With the team finding ways to lose so creatively on their way to their current 0-and-3 record, the fans are starting to face the strong possibility that the Vikings are going to be wheeling and dealing before the trade deadline. Backup running back Toby Gerhart was reportedly one of the options the Colts considered before acquiring Trent Richardson from the Browns. With Gerhart in the last year of his rookie deal — and unlikely to get much playing time behind Adrian Peterson — a trade to another team might be the best thing for the Vikings and for the player. Pretty much the entire defensive line are in contract years, although you might not think so based on the way some of them have disappeared between the starting whistle and the end of the game.
The Daily Norseman‘s KJ Segall has a bit of a moan before getting down to trade scenarios:
This team stinks. From top to bottom. Special Teams, which won ST (maybe) guru Mike Priefer an award last year, has been shaky (again outside our kicker) to say the best. They were embarrassed in Chicago by Devin Hester and at home against a team that ran not one, but two fake kicks. The defense has netted 8 turnovers in 2 games, hooray! Except for every turnover they’ve gotten, they give up multiple 3rd and long conversions, points, and not to mention game winning drives. Flashes of brilliance filled in between by glooming shadows of utter incompetence with the fundamentals isn’t winning football, and it sure as hell isn’t the shutdown D I thought we were growing into. And the offense……. Oh, the offense. When the D does step up and give them the ball back, they either do squat with it, or go ahead and give the ball right back to our opponents. Even the cybernetic machine known as Adrian Peterson has two fumbles in as many games — which I think was also exactly how many he had last year. I will say by and large he remains a fairly solid running back, but when your team is built almost exclusively around said running back, “fairly solid” ain’t cuttin’ it. Our coaches make what is charitably described as “bad” calls, challenge plays that can’t be challenged*, and make what can only be called ‘bizarre’ personnel decisions.
That being said — and it’s hard to pull much positive out of the dumpster fire the team has been so far — he’s not calling for a deliberate collapse:
If you think, by the way, this article is ever going to go the route of “Lambs to the slaughter for Teddy Bridgewater” (the best I’ve heard yet, and I’ll have to give Joshua Deceuster, twitter @DB_JoshD, full credit for it), you’re reading the wrong writer.
He also joins the chorus calling for the head of offensive co-ordinator Bill Musgrave:
In terms of coaching, I’m down for firing Bill Musgrave any time now. Maybe after the season, I suppose I can choke through it until then. But the second the final game clock ticks 0, Musgrave better have security surrounding him, holding boxes filled with the items from his desk and politely offering to escort him to his car. And quite frankly, if Leslie Frazier does anything but, I think as soon as Musgrave has left the parking lot said security guards begin packing his desk.