In Mike Zimmer's first season as a head coach, he lost his veteran quarterback and star running back for the season before the end of the third game, was forced to start a rookie quarterback, lost his starting tight end, and introduced a new offense and defense. It's a wonder he won seven games.
He should start his second season with Adrian Peterson as his featured back, Teddy Bridgewater as a budding star at quarterback, Kyle Rudolph healthy and two strong drafts having improved his defense.
I spoke with the Vikings coach one-on-one on Friday afternoon, and he sounded quietly confident.
Q Was drafting Teddy Bridgewater beneficial not only because you found your quarterback but because finding your quarterback allowed you to draft defensive players this year?
A The Teddy thing was huge because that was really the number one priority of the organization. We had to get a quarterback we thought could take us to the next level. Honestly, we didn't go into this draft saying this was going to be a defensive draft. We went in and we had offensive guys targeted, but they might have gotten picked before we could pick them.
When we picked [cornerback] Trae Waynes there were three or four guys there we thought we would be happy with, but part of it with Trae was the position he plays. Typically when you draft those corners, you draft pretty high. Once it gets down lower, to the second round, they don't produce like the higher picks. Knock on wood — we hope we're drafting a little lower next year.
Q Will the additions of Waynes and linebacker Eric Kendricks enable you to coach more aggressively?
A There are things we've been thinking about, possibly, like if we got three corners, how could we adjust that defensively and use those guys more often. If we've got a pass rusher like [third-round pick Danielle] Hunter, let's say, if he turns out to be what we want, how can we use him in the nickel package, or can we play him with five down linemen or six down linemen?