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Up-coming Draft Thoughts

FourCornersViking
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Vikings draft thoughts
Story by Warren Ludford • 10h • 10 min read

Vikings Draft Thoughts
The NFL Draft is still a little over a month away, but for the Minnesota Vikings a lot is riding on this draft. Vikings president and co-owner Mark Wilf made that clear in his statement following the release of general manager Kwesi Adofo-Mensah at the end of January, and he’s right. Between the Vikings salary cap situation and some aging starters, the Vikings could use an influx of young talent on rookie contracts.

Vikings Recent Draft Woes
While the firing of Adofo-Mensah may have coalesced around quarterback decisions that turned into a fiasco in 2025, Adofo-Mensah’s drafts have also been poor. That’s not all on him- there is collaboration with scouting and coaching staff- but he makes the final decisions and it is the GM that owns the results. And how well the team and coaching staff develops draftees is at least as important as the scouting process in the final outcome. And luck is definitely a factor too, as most GMs will admit. The Vikings had some bad luck in recent drafts, mainly due to injuries to draft picks that didn’t have injury/durability concerns in college. Guys like Lewis Cine and J.J. McCarthy- both first round picks that are expected to be quality starters early on. And fourth-round pick Khyree Jackson was killed in a car accident a couple months after he was drafted.

The Vikings were the worst drafting team in the league during Kwesi Adofo-Mensah’s tenure as GM. The fact that the Vikings had a particularly bad draft in 2022, the earliest year of this measure and therefore the draft expected to accumulate the most AVoe points, accentuates the Vikings poor results. The Vikings also aren’t credited for All-Pro Will Reichard, as a special teamer, either but this is ancillary to the results. The fact that two defensive players- Lewis Cine and Andrew Booth- were both high defensive picks in 2022 that provided next to no AV for the Vikings is a big reason why the average defensive pick looks worse. And J.J. McCarthy, as a quarterback picked 10th overall, would have a high AV expectation based both on position and how high he was picked. The fact that he’s earned just 4 AV points to date therefore more than offsets the 20 AV points Jordan Addison has earned his he was drafted. For comparison, quarterback Bo Nix, who was drafted two spots after McCarthy, has earned 26 AV points so far.

The only full-time starters among the Vikings’ draft picks over these four drafts have been Jordan Addison and Donovan Jackson last year. Dallas Turner seems likely to become one in the future, which along with Jackson should make these last two drafts look better in the future, but nevertheless the Vikings not done a good job under Adofo-Mensah in drafting and developing young, inexpensive talent. And that is key to long-term success as a franchise.

Free Agency Has Helped- But It’s Difficult to Build Rosters That Way
The Vikings have been able to mitigate their drafting woes in recent years with success in free agency- including college free agents. Signing Andrew Van Ginkel, Jonathan Greenard, and Blake Cashman two years ago on reasonable deals really helped jump-start the defense. Jalen Redmond has emerged now too. And certainly signing Sam Darnold for $10 million mitigated J.J. McCarthy’s rookie year and Kyler Murray for $1.3 million may do the same this season. Other signings like Isaiah Rodgers, Jordan Mason, Eric Wilson, and Tavierre Thomas on mid/low market deals help too. And hitting on some UDFA contributors like Ivan Pace Jr. and Bo Richter help round out the roster with contributors on minimum contracts.

But it’s difficult to consistently build quality rosters leaning mostly on free agency. There is a reason that other teams are willing to part with their veterans and those don’t always lead to successful outcomes for the acquiring team. For every Greenard and Van Ginkel, for example, there are Hargraves and Allens- free agents that come in on big contracts and underperform. And a team can accommodate only so many big contracts. Most players on every team’s roster, by salary cap necessity, are playing on minimal contracts- usually rookie contracts.

Acquiring high-end talent in free agency also brings high-end contracts- and sometimes loss of draft picks in trade- for players the team doesn’t know as well as ones that have played for them for years and probably more often than not result in disappointment. Free agents are also typically older players that are likely to have shorter tenures with the acquiring team and will need to be replaced sooner than successful draft picks. And some years there just isn’t the right talent available to fill a key hole in the roster.

So, for all those reasons, draft and develop is the mantra of most general managers, supplemented with free agency as needed.

Why This is Such a Big Draft for the Vikings
Overall, the Vikings have still managed to maintain a strong roster overall. No team is top-notch at every position group, and the Vikings haven’t been either, but they’ve managed to avoid having particularly weak links for the most part- quarterback last season being an obvious exception.

But Harrison Smith, if he returns for another season, is 37. Aaron Jones will be 32. Brian O’Neill will be 31. Andrew Van Ginkel will be 31. Eric Wilson will be 32. Blake Cashman will be 30. Isaiah Rodgers, Byron Murphy Jr., and James Pierre will all be 28 or older, which is the age of decline for most cornerbacks. That’s a lot of starters that will need to be replaced in the coming years. And the interior defensive line could use a high-end starter though this is the youngest position group on the team. And then there is the question of quarterback… if Kyler Murray proves worthy of an extension that won’t come cheap.

The Vikings won’t be able to replace all these starters when the time comes with quality free agents- they won’t have the salary cap to do so even if they can find all the willing free agents they need. They need to start hitting on draft picks and develop them. Otherwise, roster decline is inevitable.

A Big Draft with a New Interim GM
The Vikings enter this year’s draft with an interim GM in Rob Brzezinski who doesn’t have a background in scouting and player evaluation. He’s mainly a numbers guy- salary cap guru and contract negotiator. But it’ll be up to him to manage the draft including draft trades- and it’ll be his first time in that role. He should be fine. He’s been in the draft war room for the past couple decades and has handled draft trade negotiations in the past.

The key part will be putting together the Vikings’ draft board, evaluating all the prospects, and collecting intel on the 31 other teams. Brzezinski is well-connected and will be able to help collect intel. The scouting and coaching staff will gather a lot too.

Ryan Grigson and Demetrius Washington, co-assistant general managers, lead the scouting operations. Both were hired by Adofo-Mensah. Grigson has four years of experience as general manager for the Colts, which may also prove helpful in putting together the draft board. Grigson is more of a traditional football guy, having played in the NFL and CFL (he was a 6th round draft pick) and later moved up the scouting ranks over many years. Washington has more of an analytics background, having worked in the R&D department for the 49ers most of his career, overlapping there with Adofo-Mensah.

A More Influential Brian Flores
But I suspect the Vikings’ coaching staff will have even more weight in player evaluations than usual this year, and I wouldn’t be surprised if Brian Flores is one of the most influential voices in that regard. It wouldn’t be surprising if the Vikings draft a majority of defensive players this year, given where the holes in the roster lie, and I wouldn’t be surprised if Flores is more heavily involved in player evaluations and is given the last word. Flores is a former scout with the Patriots and has said that scouting is one of the things he likes doing the most. Of course Kevin O’Connell will weigh in as well, but I suspect he will defer to Flores when it comes to defensive players.

Flores clashed with assistant head coach Mike Pettine last year, who was subsequently moved to the offensive side and has since retired. Flores also is rumored to have expressed some dissatisfaction with the direction of the front office (presumably meaning Adofo-Mensah) in January before he was extended, which may have been influential in the timing of Adofo-Mensah’s dismissal later that month.

In any case, Flores’ influence appears to have grown within the Vikings front office. By all accounts Flores and O’Connell have a good relationship and O’Connell has a high degree of trust in Flores to run the defense. All that suggests Flores has solidified his control over the defense and personnel decisions on that side of the ball.

It’s interesting therefore that the two early releases this offseason were Javon Hargrave and Jonathan Allen- the two big defensive additions last season in free agency. Were those both Adofo-Mensah-led signings? Hargrave was reportedly in Flores’ doghouse at one point during the season and had his snap count reduced for a game. Hargrave also complained that Flores’ scheme wasn’t good for defensive tackle sack numbers after his release was announced. Allen didn’t criticize Flores’ scheme but he did seem a lot more enthusiastic about a Bengals’ scheme that provides an opportunity “to showcase my talent.” While there certainly were salary cap reasons to cut Hargrave and to a lesser extent Allen, the two older players may not have been as good a fit as originally thought.

The Upcoming Draft
The Vikings have four picks in the first hundred- a first-round, second-round, and two third-round picks. They don’t have a fourth-round pick, but they do have a fifth, sixth, and three seventh-round picks. The Vikings have been meeting with prospects the last couple months in the lead up to the draft. Sometimes these meetings reflect genuine interest in a player they are likely or want to draft, sometimes its due diligence that causes them to move away from that prospect, and sometimes they are smokescreens used to obfuscate their drafting intentions/priorities to the rest of the league. So take these with these prospect meetings, arranged by which of the Vikings draft pick slots they might be drafted, according to PFF’s Big Board. That’s not always accurate of course, but one of the few Big Boards that go past the top 100 prospects.

First-Round Pick #18
Nobody so far.
Second-Round Pick #49
CB Chris Johnson, San Diego State. Met at his pro day and also ran position drills at the event.
G Emmanuel Pregnon, Oregon. Met at pro day.
Third-Round Picks #82 and #97
DT Gracen Halton, Oklahoma. Pro day meeting.
WR Ted Hurst, Georgia State. Pro day meeting with Keenan McCardell.
WR Skylar Bell, Connecticut. Met at Combine.
LB Anthony Hill Jr., Texas. Top 30 visit.
Fifth-Round Pick #163
DI Zxavian Harris, Ole Miss. Met at pro day.
OT Markel Bell, Miami. Formal Combine interview.
DB Jalon Kilgore, South Carolina. Met at pro day.
RB Kaytron Allen, Penn State. Formal Combine interview.
OT Austin Barber, Florida. Formal Combine interview.
RB Emmett Johson, Nebraska. Formal Combine interview.
Sixth-Round Pick #196
RB Demond Claiborne, Wake Forest, Top 30 visit.
Seventh-Round Picks #234, #235, #244 or Undrafted Free Agent
TE/FB Lance Mason, Wisconsin. Top 30 visit.
OT Tristan Leigh, Clemson. Top 30 visit and private workout
OT Jayden Williams, Ole Miss. Private workout.
RB Rahsul Faison, South Carolina. Pro day meeting.
OT Alex Harkey, Oregon. Private work out following pro day.
DT Cam Ball, Arkansas. Pro day meeting.
QB Haynes King, Georgia Tech. Pro day meeting.
RB Chris Mosley, North Carolina Central. Met at HBCU Legacy Bowl.
There is still lots of time for prospect meetings ahead of the draft and I suspect some of the more important Top 30 meetings will come in the first week or two or April, particularly regarding their first-round pick. Here are a few observations on the meetings so far.

Chris Johnson’s comparable is Byron Murphy. 6’0”, 193 lbs., 4.43” speed. Versatile inside-outside cornerback. Would not be surprised if the Vikings drafted a cornerback with one of their first couple picks.
Emmanuel Pregnon. Surprised the Vikings would be interested in a guard this high. But they could release Will Fries next year and save $21.5 million cap hits for three years.
Vikings meeting with a couple of WRs expected to go in the third round is interesting. Not sure if a smokescreen or a sign Tai Felton isn’t ready to be WR3 just yet. Ted Hurst is a big-bodied receiver the Vikings are rumored to be interested in.
The Day 3 tackle prospects suggest disappointment with Walter Rouse.
Running back meetings suggest no more than a Day 3 pick on a running back.
Gracen Halton fits the mold for a defensive tackle in Brian Flores’ scheme. More athletic, good at twists.
Zxavian Harris is a huge defensive tackle (6’8”, 330 lbs.) with some athletic traits too.
Anthony Hill Jr. fits the mold for a linebacker in Flores’ scheme- a three-down linebacker who can blitz. Wouldn’t be surprised if the Vikings draft a linebacker given the ages of Cashman and Wilson.
It’s still early and I’m sure the Vikings will have at least another dozen meetings with prospects. And there may be some that haven’t been reported. I may have missed some as well. I’ll do another draft article in a couple weeks after the Vikings have had most of their prospect meetings. Current odds favor the Vikings drafting either a defensive lineman/edge rusher or a safety with their first draft pick. We’ll see.

Stay tuned.

#1 · Mar 22, 4:34 AM
StickierBuns
Joined May 2013
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Here's to hoping the Green Bay job opens up and they have a hankering for some analytics. I might know a guy


He's not getting another GM job. In retrospect, he was in over his head and the Wilfs got scammed with a guy that can interview and promised the future of drafting/free agency. I think the whole league knew this in time and were scratching their heads over his contract extension. 

As I mentioned in another thread, Kwesi took the org. to the edge of the abyss but not into it. A cap reset is in place, and if they can hit on Murray and a solid draft this year and next, it'll just be a bad dream.

#22 · Mar 23, 4:18 AM
purplefaithful
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MaroonBells wrote:

I hate this DL class. I don't think Woods or Banks have value at 18 and 90% of the others are the bigger nose types that don't fit Flores's size profile. I'm at a loss on what to do there. I keep wondering what the plan is. Outside of Redmond, there's Elijah Williams and the two hyphens. Nice depth, but are they starters? Maybe the kissing bandit finds his way to Minnesota.

Lol...

Kissing bandit is pretty good.

I dont know what kind of history he and BFlo have from the Mia days?

edited Mar 23, 2026 4:29 AM

Hurry-up Vikings, we ain't getting any younger! 

#23 · Mar 23, 4:28 AM
MaroonBells
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purplefaithful wrote:

Lol...

Kissing bandit is pretty good.

I dont know what kind of history he and BFlo have from the Mia days?

You have to think something's in the works somewhere. Even if we think LDR and TID are ready to start, moving them up completely depletes the depth at that position. I think we need at least two players. One starter and one more depth piece, at minimum.

#24 · Mar 23, 5:16 AM
Bullazin
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I think the kid from Ohio state is the safest IDL prospect. He doesn’t get moved in the run game. Doubt he will ever be a pass rusher though.

#25 · Mar 23, 12:00 PM
MaroonBells
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Bullazin wrote:
I think the kid from Ohio state is the safest IDL prospect. He doesn’t get moved in the run game.  Doubt he will ever be a pass rusher though.

There's a lot of that in this draft class. At the DT position this year, the run stuffers appear to outnumber the pass rushers about 4 to 1.

#26 · Mar 24, 2:24 AM
SurfnRide
Joined Oct 2024
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purplefaithful wrote:

Lol...

Kissing bandit is pretty good.

I dont know what kind of history he and BFlo have from the Mia days?

I have no problem bringing the bandit in.   Were absolutely F'ed for awhile after 4 years of the below performance.  We are going to have to work the FA market EXTREMELY well for 2026/2027/2028 due to getting NO RETURN on our drafts.

The Vikings are DEAD LAST in "Approximate Value Over Expectation for Draft Picks since 2022.  4 years with this draft performance is going to leave a BIG GAP when we lose our vets.  We haven't been filling their spots with any draft youth.

"Approximate Value Over Expectation for Draft Picks since 2022.

Top 5:

1) Rams +125.2
2) Bucs +92.4
3) Bills  +79.6
4) Packers + 76.5
5) Seahawks +64.7

Look at that... All recent PO teams and Super Bowl Winners

Bottom 5:

28) Titans negative 26.7
29) Browns negative 35.1
30) Cards negative 36.7
31) Panthers negative 39.5
32) VIKINGS NEGATIVE 61!!!!!

Thank god Kwesi is gone.  We're screwed with that draft return

edited Mar 24, 2026 11:28 AM
#27 · Mar 24, 11:28 AM
supafreak84
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SurfnRide wrote:

I have no problem bringing the bandit in.   Were absolutely F'ed for awhile after 4 years of the below performance.  We are going to have to work the FA market EXTREMELY well for 2026/2027/2028 due to getting NO RETURN on our drafts.

The Vikings are DEAD LAST in "Approximate Value Over Expectation for Draft Picks since 2022.  4 years with this draft performance is going to leave a BIG GAP when we lose our vets.  We haven't been filling their spots with any draft youth.

"Approximate Value Over Expectation for Draft Picks since 2022.

Top 5:

1) Rams +125.2
2) Bucs +92.4
3) Bills  +79.6
4) Packers + 76.5
5) Seahawks +64.7

Look at that... All recent PO teams and Super Bowl Winners

Bottom 5:

28) Titans negative 26.7
29) Browns negative 35.1
30) Cards negative 36.7
31) Panthers negative 39.5
32) VIKINGS NEGATIVE 61!!!!!

Thank god Kwesi is gone.  We're screwed with that draft return

I still can't believe the moron bro's hired that guy. Even for two dolts like the Wilf's, that was a massive reach. Always trying to reinvent the f'n wheel and buck decades of NFL history. I was shaking my head then, and I'm still shaking my head now about it. We can thank ownership for that talent gap which will inevitably bite us in the ass.

#28 · Mar 24, 12:51 PM
purplefaithful
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A good QB can cover a lot of warts while the team re-sets with a new GM...I hope either Murray or McCarthy can be that guy.

edited Mar 24, 2026 12:54 PM

Hurry-up Vikings, we ain't getting any younger! 

#29 · Mar 24, 12:54 PM
SA
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Bullazin wrote:
I think the kid from Ohio state is the safest IDL prospect. He doesn’t get moved in the run game.  Doubt he will ever be a pass rusher though.

Agree we need a DT or two, but not sure McDonald (Ohio st) is Flores’ type.

I think if we go DT at 18, it’s clearly K Faulk from Auburn.  Maybe Banks if foot checks out. 

Other DTs that match Flores’ 4i DT profile are 
Miller from UGA and Sooner Halton. Jmo.

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=axg2V3wqveQ

Really like the play at the 1:40 mark kn first and 10 vs OU. Looks like a Flores D formation/scheme.

edited Mar 24, 2026 3:14 PM
#30 · Mar 24, 1:42 PM
MaroonBells
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savannahskol wrote:

Agree we need a DT or two, but not sure McDonald (Ohio st) is Flores’ type.

I think if we go DT at 18, it’s clearly K Faulk from Auburn.  Maybe Banks if foot checks out. 

Other DTs that match Flores’ 4i DT profile are 
Miller from UGA and Sooner Halton. Jmo.

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=axg2V3wqveQ

Really like the play at the 1:40 mark kn first and 10 vs OU.  Looks like a Flores D formation/scheme.

Agree about the Flores size profile, and agree with the players you mention who fit it. But I keep wondering if BFlo's gonna change his mind. The Vikings have met with a few of the bigger nose tackle types from this draft. Maybe this is the year he finally grabs one.

#31 · Mar 25, 3:33 AM
JimmyinSD
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MaroonBells wrote:

Agree about the Flores size profile, and agree with the players you mention who fit it. But I keep wondering if BFlo's gonna change his mind. The Vikings have met with a few of the bigger nose tackle types from this draft. Maybe this is the year he finally grabs one.

kind of echoing this sentiment... I think maybe its time for Flores to change his type up a bit and prioritize that DT that can be a run stopper and get after the QB, they are a bit more difficult to find,  but when you have one... it makes it all run better.  Maybe he has been forced to use what KAM gave him and make due,  I would suspect he has never really said "NO" to a dominant DT if offered the option.

Why isn't Chuck Foreman in the Hall of Fame?

#32 · Mar 25, 6:26 AM
greediron
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MaroonBells wrote:

Agree about the Flores size profile, and agree with the players you mention who fit it. But I keep wondering if BFlo's gonna change his mind. The Vikings have met with a few of the bigger nose tackle types from this draft. Maybe this is the year he finally grabs one.

Yeah, Faulk looks more like a 3-4 DE rather than a DT.  Not very large and lined up outside quite a bit.  I think we have several of those players on the roster already.  But we don't have the beef in the middle.

#33 · Mar 25, 6:39 AM
SA
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Harrison Phillips was our run-stuffing NT, right?
Signed during _onatell, performed well.

Flores sent him off for a 6th rounder.

Phillips had a great year with the Jets.
Pff ranked 3rd overall NT, #1 ranked after week 6, against the run.

Meanwhile, B-Flo’s D went from 16th ranked (overall) with Phillips,to last year’s 3rd ranked (overall) D, without Phillips.

For me, hard to figure a big run-stuffer being a priority.

edited Mar 25, 2026 1:19 PM
#34 · Mar 25, 1:17 PM
JimmyinSD
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savannahskol wrote:
Harrison Phillips was our run-stuffing NT, right? Signed during _onatell, performed well. 

Flores sent him off for a 6th rounder.

Phillips had a great year with the Jets.
Pff ranked 3rd overall NT, #1 ranked after week 6, against the run.

Meanwhile, B-Flo’s D went from 16th ranked (overall) with Phillips,to last year’s 3rd ranked (overall) D, without Phillips.

For me,  hard to figure a big run-stuffer being a priority.


Nobody is calling for a run stuffer,  more so a guy that can be stout in the run blocking and athletic in the pass rush.

Why isn't Chuck Foreman in the Hall of Fame?

#35 · Mar 25, 5:24 PM
RS
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Apparently no one (including me) noticed, but the Vikings resigned 330 lb Taki Taimani from the practice squad in Week 18. With Allen and Hargrave out the door, maybe he gets a better shot at being the short-yardage line jammer who's actually trying to play the system rather than pad their stats.

#36 · Mar 25, 6:19 PM
SA
Joined May 2013
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The Fudge are having serious concerns on the DL, so we got that going for us, which is nice.

https://lombardiave.com/john-kuhn-says-quiet-part-out-loud-packers-pass-rush-problem

https://lombardiave.com/frustrating-update-may-erase-dream-packers-target-from-their-draft-board?page_source=v_recirc

edited Mar 26, 2026 3:10 AM
#37 · Mar 26, 3:02 AM
MaroonBells
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RS_Express wrote:
Apparently no one (including me) noticed, but the Vikings resigned 330 lb Taki Taimani from the practice squad in Week 18. With Allen and Hargrave out the door, maybe he gets a better shot at being the short-yardage line jammer who's actually trying to play the system rather than pad their stats.

He's been floating between the active roster and practice squad for a couple years now. He's definitely a nose, but just not sure how much confidence we should have in him. 

If I were to guess on why Flores has avoided the nose tackle body type for so long, I would say for two reasons (and these are just guesses): 

1. He likes guys who are interchangeable. If you look at where Redmond lined up last year, he was all over the place, LDE, RDE, NT
2. He likes guys who can play three downs. Many noses don't and that's hard to justify in the 1st round.

#38 · Mar 26, 4:20 AM
purplefaithful
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JimmyinSD wrote:
Nobody is calling for a run stuffer,  more so a guy that can be stout in the run blocking and athletic in the pass rush.

I dont see that player out there for the taking, not at 18. Those are Jalen Carter type guys or the gods smile on you and you groom one from the 4th rd that develops later. 

As much of a need that it is, I'm not convinced they go DL first, not with this class. One of the draftniks can chime in, but I wonder if the value at IDL is in later rds?

My $$ is on CB, S or WR  if they stay in Rd1

Hurry-up Vikings, we ain't getting any younger! 

#39 · Mar 26, 4:50 AM
MaroonBells
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greediron wrote:

Yeah, Faulk looks more like a 3-4 DE rather than a DT.  Not very large and lined up outside quite a bit.  I think we have several of those players on the roster already.  But we don't have the beef in the middle.

In a 3-4, that's exactly what he is. DE, 5T, 4, 4i...whole bunch of names for basically the same position, but we need two of those. Or one of those and a NT...who can rush the passer...and can also line up outside. 

Man, sometimes I think Brian Flores reads all these fan takes laughing his ass off at people trying to figure out what he wants.

#40 · Mar 26, 4:53 AM
medaille
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I think there’s a huge amount of value to be gained for our offense for DL that can both pressure the QB and hold up in the run. If they can only do one or the other well, the guys who can pressure the QB are going to get most of the snaps. I think there’s room for one guy on the roster that is pure beef that you bring in for games when teams are spamming the run on your light guys.

One of the weirdities of this past season and offseason, is that our defense was better with Hargrave and Allen, than it was previously. In the past two years, we’ve gotten rid of 3 of our 4 quality starting DL. Maybe they weren’t the best guys or the cheapest guys, but we’re definitely going into the draft with two holes at DL and two holes at S. In the past we’d have tried to fill all the holes in free agency so that at least we’d have some floor of competency going into the draft, so this feels out of sorts to me to have glaring openings.

I kind of think we’re going to have to get two day one starters on defense from the draft or we’ll be regressing.

Sidenote: I think our defense was a little over-rated last year statistically and will regress to the mean on its own. Us having had a bottom 5 offense with little to threaten defenses with slowed the pace of games quite a bit. I kind of expect our defense to get worse in terms of yardage but better in terms of turnovers as teams have to push a little bit harder to keep up with our offense.

#41 · Mar 26, 5:09 AM
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