MANKATO – Every defensive back remembers his welcome-to-the-NFL moment, that split second when a professional defensive back receives tangible evidence that he's no longer defending unpaid college kids.
"Brett Favre threw a no-look slant on me in practice my rookie year," said Vikings cornerback Chris Cook, a second-round draft pick in 2010. "He looked this way and threw that way. No-look. And still completed it in stride. Never seen that one before."
The Vikings secondary is about to get an eyeful of elite NFL quarterbacks. In fact, if the Vikings' 2013 schedule were a weather report, Paul Douglas would be interrupting regularly scheduled programming to advise Chris Cook, Josh Robinson, Xavier Rhodes, Jamarca Sanford and Harrison Smith to spend the next four months hiding in their basements.
"I don't want to leave anybody out," said Smith, the starting safety. "We got Eli Manning, all the guys in the division, [Tony] Romo, RGIII, Cam Newton, Russell Wilson. Did I forget anybody?"
Only Joe Flacco, the reigning Super Bowl MVP. And Ben Roethlisberger, a two-time Super Bowl champion.
Vikings coach Leslie Frazier put the kibosh on receiver Greg Jennings talking about the size of Aaron Rodgers' ego. But he probably won't mind his top five defensive backs talking about the size of Rodgers' Hall of Fame-bound talent.
Three of those defensive backs — Cook, Smith and Sanford, the starting strong safety — said Rodgers was the greatest quarterback they have ever faced in their careers. One of them — Rhodes, a rookie from Florida State — picked former North Carolina State quarterback Mike Glennon because, well, he's never had the opportunity to compare Glennon's "great back-shoulder throws" to Rodgers' unstoppable precise back-shoulder throws.
The other defensive back — Robinson, who should win the slot corner position in the oft-used nickel defense — labored over the question before punting.