The golden rule at Winter Park is nonnegotiable. A draft class cannot be fully evaluated until after three seasons.
So there will be no celebration of the Vikings' 2012 haul until January 2015. At the earliest.
To rejoice now would be premature, like declaring a Las Vegas trip a success after a hot 30-minute blackjack run.
"What if all those guys we picked last year come back in 2013 and stink it up?" asked General Manager Rick Spielman.
That, of course, is not the expectation. Not with a group whose talent and hunger paid immediate dividends. So even with the three-year rule in place, those within the Vikings organization have no problem expressing unbridled enthusiasm about the momentum built through last year's draft.
It was a weekend that included 10 picks and four trades, a draft that delivered difference-making starters on offense and defense in Round 1 (Matt Kalil and Harrison Smith); a Pro Bowl steal in Round 6 (Blair Walsh); and plenty of promising complementary parts throughout (see: Josh Robinson, Jarius Wright, Rhett Ellison and Robert Blanton).
Sure, we may only have one season of on-field results to assess. But the internal hunch is that last year's draft may long be looked at as a landmark turning point.
Said director of college scouting Scott Studwell, entering his 22nd season in the player personnel department: "As long as I've been doing this, that class is one of the best if not the best that we've had here. A lot of things just clicked."