psjordan wrote: ↑Sun Jan 12, 2020 9:33 am To quote the old song, there's got to be a morning after, and here it is.
Lots of emotion posted here among many cogent thoughts. Honestly I think everyone posting here has valid points. It's frustrating, and the if "Zim and Spielman could ONLY see it the way I do, this franchise would take off" mentality is pretty easy to adopt for all of us.
I'd sum my thoughts as:
Cousins, this offensive line and this OL/TE coaching staff are NOT a good combination. One can argue what percent is at what fault, but the combination is about as inconsistent/poor as any in the NFL. Something needs to change within this group for this team to progress and win playoff games. What changes and who changes it? Heck if I know. I only know if nothing changes with this group, I will be back to being an unexcited fan, again.
This team needs to address "depth", and not in the "let's stockpile 12 sixth round draft picks and see what sticks to the wall" kind of way. Spielman and group need to start targeting SPECIFIC depth needs with SPECIFIC draft prospects or FA's. Maybe continuing to supply the Cowboys with kickers bit them and we will stick with "best athlete available" again this year. Doing that 100% of the time is a mistake IMO. Evaluate the players and your missing depth, trust your evaluation even with past misses, and jump. We'll see. If we stockpile 6th rounders again, that's a sure sign we are just hoping for the best.
I know we'll address the 2020 cap situation with marginal restructures here and there, but I don't recall a team with such poor depth being at or over the cap before the next season even starts. THE CAP NEEDS TO BE ADDRESSED LONG TERM. As shown by many teams, the best way to address this is to draft a starting QB. Sounds simple but it's not something we have even attempted in what seems like forever. I'm not judging Cousins, I'm saying the quickest way to a great cap situation is to draft your starting QB.
And finally, I am a big proponent of the biggest difference in the NFL being coaching. And it's not game day coaching, it's everything that goes into non-game day coaching. Statistically (sorry, quant stats major here) it's less and less likely that we whiffed on every OL acquisition than it is that our OL coaches stink. My litmus test is which players got better or stayed great every year under a staff, and honestly I see very few of those players on this roster. We did not draft or acquire 30 players that are incapable of learning and growing, I guarantee you that. What's the magic mix - keep Zim and change assistants? Worked OK for special teams. Fire Zim and gamble with a whole new staff? Cut players and keep all coaches? That one would peeve me but whatever. I don't know the magic mix. I only hope the Wilf family is at least CONTEMPLATING what the plan for change should be moving forward.
Great post.
I think the "magic mix" involves replacing Spielman and Zimmer and going from there. It seems like folly to expect better with those two in charge. They've kept Zim and switched various assistants for years now and the overall team results have remained disappointing, even though there has been some fun along the way. Collectively, every move the Vikes have made for 6 seasons has built the team that was manhandled by the 49ers yesterday.
Spielman has drafted some very good players over the years but as I've said many times, drafting is not his primary responsibility. That was his main job during the Childress era but he's been GM since 2012 and the GM's job is to build a championship team. That takes more than just a solid eye for talent and I think several of the points you made to speak to that issue.
By keeping Zimmer and Spielman for even one more year, the Wilfs are simply wasting time and delaying the inevitable. Keeping them longer would be an even bigger mistake. Expecting Cousins to be a long term solution at QB who will lead the team to a Super Bowl would be an error too and the Vikings should begin preparing for the post-Cousins era asap. Extending any of those 3 contracts is a bad idea.
It's not that I'm ungrateful for the winning seasons, the playoff appearances, etc. we've seen from these guys. They clearly work hard and do their best and I genuinely appreciate that effort. It's just that I think their limitations are clear. This simply isn't a mix of leadership at arguably the 3 most important positions on a football team that ever seems likely to win a Super Bowl.
Honestly, I believe the sooner this team gets firmly into a rebuilding mode from the top down the better. Naturally, they need to make good decisions or things could get worse rather than better but it seems like the only sensible way forward if they're ever going to win a Lombardi trophy.