Not No. 3."
OK. But can you tell us where the Vikings ranked, Captain? (Answer: 31st in yards allowed, last in points.)
"No, I actually haven't looked at it," Munnerlyn said. "But I'm sure with these signings and with the people they brought in, we'll be ranked in the top 10."
Whether or not the Vikings are signing the right people won't be known until the league starts keeping score in the fall. But so far this spring, they've been filling positions of need with seemingly capable bodies at a rapid-fire pace the past week.
The 25-year-old Munnerlyn, who signed a three-year, $14.3 million deal with $7 million guaranteed, was the latest addition until moments after his conference call ended on Thursday night. That's when reports surfaced and were confirmed that the Vikings also had reached a one-year agreement with 27-year-old cornerback Derek Cox. Cox is a 6-1, 180-pounder who struggled last year in San Diego but had some productive seasons in Jacksonville before that.
Add Munnerlyn and Cox to quarterback Matt Cassel, defensive end Everson Griffen and nose tackle Linval Joseph, and the Vikings had addressed each of their top four needs before Day 3 of free agency had come to a close.
Wait, there was more.