Like It Or Not, Here’s A Viking Prediction
Like everyone else in the business, Sports Headliners doesn’t
guarantee its predictions. However, I am willing to offer up a guess on
the Vikings’ 2007 season record. So go ahead and read the prediction,
with my permission to laugh, cry or kick your foot through the monitor.
I even agree to be reminded in December about the prediction.
It will be a small gathering if you pull together a group adamant that
the Vikings are headed for a championship season. Advertise for a crowd
who believes the results will be mediocre at best, lousy at worst, and
you should have no problem filling the Metrodome.
The elusive among us prefer to forecast a range of wins and losses.
Safe ground looks like 6-10 to 10-6 for the Vikings. People who think
like this wear plain clothes, invest all their money in treasury bonds
and never buy an American car.
I drive a Chrysler and perhaps that doesn’t make me a risk taker but I
am willing to be more specific than predicting a range of wins and
losses. I think the Vikings will finish close to .500. Let’s go with
an 8-8 record.
Don’t hold me to the prediction if Adrian Peterson is injured and
misses a few games. The rookie running back is that important to the
season’s results. Peterson can become one of the NFL’s best running
backs and he has three potentially elite linemen working for him,
Steve Hutchinson, Matt Birk and Bryant McKinnie.
Those four players figure to make or break an offense that is
quarterback and receiver challenged.
Peterson and friends must be just good enough point producers to
complement a good defense that by season’s end might be great.
Defensive tackles Kevin Williams and Pat Williams, safety
Darren Sharper and cornerback Antoine Winfield rate with
the best players at their positions in the NFL. Peter King of
Sports Illustrated lists Kevin Williams as the top defensive tackle and
14th best player in the NFL. Sporting News assigns players a
1-5 ranking and gives fives to Williams and
Hutchinson.
Last season the defense held opponents to 20 points or less in nine
games. The Vikings were No. 1 in rushing defense and No. 8 in overall
league defense. What's needed to make the next step is better pass
rushing, particularly from the defensive ends. Those ends now are Ray
Edwards and Kenechi Udeze but Erasmus James,
recovering from a knee injury, may become a starter later in the
season. During the pre-season the Vikings looked formidable defensively
and playmakers included improving linebackers Chad Greenway and
E.J. Henderson.
The 16 game schedule includes at least four teams who are clear choices
to be better than the Vikings. Playing Chicago twice and single
meetings with Dallas, Philadelphia, San Diego and Denver will allow the
Vikings to make comparisons between themselves and the NFL’s better
teams. A challenging schedule is not a prediction. It’s a fact.