Christian Ponder is more battle-tested entering his third season than any quarterback in the Vikings' 53-year history. Ponder started 26 of his team's 32 regular-season games and threw 774 passes in his first two years.
Only Fran Tarkenton, the franchise's original hero, was in Ponder's ballpark (in his case, Met Stadium) for early experience. Tarkenton started 24 of the Vikings' 28 games and threw 609 passes in 1961 and 1962.
The NFL's prevailing attitude toward playing young quarterbacks was evident immediately with our expansion franchise.
The NFL draft for the 1961 season was held on Dec. 27-28, 1960. There were 14 teams, and the Vikings selected Tarkenton at the top of the third round (29th overall).
Two weeks later, the Vikings gave up what turned out to be the No. 1 overall choice in the 1962 draft for George Shaw, a journeyman with 24 starts in six NFL seasons.
Tarkenton came off the bench in the first half of the franchise's first game, went 17-for-23 with four touchdowns and no interceptions, and the Vikings whipped the Chicago Bears 37-13.
That earned him a start the next week, but when the rookie struggled, coach Norm Van Brocklin went back to Shaw for three games. Imagine that in today's NFL:
The rookie lights up the league in his first game, he returns to the Earth in the second game, and the coach goes back to an undistinguished veteran. Folks might have gotten on Twitter to complain about that move, if we weren't 45 years removed from the 140-character editorials.