General News
| On 3 years ago

Vikings Down to One Realistic Option for Free Agent DE

By Dustin Baker

Approximately 45 EDGE rushers signed with various teams during free agency this offseason.

For now, the Minnesota Vikings are content with a compilation approach opposite Danielle Hunter — Stephen Weatherly, D.J. Wonnum, Patrick Jones II, Janarius Robinson, Jalyn Holmes, Kenny Willekes, and Jordan Brailford. Ostensibly, this will be the group (perhaps trimmed by a name or two after roster cutdowns) that accompanies Danielle Hunter, Michael Pierce, Dalvin Tomlinson, Sheldon Richardson, and Armon Watts on the Vikings 2021 defensive line.

Weatherly was the team’s free-agent EDGE acquisition. In fact, he was the first free agent that Minnesota signed amid its defensive bonanza in the spring. The Carolina Panthers hosted Weatherly for one season, allowing him to head back home to the Vikings after nine games of service.

The frontrunner to start opposite Hunter is reasonably Weatherly as of now. Although, when general manager Rick Spielman signed Sheldon Richardson in June, theories abounded that head coach Mike Zimmer will get creative with the utilization of Richardson. He spent the 2018 season in Minnesota, so some familiarity with the system exists.

The Vikings will take all of the innovation and quarterback pressure they can find. The pandemic season was so rotten that Minnesota finished dead last in the NFL for defensive pass rush per Pro Football FocusZimmer’s defenses ordinarily hang their hats on a vicious pass rush, making this last-in-the-business malarkey a true outlier.

While betting money is probably on some trio of Weatherly, Wonnum, and Jones II receiving the defensive snaps on the opposite side of Hunter, severely limited free-agent options do still exist. But the question looms: Wouldn’t the Vikings have signed one of the other 45 men by now? Probably.

Should Spielman desire one other pass-rushing option, one familiar man is available. And he could start immediately — Everson Griffen.

Image courtesy of Vikings.com

That was likely a bit predictable, but he’s truly the one remaining starting-caliber defensive end left on the wire. Adrian Clayborn, formerly of the Cleveland Browns, is intriguing. Yet, he tore his Achilles tendon late in the 2020 season. His impact, if any, may take months to surface for any team that signs on the dotted line.

Griffen, on the other hand, would be forced to mend fences with Minnesota’s front office and players. Earlier in 2021, Griffen tweeted-then-deleted whimsical and insulting statements about quarterback Kirk Cousins and the team as a whole. Then, he expressed a longing to return to the Vikings. It was a strange ordeal. Needless to say, his tweeting routine ceased after the controversy.

If the Vikings can find a way to make amends with Griffen (or vice versa), the USC alumnus would add instant flair to the defensive line — as he did for 10 seasons in Minneapolis. Hell, Danielle Hunter has never played a single snap of professional football without Griffen on the roster.

Griffen registered six sacks in 2020 during stints with the Dallas Cowboys and Detroit Lions — while playing about 25% of all defensive snaps. When those Vikings foes gave the man playing time, he delivered. On Minnesota’s all-time sack list, Griffen ranks seventh (74.5 sacks), trailing Jared Allen (84.5 sacks) by 10 sacks. During his last season in purple, he tallied 35 pressures per ProFootballReference.com — which ranked 14th in the NFL for the 2019 season. It was the season that the Vikings upended the New Orleans Saints in the postseason. Hunter had 36 quarterback pressures; Griffen was one off Hunter’s total.

At age 33, Griffen probably has one or two final hurrahs for a team that takes the plunge. If the Vikings are not the team to effectuate it, he’ll eventually sign on with a franchise, probably a contending team.

The other option for Minnesota is to stay organic with the current group and hope that Hunter-Pierce-Tomlinson-Richardson generates enough attention to free up Weatherly-Wonnum-Jones for some menace.

The Vikings have about $12 million in cap space as of August 2nd, more than enough to sign Griffen.

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: minnesota vikings minnesota vikings free agency Minnesota vikings news minnesota vikings players minnesota vikings rumors MN Vikings Vikings Vikings News

View Comments

  • I'd be willing to take a flyer on Griffen. I think having pressure coming from all directions helps the rest of the DL and defense. On passing plays, Hunter will face a lot of double teams right now as Weatherly doesn't scare anyone and Pierce/Tomlinson are more run stoppers. Richardson could add done pressure up the middle.

  • Wonnum makes the leap in year 2. In the mold of Hunter out of South Carolina! Write it down! Wonnum!!!

  • Just saw Griffen pick up his kid from football camp here in the West Metro. He's here and probably not wanting to go anywhere else. Its likely that if we don't sign him, it would take a lot from another team for him to uproot his family again (or at least see less of them during the season.) What would be wrong with a flyer "prove it" cash contract with some incentives thrown in? You can't tell me that he's not worth more to the team than that 6th or 7th round special teamer. We loved Everson because he was an outspoken mouthpiece on our team. While it probably wasn't in his best interest to air out dirty laundry, the conflict among the team about the leadership ability of a certain QB really isn't a secret--neither is it due to any fault of his own. And in terms of his breakdown and mental health, also very unfortunate, and a valid reason to stay away if there are lingering issues. However, he was signable by two other organizations, so there is good reason to believe he has gotten help and wants to play. (And yes, I do recognize that he is no longer on either of those teams, so there is an argument to be considered to the contrary.) I think the onus lies with him to prove that he can still play at a high level and wants to be in the game, hence the prove-it contract.)
    Give the guy a shot at redemption--both for himself and the fans. (Just think about what a feel good story that would be running before they play in the superbowl. *Wink wink*)