In the days leading up to the 2016 NFL draft, which runs April 28-30, we will break down where the Vikings stand at each position group on the roster. Today, we continue the series with a look at the running backs.
This time a year ago, the noise surrounding Adrian Peterson was deafening. Despite the Vikings' insistence, both publicly and privately, that they had no interest in trading the disgruntled running back, trade rumors swirled nationally. There was nothing to them, though, and the Vikings held firm.
Peterson, fresh after a year off and motivated by his NFL suspension, would start every game, lead the NFL in rushing and garner first-team All-Pro honors for the fourth time in his career. Not bad for a 30-year old.
It wasn't all positive for Peterson. His season-long fumbling issues came back to bite him in the playoff loss and his awkwardness when it came to running out of the shotgun formation forced the Vikings to tweak their offense after a few games. Still, he was by far their best offensive player.
The Vikings have made it clear that they need Peterson to better mesh with the shotgun spread attack that quarterback Teddy Bridgewater has thrived in. Peterson has acknowledged it after the 2015 season, too.
Third-year running back Jerick McKinnon should see an uptick in snaps after he opened eyes late in the season with big plays on screen passes and jet sweeps. Perhaps he and Peterson will be used on the field together.
With both of those players returning for 2016, drafting a running back early would be a luxury pick. But as long as coach Mike Zimmer is wearing the coach's headset here, the Vikings will run the ball, so you never know.
Projected starters: Peterson at tailback and Zach Line at fullback.