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Today Could be Exclamation Point on Vikings 2021 Offseason

By Dustin Baker

First, it was Stephen Weatherly.

He returned to the Minnesota Vikings in March after a one-year stint with the Carolina Panthers. The first free-agent acquisition of the offseason, it was neat to see an ex-Viking return as many onlookers of the Vikings perceive head coach Mike Zimmer as difficult to work with.

Weatherly disagreed. So did Mackensie Alexander, who also rejoined the team after spending a season with the Cincinnati Bengals. The narrative about Zimmer fostering a “toxic culture” might just be false or overblown.

Today, Everson Griffen will reportedly work out with his former team in Eagan.

And welcoming Griffen back to the 2021 Vikings would be the exclamation point on a defense-first offseason agenda.

When the Detroit Lions season finished in 2020 (Griffen’s previous employer), the 33-year-old promptly commenced a social media flirtation with returning to Minnesota in 2021. But that was marred by antics. Griffen has a documented history of whimsical, offensive tweets. Foremost, it seemed that he welcomed a Vikings reunion. Soon after, he tweeted-then-deleted that current Minnesota quarterback Kirk Cousins was “ass.” Not a good look. That anti-Cousins tweet is the thing that holds some Vikings fans back from embracing a Griffen reunion. Nobody wants schisms.

Drafted by the Vikings in 2010, Griffen remained with the franchise for a decade before a 2020 departure — along with several other mainstay defensive figures on Mike Zimmer’s depth chart. He landed with the Dallas Cowboys via free agency, playing seven games in Texas. At the season’s midpoint, Dallas dealt Griffen to Detroit for a 6th-Round draft pick, briefly reacquainting him with ex-Viking, Adrian Peterson. Between both 2020 stops, Griffen tallied six sacks on 528 defensive snaps (or about 50% of a normal team’s defensive plays). That’s a respectable total for a pass rusher in his 30s.

Griffen is still a free agent.

While reuniting with Zimmer’s defense in 2021 is certainly not mandatory for a re-tooled Vikings bunch, he would effectuate familiarity — especially for Danielle Hunter.

Hunter is returning from a 2020 campaign in which he played zilch due to a neck injury. The tentative plan at right defensive end is the utilization of Stephen Weatherly and D.J. Wonnum. Otherwise, Zimmer could explore playing time for these defensive ends, all of which are currently on the Vikings roster: Patrick Jones II, Jalyn Holmes, Janarious Robinson, and Kenny Willekes. Call it a full house. Too, as of late, Wonnum seems to be emerging as the frontrunner to start Week 1 at RDE against the Cincinnati Bengals.

That could all change if Griffen is signed this week.

Amid the last 30 years for the Vikings, Griffen ranks third in sacks behind John Randle and Jared Allen. Obtaining the USC alumnus should be an affordable endeavor, and Griffen would likely have to smooth out relations based on his bizarre tweets from earlier in the year. But that’s doable – Kirk Cousins is a reasonable human being, particularly if Griffen’s statement(s) were fueled by adverse mental health.

The RDE spot is arguably the one place on the Vikings defensive depth chart that is iffy. A Griffen reunion would douse that uncertainty. He’s a pass-rushing machine, ultra-familiar with the Vikings system. Griffen probably knows Zimmer’s ways better than the vast majority of men on the roster.

Plopping Griffen at RDE would be a return to normalcy and the last chapter of an eventful offseason. At every spot on the defense, a layer of confidence would exist. If the Griffen tryout does not come to fruition, Minnesota merely hopes the Wonnum-Weatherly-Jones trio will do the trick.

Lastly, this might explain why the Vikings never seriously pursued Justin Houston or Melvin Ingram in July. It may have been Griffen as the pass-rushing contingency all along.

Dustin Baker

Dustin Baker is a political scientist who graduated from the University of Minnesota in 2007. Subscribe to his daily YouTube Channel, VikesNow. He hosts a podcast with Bryant McKinnie, which airs every Wednesday with Raun Sawh and Sal Spice. His Vikings obsession dates back to 1996. Listed guilty pleasures: Peanut Butter Ice Cream, ‘The Sopranos,’ Basset Hounds, and The Doors (the band).

Tags: everson griffen minnesota vikings Minnesota vikings news minnesota vikings players MN Vikings Vikings Vikings News

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  • I see this as a small risk, possibly moderate return. Griffen seemed like he could still play and a line of Hunter, Tomlinson, Pierce and Griffen would put pressure on the opposing OL and make it harder to double team.

  • Based on other articles I’ve read, signing Griffen at the correct time would allow the Vikings to cut him with no negative financial consequences. As the article stated, the Vikings can bring in a productive DE who knows Zimm’s system backwards and forwards at a reasonable price point and if he becomes more of a problem than he’s worth, part ways and move on to RDE by committee.

    The only statement in the article I don’t agree with is that the RDE position is “the one place on the Vikings depth chart that is iffy”. If this is referring to starters only, I wholeheartedly agree! Having said that, the poor showing from our 2nd & 3rd string players in the preseason game against the Broncos makes me question our defensive depth, especially at the safety position. I believe Xavier Woods and Harrison Smith both have the potential to play at a pro bowl level but our backups looked absolutely lost on Saturday. It may not be a bad idea to bring in a veteran safety who could fill in more admirably if one of our starters gets injured. There are a number of veteran free agents (30+ yrs old) still available if Zimm and Rick decide experienced safety depth is a priority. None of them compare to Woods and Smith but most of them would avoid the mistake of biting on a play action fake and getting burned for an 80 yd touchdown, which is one of the main things the Vikings need their safeties to do.

  • The risk is who gets cut to fit Griffen on the roster. I don't think it's worth the risk to lose a promising rookie like Lynch or Willekes for an aging 1 year rental who might not even out-produce Wonnum, Jones or Robinson.

    The value of working him out now, is that we could call him during the season if we need help. He's not a forward looking option.

  • I have been an avid Viking's fan since the 1969-70 season. The end of that season was the Vikings 1st S.B. loss to the K.C. Chief's. I was in the 9th grade in J.H.S. and lost a $1.00 bet to one of my algebra class students, Bob Bishop, who told me he was originally from K.C. Missouri, so yes he was a "true Chief fan"! What I do recall is that I couldn't understand why Minnesota was favored by so much heading into that Super Bowl? I was able to watch the Chief team during that season and was impressed by not only their abilities, but their size!!!! They must of outweighed the Vikings offensive line by at least 20 lbs. per man, if not more! Well we got whacked by K.C. and to this day I can't stomach watching Hank Steam laughing and having a great old time at the Vikings expense as they clearly got outplayed and beaten! Ok but what I really want to say is sign Everson Griffin, he will not only help the team with his ability, but his locker room presence will be even a bigger benefit!!!