Usually when we meet a new Vikings coach, we ask for honesty.
My first hope for Mike Zimmer is a little different. I hope he's lying.
We don't know enough about Zimmer to know what to make of his critical comments about Johnny Manziel, but because of them we might know a lot more about Zimmer in five weeks.
We might know then whether Zimmer prides himself on being an old-school taskmaster who can't stomach a flamboyant personality. Or we might find out that Zimmer was willing to lie to hide his true intentions.
Maybe the Vikings won't have the opportunity to draft Manziel, but if they do have a chance to select him and they pass on him, we will know that Zimmer was being honest when he criticized Manziel. If the Vikings take Manziel, we will know Zimmer was fibbing.
I'm not sure which would be worse.
Zimmer separated himself from other coaching candidates because of his ability to extract value from troubled or underachieving players. He has done so as a defensive coordinator. As a head coach, he likely dreams of a prototypical quarterback with a prototypical personality. Everyone wants someone like Peyton Manning or Andrew Luck, whose refined skills are surpassed by obsessive work habits.
Most NFL teams have to find an alternative path. The Vikings need to find a young quarterback who can succeed even if he doesn't remind anyone of Manning or Luck. They need to find their own Russell Wilson, Colin Kaepernick or Nick Foles.