The first week of the NFL new year could very well confirm the direction the Vikings are headed: They are moving into teardown mode, a change from their previous "competitive rebuild" stage.
And it needs to happen.
Because they need to move money around and shed salaries: The Vikings must be cap compliant by the start of the new season on Wednesday, and they also must prepare for Justin Jefferson's bank-breaking contract extension talks later this spring.
Because they need new players: Usually when a team goes 13-4, it's scheming up ways to stay the course with a few upgrades. But General Manager Kwesi Adofo-Mensah inherited a roster with a porous defense that needed upgrading two years ago. They need to retool the defense under new coordinator Brian Flores.
And because of both money and talent: The roster contained some aging players on sizable contracts.
The finances were foisted on him by seventh-round-draft-pick-hoarder Rick Spielman. Spielman, the previous GM, changed the course of the franchise when he signed Kirk Cousins in 2018 for three years and $84 million, leading to cost-cutting elsewhere on the roster that sent the defense to its current state as one of the worst in football.
Two Cousins contract extensions and several kick-the-can-down-the-road decisions later, the Vikings are dealing with cap calamities. They have been chiseling away on a $24 million cap overage since the end of the season. Adofo-Mensah eventually had to clean up this mess.
Notice that on Monday, the first day teams could contact free agents, reports about free agent agreements came fast and furious around the league without any indications of the Vikings making a splash. That's what a team does when it's hamstrung by its finances.