Milwaukee Journal Sentinel - Packer Plus

PACKERS-VIKINGS

- DAVE CAMPBELL

Basics, roster, depth charts

Minneapoli­s — The defense has largely fueled Minnesota’s success since Mike Zimmer was hired as head coach, a balanced, discipline­d and intelligen­t unit that has annually ranked among the NFL’s best.

This virus-altered season will serve as a stiff test.

Before the COVID-19 outbreak forced teams to conduct spring meetings and practices virtually, the salary cap delivered the first blow to the Vikings. Defensive tackle Linval Joseph and cornerback Xavier Rhodes were released to make room before free agency. Three other starters eventually signed elsewhere. The younger candidates for filling the turned-over positions lost valuable on-field developmen­t time to the global pandemic. Michael Pierce, the most prominent acquisitio­n and expected replacemen­t for Joseph, opted out for 2020 due to asthma-related health concerns.

For the first time in Zimmer’s seven years with the Vikings, the offense has the edge in stability over the defense, with quarterbac­k Kirk Cousins with running back Dalvin Cook as the centerpiec­e. The Vikings have the league’s sixth-highest percentage of combined snaps played by returning players on offense, according to Sportradar research. They rank 19th on defense.

As the rare NFL head coach with both a background on defense and a duty as the primary play caller on game day, though, Zimmer has a palpable sense of pride in the group he has largely shaped. It’s a unit that’s still led, despite the wave of departures, by end Danielle Hunter, linebacker­s Anthony Barr and Eric Kendricks, and safety Harrison Smith, a quartet sporting a combined 12 Pro Bowl selections. The other safety, Anthony Harris, led the league with six intercepti­ons last season.

“We have a lot of guys who have played for a while, together, and have had a lot of success and have been through ups and downs, and then we have a lot of guys who are new, kind of have clean slates, but a ton of talent.

Smart guys, smart coaches, a lot of people who want to win and who want to be great football players and a great defense,” Smith said. “So I think it’s good to have that mix. It’s good to have some new faces every now and then.”

STAYING SHARP

The Vikings have ranked in the top 14 in both yards and points allowed in each of their six years under Zimmer, including eight out of 12 times in the top 10. After leading the NFL in both categories in 2017, they’ve finished fourth and 14th in yards, ninth and fifth in points.

“If you’re not adapting every single day or every single year, you’re not going to last very long, because that’s what everybody does. Same as life. I feel fortunate that I’ve never been fired. I take more pride in that than anything else,” said Zimmer, who is 64 and armed with a contract extension through the 2023 season. “Not very many coaches can say that.”

PANDEMIC PROBLEMS

The Vikings unhesitati­ngly supported Pierce in his decision, but his exit left a hole at the nose tackle position held by Joseph for the last six years. Shamar Stephen lid over, leaving Jaleel Johnson as the leading candidate at the other spot, known as the 3-technique.

An even bigger issue caused by the coronaviru­s, however, will undoubtedl­y be the loss of the roaring crowd for at least the first two home games against Green Bay (Sept. 13) and Tennessee (Sept. 27). Even if fans are allowed in later, capacities would certainly be significantly reduced. The Vikings are 23-9 in the regular season since U.S. Bank Stadium opened in 2016, tied for the best home mark in the NFC with Philadelph­ia and New Orleans. The noise level under the translucen­t roof has been helpful for rattling the opposing offense.

“The concentrat­ion is so much harder when you’ve got 66,000 crazy Vikings fans that are doing the Skol chant,” Zimmer said.

THE REPLACEMEN­TS

After 10 seasons with the team, six as a starter, defensive end Everson Griffen departed for Dallas. Ifaedi Odenigbo, one of last year’s breakout players, has taken over the right side, opposite Hunter. Andre Patterson, the new co-defensive coordinato­r with Adam Zimmer, plans to keep Hunter at left end. Hunter, 25, who has missed more than a week of practices with an unspecified injury, is the youngest player in NFL history with 50 career sacks.

“I don’t want to take a guy from where he’s comfortabl­e and making a name for himself to be one of the best in the business at what he does. To me, that’s not very smart as a coach,” Patterson said.

THE SECONDARY REPLACEMEN­TS

Mike Hughes and Holton Hill are the top two outside cornerback­s, with Xavier Rhodes and Trae Waynes moving on. Jeff Gladney, one of the team’s two firstround draft picks, will be groomed to eventually play one of those spots. The most impressive rookie of training camp has been Cameron Dantzler, a lanky third-round draft pick from Mississipp­i State nicknamed “The Needle” for a hard-hitting ability belying his lean frame. Dantzler has worked both outside and inside.

GOING DEEP

Cousins will miss Stefon Diggs, who was traded to Buffalo in the biggest move of the offseason to save cap space — and erase the tension surroundin­g his dissatisfa­ction with his role in the offense.

First-round draft pick Justin Jefferson from national champion LSU will factor heavily into the plan to complement Adam Thielen in an otherwise inexperien­ced wide receiver group. Bisi Johnson, who has continuall­y impressed the coaches with his mastery of the system since being drafted in the seventh round last year, has emerged as the No. 2 option.

 ?? KIRBY LEE / USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Vikings head coach Mike Zimmer has had a solid defensive unit in Minnesota.
KIRBY LEE / USA TODAY SPORTS Vikings head coach Mike Zimmer has had a solid defensive unit in Minnesota.

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