The Vikings will tell you that Matt Cassel only played
because Christian Ponder was hurt, everyone else will tell you the truth, it
was time for a change.
Given every chance to succeed and complete confidence from
the team, coaching staff, and his teammates, Christian Ponder has shown he does
not have what it takes to be a successful NFL quarterback.
Matt Cassel isn’t going to the Pro Bowl, but on Sunday he
showed that he deserves to be a starting quarterback. He looked decisive, threw
the ball with the velocity, and took chances downfield. Three things Christian
Ponder either can’t or won’t do.
Matt Cassel is just another name in the long list of veteran
free agent quarterbacks to become starters for the Vikings. The Vikings have
relied on free agency to find their starting quarterbacks going back to the
80s. Since Tommy Kramer was let go following the ’86 season, the Vikings have
drafted four quarterbacks, and rarely have things worked out. Christian Ponder
failing is disappointing but it shouldn’t be surprising.
Rich Gannon was drafted in 1987, didn’t start a game until
1990, and was no longer on the team following the 1992 season. He was selected
in the fourth round so this kind of career arc is not surprising.
Daunte Culpepper was drafted 1999, became the starting
quarterback in 2000, went to three Pro Bowls, suffered a devastating knee
injury, and forced a trade which sent him to Miami in 2006. Easily one of the
best quarterbacks the Vikings drafted, Culpepper might still be playing had he
not been injured and decided to become his own agent.
Tarvaris Jackson was drafted in 2006, started 20 games over
the next five years, and was let go following the 2010 season. Never looked
like a starting NFL quarterback, played like one once or twice.
Christian Ponder was drafted in 2011, underwhelmed his
rookie season, underwhelmed in 2012, and was benched is currently
nursing an injured rib on the sidelines. Pundits and fans scratched their heads
when he was drafted and they still are.
Rich Gannon was never plan A, Daunte Culpepper was almost a
franchise quarterback, Tarvaris Jackson was a mistake, and Christian Ponder
would make a fine back up.
Other than Culpepper, the other draft choices were poor selections.
No one but Brad Childress saw Jackson as a starting quarterback and no one saw
Ponder as one except for the Vikings.
The coaches have changed, the front office has changed, but
the situation has not. The Vikings are still looking for their franchise
quarterback and they have wasted the prime years of Adrian Peterson’s career
looking for their guy.
At some point the Vikings need to find a quarterback that can
effectively play the position for several years. Signing a different veteran
from year to year to cover for an inability to draft might win some games, but
it won’t win you any Super Bowls.
After this season Christian Ponder will be gone and the
Vikings will back in the mix to draft a quarterback. If history is any
indication, they will probably pick the wrong guy. Other teams will draft Pro
Bowlers, future hall of famers, and day one starters while the Vikings will be
stuck with a passer they need to make excuses for until they find excuses to
bench him.
Maybe they don’t get good enough draft picks, maybe they are
unlucky, or maybe the truth is that the Vikings haven’t seen a franchise
quarterback in Minnesota for so long that no one knows what one looks like.