The Vikings have had some great safeties over the years, such as Hall of Famer Paul Krause, who came to the Vikings in a great trade with the Redskins back in 1968, first-round draft choice Joey Browner, Robert Griffith and Darren Sharper, who became a Viking after being a longtime Packer.
I have followed the Vikings closely since their inception. And I'm confident no Vikings safety has had as good of a rookie year as first-round pick Harrison Smith.
He is one of the big reasons the Vikings are much improved defensively.
Smith has made some great plays this year, but none more important than the touchdown he scored on an interception Sunday that was the margin of victory over a stubborn Arizona team.
Smith's grab and go gave the Vikings a 21-7 lead in the third quarter and allowed them the cushion needed to hold off Arizona.
The Cardinals dominated the Vikings statistically. They had 356 yards of offense to the Vikings' 209 and won the battle of possession, 35:05 to 24:55 and limited the home team to one first down in the fourth quarter.
Vikings coach Leslie Frazier sang the praises of Smith when he said, "He's having a fantastic rookie year. That play he made [Sunday] was a great play and then the run after the catch. He's a smart football player, a tough football player; he's been great for our defense.
"He should have a bright future. I think he's going to be a good football player for a long time. The fact that he's a smart player, he studies, he works extremely hard, and he has very good hands. He's a bright player who is very athletic and talented.