Rick Spielman became the Vikings general manager in 2012. He ran drafts for the team before that as the VP of player personnel — who can forget Christian Ponder in 2011 — but there is no doubt who owns the 2012-16 drafts for the Vikings.
For better or worse, it is Spielman. And for a while, those past five drafts looked a lot better than they do now. Specifically, events and decisions of the past several months — starting with Teddy Bridgewater's terrible injury and continuing through this free agency period — have to make us re-evaluate those past five classes. Let's take a look at 10 key players/events, with at least one from each class, to illustrate that point:
• Matt Kalil: The 2012 No. 4 overall pick was either injured, ineffective or both for much of his Vikings tenure. Now he's gone to Carolina after signing with the Panthers as a free agent.
• Blair Walsh: Also a 2012 pick (sixth round), Walsh floundered after receiving a contract extension and was released in the middle of the 2016 season.
• Cordarrelle Patterson: The Vikings moved up and traded a bunch of picks to land Patterson, one of three first-round choices in 2013. He was a great kick returner but never developed as a receiver. Now he's with Oakland after signing there as a free agent.
• Sharrif Floyd: A valuable player when healthy, Floyd has struggled to stay on the field. He missed five games in 2014 and 2015 combined, then missed the entire 2016 season. The Vikings picked up his fifth-year option and because Floyd — also a first-round pick in 2013 — is still injured his $6.8 million salary is guaranteed for 2017.
• Jeff Locke: A fifth-round pick in 2013, Locke signed to punt with the Colts this offseason.
• Bridgewater: One of two first-round picks in 2014, Bridgewater and the Vikings (Spielman by extension) were dealt some terrible luck with his freakish and devastating injury in the 2016 preseason.