NFL_FAN said:
Let Dennis coach his team, our team, in the manner that got him the impressive record he has and quit whining about it until the season is at least half over... maybe we will get to the playoffs in 2004!!
NFL_FAN:
So, Dennis Green is gonna turn sow's ears into silk purses, huh? Lemons into lemonade? Chicken sh*t into chicken salad?
Let's review. When Green took over the Minnesota Vikings for the 1992 season, he inherited an 8-8 team with the following assets:
>A receiving corps of Steve Jordan, Anthony Carter, Hassan Jones and Cris Carter. Jordan had been to six consecutive Pro Bowls--the only TE in history, to that point, selected to more than five. Still trying to crack the starting line-up was second-year "project" Jake Reed.
>An OL, ranked 2nd in yards per rush and eighth in sacks yielded, that included three-time Pro Bowlers Randall McDaniel and Gary Zimmerman. (Each went to his fourth Pro Bowl at the end of the 1992 season.)
>In the offensive backfield, three veteran QBs in Rich Gannon, Sean Salisbury and Wade Wilson. At RB, a healthy Terry Allen had averaged 4.7 ypc in taking over for Herschel Walker. Roger Craig was still available as a backup.
>Lining up on the DL were Chris Doleman, Henry Thomas and John Randle. The LB corps included three-time Pro Bowler Mike Merriweather and Plan B free agent Jack Del Rio, who'd led the Dallas Cowboys in tackles in 1991. SS Todd Scott and RCB Audray McMillian, both of whom made the Pro Bowl in 1992, were already on the roster as well.
What's my point? That when Green took his first Vikings team to an 11-5 record and the playoffs, he was doing it with a fairly talented roster, littered with current and former Pro Bowlers, that had gone .500 under his predecessor. And he did it with Tony Dungy as his DC, who should probably get
some credit for that unit's performance (7th points allowed, 9th yards allowed).
Give Green his due. He's been a successful head coach in this league. But he was handed a far better group of players in Minnesota than last year's Cardinals squad. Even if he matches his first-year success with the Vikes--i.e., adds three wins to the prior year's total--we're looking at a 7-9 Cards team in 2004.
And that's about what I expect, given that the only addition to last year's roster among the current offensive starters is a rookie WR. So let's hold off on the playoff predictions for a little while yet, O.K.?
WC