Around this time every spring, general manager Rick Spielman declares that he wants to pick 10 players in the draft. And he usually pulls it off.
The Vikings drafted 10 players apiece in the 2011, 2012, 2014 and 2015 drafts. In 2013, Spielman was only able to select nine players. Slacker.
As a result, since 2012, when Spielman was officially given the final say in the draft room, the Vikings have selected a total of 39 players. Only the 49ers, who picked 40 players, drafted more over that four-year span, according to the fine folks over at Pro Football Reference.
There have been some whiffs among those 39 picks, sure. But for the most part, Spielman has hit a number of home runs while compiling a young core that helped the Vikings go 11-5 and win the NFC North in 2015.
So what trends have emerged for the Vikings since Spielman joined the staff in 2007? Which colleges have they hit up the most? What positions have they stockpiled players at? Which rounds have they picked in the most?
Yup, it's time for our annual look at Vikings drafts by the numbers, with the help of the invaluable Pro Football Reference draft finder tool. Most of this draft data spans the past nine years, but we will pull out some specific Spielman stats from the past four years with him calling all the shots.
— The Vikings have drafted 75 players since 2007, an average of 8.3 per year. Of those picks, 37 were used for defensive players and 36 were for offensive players. One pick was a kicker and one was a punter. The Vikings have eight draft picks right now, including two seventh-rounders.
— After drafting three offensive linemen last year, the Vikings have now picked a dozen of them since 2007, tying that position with linebacker and the defensive line for the most players selected. However, only two of those offensive linemen were taken in the first three rounds of the draft. On the flip side, they have picked just three running backs because the one they took seventh overall in 2007 turned out to be a pretty good one.