I am a documented supporter of Vikings head coach Leslie Frazier, and thus, the staff he has assembled. I am also a big non-fan of second guessing, as that is just plain to easy to do, and lacking in fairness. At the same time, I see a concern with this team's offense that I long for Leslie and his staff to address: I believe the offense lacks an identity, and a common "modus operendus" based on the personnel they have. Yesterday was a glaring example, in my opinion.
I believe this collection of offensive players, which will admittedly change before next season, needs to become a running game force for which other teams must adjust defensively. Repeating what I said on the blog, yesterday was a day to pound the Saints on the ground. Use clock, wear down the opposing defense, keep the opposing offense away from our practice-squad defensive secondary, and hope for a couple breaks. If there appears to be one thing this OLine can do with some level of respectability, it is block straight ahead. The combination of Adrian Peterson, Toby Gerhart, and Percy Harvin give the Vikings a dangerous cluster of backs. With the threat of an occasional Christian Ponder bootleg, a defense can be presented with a significant problem. Run on first and ten, run on second and seven, and run on third and five. Mix in an occasional flare pass to Gerhart, a shovel pass to Peterson, and a reverse to Harvin. But primarily, just run, and mostly straight ahead. Make it your identity, and make teams prepare for it. Then... the play action pass will be there, and those DLinemen will have to check for the run before going hell bent into these less-than-stellar O-linemen. Those linebackers will be closer to the line, starting their drops just an instant later, a very critical instant.
But instead, we try to pass protect for a rookie QB with a weak Oline as we try to throw to one high-level receiver who got more attention yesterday than a US president at a state fair. I really thought Musgrave was going to bring that run identity to this team, which I thought was Leslie's reason for hiring him, but it has not transpired. Admittedly, it takes a huge commitment, and it will not always succeed. But it isn't fair to ask this rookie QB to throw for enough yards and points to outscore the Saints with the kind of cast that surrounds him. The mark of good coaching is to use the existing personnel to the best advantage possible. It sometimes feels like we are determined to expose our own weaknesses. When a team is faced with a third and five, it is no greater failure to get stopped a yard short than it is to throw an incomplete pass.
I'm in your corner Leslie. But let's get our existing personnel playing to what strengths we do have.



