The Vikings' decision to select North Carolina State center Garrett Bradbury with the No. 18 overall pick on Thursday night at the NFL draft was the first step in what should be a key couple of days as the team tries to build out their depth with just $1.8 million remaining in free agent money.
And while the Vikings drafted center Pat Elflein in the third round of the 2017 draft — and Elflein started 27 out of a possible 32 games at center over the past two seasons — General Manager Rick Spielman has said that with a new offensive coaching staff, and a new offensive line coach in Rick Dennison, linemen could be moved around.
So it could be that Elflein moves to guard while Bradbury starts at center or it could be that Bradbury, a tremendous all-around athlete who excelled at baseball in high school before focusing on football, plays guard.
Bradbury was recruited to N.C. State as a tight end, redshirted his freshman year, switched to defensive line, then played offensive guard before moving to center, where he started for three seasons. He won the Rimington Trophy this year as the nation's best center, the same award Elflein won in 2016, and was named a consensus All-America.
Yes, no matter where Bradbury ends up on the line, the key for the Vikings not only with their first-round selection but through the rest of the draft, is that they find players who can step in and contribute.
Lost key contributors
There have been few offseasons in recent memory that saw the Vikings lose so many key pieces to their roster, especially the kind of free agents that really provided a lot of depth to the team over the past few years.
They lost center Nick Easton (four years, $22.5 million), running back Latavius Murray (four years, $14.4 million) and cornerback and special teams ace Marcus Sherels (one year, $1 million) to New Orleans; safety Andrew Sendejo (one year, $1.3 million) to Philadelphia; and guard Tom Compton (one year, $1.6 million) and quarterback Trevor Siemian (one year, $2 million) to the New York Jets.
On top of the players they lost, the Vikings have put themselves in an unusual position with so many long-term contracts handed out to key members of their roster, which is an organizational philosophy at this point.