Realistic Expectations for the 2023 Defense?
May 26, 2023 19:13:18 GMT -6
Josey Wales and gophersturf10 like this
Post by Purple Pain on May 26, 2023 19:13:18 GMT -6
Flores, Flores, Flores - but can he truly be expected to fix the defense that quickly?
Rob Searles : Can Flores Do For Minnesota’s Defense What Daboll Did With the Giants’ Offense Last Year?
Rob Searles : Can Flores Do For Minnesota’s Defense What Daboll Did With the Giants’ Offense Last Year?
Over the past three seasons, the Minnesota Vikings have been one of the worst defenses in the entire NFL. New defensive coordinator Brian Flores is inheriting a unit that has ranked near the bottom of the league in the four most critical areas. Whether it’s points, total yards, passing yards, or rushing yards allowed, opposing offenses have had their way with carving up this unit with alarming frequency.
Here’s how the Vikings have ranked in all four metrics in each of the past three seasons:
2022
28th in points allowed
31st in yards allowed
31st in passing yards allowed
20th in rushing yards allowed
2021
24th in points allowed
30th in yards allowed
28th in passing yards allowed
26th in rushing yards allowed
2020
29th in points allowed
27th in yards allowed
25th in passing yards allowed
27th in rushing yards allowed
And if you combine all of the past three seasons, the Vikings find themselves ranked:
29th in points allowed
30th in yards allowed
31st in passing yards allowed
26th in rushing yards allowed
Coach Flo certainly has his work cut out for him, eh? Following an offseason with what appeared to be an intentional plan of adding an influx of youth after parting ways with aging veterans such as Eric Kendricks, Za’Darius Smith, Dalvin Tomlinson, and Patrick Peterson, is it reasonable to expect drastically different results with a younger defense?
The 2023 Vikings’ defense finds itself in an eerily similar position as the New York Giants’ offense from a year ago. After three-straight abysmal seasons where the Giants were near the bottom of the league in every major offensive category, New York tasked first-year head coach Brian Daboll and first-year offensive coordinator Mike Kafka with what seemed to be an impossible mission in Year 1: make this Giants’ offense tolerable.
I can assure you, absolutely no one expected Daboll and Kafka to succeed at this time a year ago in their debut season together. After all, the Giants’ offense from 2019 to 2021 looked awfully similar as the Vikings’ defense since 2020. Especially when you consider that even though Daboll was the play-caller for the Bills, he was handing those responsibilities with the Giants over to a relative unknown in Kafka.
Here’s how New York’s offense fared from 2019 to 2021 under Pat Shurmur, Jason Garrett, and Freddie Kitchens as their play callers:
2021
31st in points
31st in total yards
31st in passing yards
24th in rushing yards
2020
31st in points
31st in yards
29th in passing yards
19th in rushing yards
2019
18th in points
23rd in yards
18th in passing yards
19th in rushing yards
Similar to the present-day Vikings’ defense, aside from Danielle Hunter and Harrison Smith, Daboll and Kafka inherited a Giants’ offense that was devoid of serious talent other than running back Saquon Barkley. However, two coaches that achieved success in their respective roles with two of the best offenses in the league with the Buffalo Bills and Kansas City Chiefs found a way to overcome these talent deficiencies in New York.
Did the 2022 Giants’ offense look anything remotely similar stylistically to the Bills and Chiefs when Daboll and Kafka were on those coaching staffs? Absolutely not. Instead, those two looked themselves in the mirror and were honest about what needed to be done to put their team in a position to win games. And that was playing ball-control, mistake-free football with an offense that wouldn’t be the reason why they continuously lost games in their inaugural season together.
Here’s how the Giants’ offense fared in 2022 with Daboll and Kafka:
2022
15th in points
18th in yards
26th in passing yards
4th in rushing yards
2nd in turnovers
Not exactly gaudy offensive production. But by effectively running the football and limiting turnovers, the Giants were in a position to win seemingly every single week — as evidenced by 13 of their 17 regular-season games being of the one-score variety. The Giants went 8-4-1 in 13 one-score games.
Brian Flores and the 2023 Vikings’ defense would be best served to take a page out of Daboll and Kafka’s playbook. First and foremost, by determining a way for this unit to not be the reason why Minnesota loses games. If Flo’s defensive unit can replicate the same middling production of Daboll and Kafka’s offense with the Giants last season, that would be an overwhelming success in Year 1 with him as the defensive coordinator.
Here’s how the Vikings have ranked in all four metrics in each of the past three seasons:
2022
28th in points allowed
31st in yards allowed
31st in passing yards allowed
20th in rushing yards allowed
2021
24th in points allowed
30th in yards allowed
28th in passing yards allowed
26th in rushing yards allowed
2020
29th in points allowed
27th in yards allowed
25th in passing yards allowed
27th in rushing yards allowed
And if you combine all of the past three seasons, the Vikings find themselves ranked:
29th in points allowed
30th in yards allowed
31st in passing yards allowed
26th in rushing yards allowed
Coach Flo certainly has his work cut out for him, eh? Following an offseason with what appeared to be an intentional plan of adding an influx of youth after parting ways with aging veterans such as Eric Kendricks, Za’Darius Smith, Dalvin Tomlinson, and Patrick Peterson, is it reasonable to expect drastically different results with a younger defense?
The 2023 Vikings’ defense finds itself in an eerily similar position as the New York Giants’ offense from a year ago. After three-straight abysmal seasons where the Giants were near the bottom of the league in every major offensive category, New York tasked first-year head coach Brian Daboll and first-year offensive coordinator Mike Kafka with what seemed to be an impossible mission in Year 1: make this Giants’ offense tolerable.
I can assure you, absolutely no one expected Daboll and Kafka to succeed at this time a year ago in their debut season together. After all, the Giants’ offense from 2019 to 2021 looked awfully similar as the Vikings’ defense since 2020. Especially when you consider that even though Daboll was the play-caller for the Bills, he was handing those responsibilities with the Giants over to a relative unknown in Kafka.
Here’s how New York’s offense fared from 2019 to 2021 under Pat Shurmur, Jason Garrett, and Freddie Kitchens as their play callers:
2021
31st in points
31st in total yards
31st in passing yards
24th in rushing yards
2020
31st in points
31st in yards
29th in passing yards
19th in rushing yards
2019
18th in points
23rd in yards
18th in passing yards
19th in rushing yards
Similar to the present-day Vikings’ defense, aside from Danielle Hunter and Harrison Smith, Daboll and Kafka inherited a Giants’ offense that was devoid of serious talent other than running back Saquon Barkley. However, two coaches that achieved success in their respective roles with two of the best offenses in the league with the Buffalo Bills and Kansas City Chiefs found a way to overcome these talent deficiencies in New York.
Did the 2022 Giants’ offense look anything remotely similar stylistically to the Bills and Chiefs when Daboll and Kafka were on those coaching staffs? Absolutely not. Instead, those two looked themselves in the mirror and were honest about what needed to be done to put their team in a position to win games. And that was playing ball-control, mistake-free football with an offense that wouldn’t be the reason why they continuously lost games in their inaugural season together.
Here’s how the Giants’ offense fared in 2022 with Daboll and Kafka:
2022
15th in points
18th in yards
26th in passing yards
4th in rushing yards
2nd in turnovers
Not exactly gaudy offensive production. But by effectively running the football and limiting turnovers, the Giants were in a position to win seemingly every single week — as evidenced by 13 of their 17 regular-season games being of the one-score variety. The Giants went 8-4-1 in 13 one-score games.
Brian Flores and the 2023 Vikings’ defense would be best served to take a page out of Daboll and Kafka’s playbook. First and foremost, by determining a way for this unit to not be the reason why Minnesota loses games. If Flo’s defensive unit can replicate the same middling production of Daboll and Kafka’s offense with the Giants last season, that would be an overwhelming success in Year 1 with him as the defensive coordinator.