Antoine Winfield was trying to guess what his peers in the Vikings secondary were doing when the Buffalo Bills drafted him in the first round in 1999.
"Probably getting on a bus on their way to middle school," he said.
Not exactly. At least not all of them.
The Vikings kept 11 defensive backs. Nine are younger than 26. Winfield, 35, is the only one older than that. As for 21-year-old rookie Josh Robinson? Well, he was in second grade when Winfield was a rookie.
In so many ways, all of this seems like a recipe to be torched beyond recognition in the NFC North. However, if ever there were a good time for a certain purple-colored NFC North cellar dweller to be executing the ultra youth movement in its secondary, this might be the year.
Let us count the ways ...
1. Of the first nine starting quarterbacks the Vikings are scheduled to face, three are rookies, two are second-year players and only one is older than 24.
2. Six of those nine quarterbacks have started fewer than 15 NFL games. Only one of them has a winning record.