If this were to bear fruit the Browns have two first round picks that could potentially be in play.Adrian Peterson - RB - Minnesota Vikings
Posted 4/4/15 6:24pm ET
Minnesota Vikings RB Adrian Peterson could be a target for the Cleveland Browns, in the opinion of ESPN reporter Jeremy Fowler. The Browns have $30.96 million in salary cap space, so they could afford to make a trade for Peterson.
Huddle Up: If the Browns want to package one of their talented sophomore backs with a pick or two, the Vikings might be willing to listen. Or maybe Cleveland is just upping the ante, waiting for Jerry Jones and the Cowboys to get involved
Crowell had over 20 teams contact his agent after last year's draft to express interest. Not sure if the Vikings were one of the teams.From the Peterson thread:
If this were to bear fruit the Browns have two first round picks that could potentially be in play.Adrian Peterson - RB - Minnesota Vikings
Posted 4/4/15 6:24pm ET
Minnesota Vikings RB Adrian Peterson could be a target for the Cleveland Browns, in the opinion of ESPN reporter Jeremy Fowler. The Browns have $30.96 million in salary cap space, so they could afford to make a trade for Peterson.
Huddle Up: If the Browns want to package one of their talented sophomore backs with a pick or two, the Vikings might be willing to listen. Or maybe Cleveland is just upping the ante, waiting for Jerry Jones and the Cowboys to get involved
If the Vikings were interested in one of the Browns RB would that be West? Or Crowell?
Not really familiar with him. Here is his article that the huddle may be referring to.Sorry, but a basic question: is there any reason to believe that Jeremy Fowler is a sentient being?
There is a recent history of the Browns and Vikings making draft day trades as well.CLEVELAND -- The Browns lack serious playmaking depth on offense, face questions at quarterback, want to run the ball 30-plus times a game as a result, have a ton of cap space and know the best running back of this generation is eager for a fresh start.
Why doesn’t Cleveland at least feel out the situation, maybe entertain a potential trade offer to the Minnesota Vikings for Adrian Peterson?
That’s a loaded question, and one that is irrelevant if Browns officials don't want the headaches associated with a player who sat nearly a full season and reached a plea deal in a child-abuse case. That position is understandable.
If you consider Peterson someone who made a mistake but isn’t a criminal, however, then maybe you would consider the on-field dynamics: an elite 30-year-old running back who is due $12.75 million next year with three years left on a blockbuster deal.
For the Browns, that number isn’t backbreaking. In fact, that number can be reworked. Everything can be reworked with flimsy NFL contracts. The team still has $30.96 million in cap space after finishing a series of short-term deals for aging starters. The Browns could cut a deal that provides flexibility after two years.
Giving up, say, a second-rounder for a Peterson trade wouldn’t cripple the franchise. The Browns have 10 picks this year, including six in the top 115.
A workhorse running back would complement young backs Isaiah Crowell andTerrance West, who are promising but erratic. It would give Crowell and West more time to develop. The suddenly impressive tailback depth would help Peterson, too.
Of course, there are a few major hurdles here:
1) The dip in running back production at age 30 is significant (a drop of 100-plus yards on average from age 30 to 32).
2) Peterson could veto a trade to a place such as Cleveland, which doesn’t have Dallas' cachet.
3) The Vikings might not trade him.
Those last two points are unavoidable.
As to No. 1, however: I believe Peterson is different. And knowing Peterson, he’s prepared to convert that violent running style into another take-my-name-back performance. A player aiming for an all-time spot had to sit a year in his prime. Yeah, he’s running angry.
Peterson values his place in NFL history. He would relish the photo ops with Jim Brown. You don’t think that would excite a fatalistic Browns fan base that sees more quarterbacks than George Whitfield?
Browns general manager Ray Farmer seems to think you can win with just dudes on offense. The Dwayne Bowe and Brian Hartline signings were solid. Andrew Hawkins is a nice piece. But it’s not enough. The Browns ran out of gas late last season, and it'll happen again if they don't get more help. No starting tight ends are on this roster.
The Browns ran the ball 477 times last season. Only the Bengals, Jets, Cowboys, Seahawks and Texans had more. Four of those teams played with an elite back or one close to being one (Bengals running back Jeremy Hill).
If that’s your identity, if this offensive line is as good as most believe, affirm it with one of the last true workhorses of the modern era.
This isn’t to say the Browns should be willing to pay Peterson’s remaining $43.25 million contractual balance. Work out alternatives.
But at least make the phone call.
At least consider the possibilities.
Then ask Peterson and the Vikings if they will do the same.
The Minnesota Vikings sit at an intriguing spot with the No. 11 overall pick.
Driven by hype and/or actual scouting, this year's top-end draft prospects are stirring up a lot of excitement, whether we're discussing quarterbacks in Jameis Winston or Marcus Mariota, receivers in Kevin White, Amari Cooper or DeVante Parker, edge rushers in Vic Beasley, Dante Fowler or Shane Ray as well as a few cornerback prospects in Trae Waynes and Marcus Peters and some offensive linemen like Brandon Scherff or La'el Collins.
The Vikings gave up a top-10 draft pick with their first NFC North win over the Chicago Bears in the regular season finale. Even though Minnesota didn't tank to gain draft ground, general manager Rick Spielman should be pleased with the assortment (and hype) of some premier prospects at key positions, which could help the Vikings to continue their trading ways.
While many NFL personnel types might not say the media has much to do at all with where prospects are drafted, Spielman revealed a little credence to the idea of hype (or cold water) onto a prospect's 'ceiling' or 'chance to succeed' in the NFL by thanking the media at the NFL scouting combine for helping quarterback Teddy Bridgewater fall into Minnesota's lap. Bridgewater went from an assumed top-10 pick after taking his pads off at Louisville for the final time to nearly falling out of the first round, in part, because of this four-month microanalysis of draft prospects after the games are played and before the first team is on the clock.
"I'm thankful the media did [bridgewater] a disservice, in my opinion," Spielman said in February. "Last year by judging him on his pro day.
"We spent six different occasions with Teddy last year," he added. "One thing that we try to do, our process, is that we...graded [prospects] purely off what we saw off tape or what we saw live as football players. All this other stuff that will accumulate here and over the next couple months will start to add into it, but it's not going to be a situation where a guy having a sixth-round [grade] goes all the way up to the first round because he comes out here and he runs fast in his shorts."
In the same vein, prospects can be overhyped and that matters when subterfuge from front offices shifts from spinning the media to spinning a fellow general manager on draft day. Spielman has taught a crash course in this process the last three years.
Since he took over title of general manager before the 2012 draft, the Vikings have made seven first-round selections (Matt Kalil, Harrison Smith, Sharrif Floyd, Xavier Rhodes, Cordarrelle Patterson, Anthony Barr and Teddy Bridgewater) through three drafts. The Vikings have made at least three draft-day trades in each of the three drafts under Spielman, the GM, and this year probably won't be any different.
The Vikings currently sit with seven draft picks -- 11th, 45th, 76th, 110th, 137th (via BUF), 228th and 232nd (via MIA). Spielman likes to have 10 picks and hasn't selected fewer than nine for the Vikings since 2011.
In 3 1/2 weeks, the Vikings will be on the clock and given recent history, it's likely the Vikings will be picking elsewhere in the first round whether they keep the No. 11 pick or not. Like any team coming off a 7-9 season, coach Mike Zimmer's squad has many needs across the depth chart and after a relatively quiet free agency period, more picks will be beneficial for an organization that is already focused on building through the draft.
Philadelphia's Chip Kelly would be on speed dial should Mariota fall to the Vikings at No. 11, but that's unlikely given the handful of QB-needy teams and other trade possibilities in the top 10. But the perceived draft depth at some Vikings' positions of need -- OL, DL, WR, RB -- could make trading down easier while the hyped prospects at the top could cultivate trade suitors, not to mention the mega trade chip sitting on the roster in Adrian Peterson, who has indicated he wants out of Minnesota.
The stars have also aligned for the third time in four years as the Vikings pick one spot ahead of the Cleveland Browns (12th).
We'll see if the Browns have learned after the Vikings swindled them for four additional draft picks in two separate first-round trades (2012, 2014) so Cleveland could move up a combined two(!) spots to select Trent Richardson and Justin Gilbert.
2 players the Vikings could take at 11 and one that they could take at 45.
Agree 100%I don't like some of the fits. For example David Johnson. The Vikings are already working with raw skill players in McKinnon and Patterson. I know a lot of people like Johnson. Great receiving RB. I would likely feel more comfortable with David Cobb who can run between the tackles.
I was a bit surprised to discover that the Vikings have the sixth-highest regular-season winning percentage in modern NFL history, ahead of teams like the Ravens, Packers, Patriots and Colts. Throw in 13 Hall of Famers and they fare pretty well for a franchise that hasn't won a Super Bowl. On this scale, that's enough to edge out Super Bowl winners Denver, Indy, Baltimore, Kansas City and Chicago.
If Aiyegbusi sticks with the Vikings at all, it’s more likely to be on the practice squad than the 53-player roster. But this is a young man who has the self-confidence to match his size. That’s hard not to like.
Love to see Rick do something like this.Arif Hasan @ArifHasanNFL
Participating in #RattyMock where I traded Pick #11 to Browns (@SamIngro) for Picks #19, #77 and #147. They get to pick twice now.
Arif Hasan @ArifHasanNFL
In #RattyMock, I have also traded Adrian Peterson and Pick 137 to @RyanRattyNFL and the #Cowboys for Pick 60 and 91. Come at me.
Arif Hasan @ArifHasanNFL
.@RyanRattyNFL With pick 19 in #RattyMock, I'll select Byron Jones, CB Connecticut for the #Vikings. @eaglescentral and the #Eagles are OTC
Darryl Roberts, Marshall (5-11, 187, 4.38)
While he needs a lot of work with his technique, awareness and functional strength, Roberts has enough of the base traits for the cornerback position that has grabbed the attention of NFL teams. And his outstanding workout at Marshall’s pro day (4.38 40-yard dash, 39-inch vertical, 6.66 3-cone drill) will put him on some team’s draft boards.
Running indoors on Field Turf, cornerback Darryl Roberts clocked times of 4.39 and 4.36 in the 40-yard dash, including a 1.48 10-yard split. He also had a 39-inch vertical and 11-1 broad jump. He ran a 4.08 short shuttle and 6.66 3-cone drill, and had 23 bench-press reps. He had an excellent workout, and a number of teams will be bringing him in for interviews after his pro day. He could be a sixth- or seventh-round pick.
Not a horrible draw at all... west coast is always a challenge but it is a good game to face a SF team that has huge personnel/coaching turnover heading into 2015.West Coast late Monday night game to kick off the season?? Someone is upset with this franchise!! Plus an early bye...
Pick Joe Thomas is about it, but that was a while ago.Sorry you guys don't like the Browns speculation. I agree it does not make a whole lot of sense for them.
This is Browns though. When is the last time they did something that makes sense?
There is a connection between Spielman and the Browns front office. Many a deal has been made between these two teams in recent years.
Using any team as a potential trade partner helps the bidding war I think.
The heavy favorite for the Vikings is to select Parker at 11. Almost every mock you see with them taking a WR in the 1st is Parker. Both Rapport and Kiper have MN taking him.Pick Joe Thomas is about it, but that was a while ago.Sorry you guys don't like the Browns speculation. I agree it does not make a whole lot of sense for them.
This is Browns though. When is the last time they did something that makes sense?
There is a connection between Spielman and the Browns front office. Many a deal has been made between these two teams in recent years.
Using any team as a potential trade partner helps the bidding war I think.
Curious what you guys think about what they will do at WR in the draft.
I'd be pretty surprised if they went with a WR in the first. They just acquired Wallace, after all. If they stick with #11 pick and Waynes is available I'd be shocked if they didn't take him. IMO they'll move down and/or trade Peterson in order to gain some additional picks. Trader Rick needs to get up to his magic number of 10, after all.The heavy favorite for the Vikings is to select Parker at 11. Almost every mock you see with them taking a WR in the 1st is Parker. Both Rapport and Kiper have MN taking him.Pick Joe Thomas is about it, but that was a while ago.Sorry you guys don't like the Browns speculation. I agree it does not make a whole lot of sense for them.
This is Browns though. When is the last time they did something that makes sense?
There is a connection between Spielman and the Browns front office. Many a deal has been made between these two teams in recent years.
Using any team as a potential trade partner helps the bidding war I think.
Curious what you guys think about what they will do at WR in the draft.
Of course, no one knows if they will go that route or Waynes or another route.
If they pass on WR in the 1st, there have been talks of possibly Nelson Agholor with the 45th pick.
There have been multiple times the Vikings and Browns have traded draft picks in recent years.Pick Joe Thomas is about it, but that was a while ago.Sorry you guys don't like the Browns speculation. I agree it does not make a whole lot of sense for them.
This is Browns though. When is the last time they did something that makes sense?
There is a connection between Spielman and the Browns front office. Many a deal has been made between these two teams in recent years.
Using any team as a potential trade partner helps the bidding war I think.
Curious what you guys think about what they will do at WR in the draft.
I think Gerald Hodges will beat out Cole for a starting spot assuming we don't get a starter in the draft.