Normally a team like the Vikings will sign 10 or so rookie free agents, but that might not be the case this year, according to Vikings General Manager Rick Spielman.
"The budget now with the new [collective bargaining agreement] is basically you can spend $75,000 in signing bonuses on all your college free agents," he said. "There's never been a cap in the past. Now going forward you get $75,000 towards signing college free agents. How you divvy it up is what you do with it."
That new rule makes the draft even more important because in the past, the Vikings and many other teams have signed free agents who have made it big with the club. Center Mick Tingelhoff, defensive tackle John Randle and safety Robert Griffith are three former free agents who went on to become standouts with the Vikings.
Spielman also pointed out that the CBA limits the money guaranteed to draft choices, especially in the top 10 picks.
You can see that difference between the contracts of the past two top picks in the NFL draft. St. Louis Rams quarterback Sam Bradford got a six-year, $78 million contract in 2010; about one year later, Carolina Panthers quarterback Cam Newton signed for four years and $22 million.
"A lot more teams are willing to move into that top-10 area because that financial commitment is not as great as it has been in the past," Spielman said.
As for the upcoming NFL draft, the Vikings have lost three starting offensive lineman in the past two years -- Bryant McKinnie last year and Steve Hutchinson and Anthony Herrera were free agents who weren't brought back this year.
Spielman refuses to admit the Vikings will draft USC's Matt Kalil with the third pick in the draft, a player who, according to my sources, is the best offensive tackle to be available since Cleveland drafted Joe Thomas from Wisconsin third overall in the 2007 draft.