Other Teams Missed on ‘Nintendo-Game Force’
Although they won’t admit it, there are
probably a lot of NFL decision makers having second thoughts this week
about passing on Adrian Peterson in the college draft earlier
this year. Yeah, the Chicago Bears are upset about their poor
performance trying to corral and tackle the 22-year-old Viking running
back from Palestine, Texas. But draft decision makers with
Oakland, Detroit, Cleveland, Tampa Bay, Arizona and Washington have
reason to think about throwing a tantrum, too, even if they do it in the privacy
of a closet at midnight.
Those teams drafted one through six last
April, choosing quarterback JaMarcus Russell, wide
receiver Calvin Johnson, offensive tackle Joe Thomas,
defensive end Gaines Adams, offensive tackle Levi Brown
and safety LaRon Landry. Russell has yet to play for the
Raiders. Johnson has 11 receptions, 192 yards, a 17.5 per catch average
and two touchdowns. Thomas has started all six games for the Browns at
left tackle. Adams has started the same number of games and has 15
tackles and one sack. Brown has started three of six games at right
tackle. Landry has started three of five games and has 26 tackles and
a half sack.
Peterson, the seventh pick in the draft,
leads the NFL in rushing with 607 yards after playing in five games.
With five touchdowns he leads all NFL rookies in that category.
Against Chicago last Sunday he rushed for a single game team record 224
yards (also the most ever given up by the Bears). He has set or tied
numerous franchise records including the first Viking to have two runs
of over 50 yards in a single game (against the Bears).
After five games including Sunday’s
coming-of-age performance against the Bears, people are talking about
running back king LaDainian Tomlinson and Peterson in the same
sentence. Tomlinson, with six consecutive 1,000 yards or more
seasons, had four touchdowns and 198 yards rushing on Sunday against
Oakland. That sentence can be something like: “Tomlinson and Peterson
are the two best running backs in the NFL.”
Assume that all seven of the first picks
in last April’s draft become Pro Bowl players. Other than perhaps
Russell, none can have the impact of Peterson because of the positions
they play. Peterson is such a playmaker that if he remains healthy the
others can’t compare unless Russell ultimately shows quarterback
skills the equal of Peterson’s as a runner. That’s a lot to ask because
Peterson’s ability to cut, change speeds, and overpower and outrun
everybody on the field makes him a candidate for wearing a big “S” on his chest.
Before he becomes the new age’s superman,
though, he will have to play a few more games at minimum. And at some
point he will need to be recognized as the Vikings’ No. 1 running back.
As of Monday’s news conference with head coach Brad Childress,
Peterson was still No. 2 behind veteran Chester Taylor.
Childress said the No. 2 status doesn’t bother him or Peterson.
While Childress wants to continue to mix
playing time between the two, he recognizes how special a first year
runner Peterson is. “He’s the best (rookie back) that I’ve seen or
coached,” Childress said. The coach also said he likes alternating his
two running backs, providing “fresh” legs and looks, maximizing
opportunities for explosive plays.
Peterson did that against the Bears. He
had runs of 67, 73 and 35 yards for touchdowns, plus a 53-yard kickoff
return.
Peterson will see better defenses ahead
than the Bears offered. In their last three games the Bears have given up
88 points. Against Peterson the
Bear secondary was particularly bad, missing tackles and taking poor
angles. The Bears gave up 311 total yards rushing to the Vikings,
including 224 to Peterson and 83 to Taylor.
Here’s what Bears' defensive tackle
Tommie Harris told Chicago Sun-Times columnist Jay Mariotti
on suntimes.com:
“There's no excuse to give up that many yards. I don't even think we
were in position to make tackles,'' Tommie Harris said. “We played
poorly on defense. People talk about how good our defense is, but we've
been giving up way too many rushing yards. …”
Mariotti offered this praise to Peterson: “We've seen magnificent
running backs in this town, the best to play the game. Cedric Benson
certifiably is not worthy of the tradition, which makes life difficult
when you've wasted a high draft pick and about $20 million on a bust
while the Minnesota Vikings are showcasing the next power-and-speed,
bash-and-dash, Nintendo-game force.”