The morning after every Vikings game, after a few hours of sleep and maybe an early flight back to Minneapolis, Star Tribune beat writer Matt Vensel will empty out his notebook and share a few opinions after getting a chance to gather his thoughts. It's sort of like a Minnesota-centric version of the Monday Morning QB — except it's a few thousand words and one haiku shorter.
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On the final offensive play for the Vikings yesterday, which felt like it lasted less than a second before Sam Bradford was on his back, they relied on a once-undrafted lineman to come off the bench to replace an injury-riddled 31-year-old who was chilling on his couch the last time they won a game.
It was a tough spot for Jeremiah Sirles, who has usually played well when plugged in somewhere on the line, to get thrown in at left tackle to protect Bradford's blind side with the game on the line. And you feel for Jake Long, whose career might be over after he injured his Achilles' tendon.
But if you want to point fingers, consider aiming one at the front office.
Praising General Manager Rick Spielman is not always a popular position. But there is no question he deserves plenty for hiring coach Mike Zimmer, giving him the pieces he needed to build one of the NFL's best defenses and salvaging the team's Super Bowl hopes with his bold trade for Bradford.
The biggest knock on Spielman and his staff the past three years, though, has been the Vikings' reluctance to draft offensive linemen with premium picks coupled with their inability to develop late-rounders like they did in years past with guys like Matt Birk, John Sullivan and Brandon Fusco.
Since 2007, the Vikings have drafted only two offensive linemen in the first three rounds of the draft — offensive tackles Matt Kalil and Phil Loadholt. Instead, they have taken a bunch of late-round flyers on guys such as Tyrus Thompson, David Yankey, Jeff Baca, Travis Bond and Chris DeGeare.
They have also recently traded late-round picks for developmental linemen such as Sirles and Nick Easton. Sirles, despite his whiff on Redskins outside linebacker Preston Smith, was a useful addition. We still don't know much about Easton, who was acquired in the Gerald Hodges trade last year.