MANKATO - There are Vikings fans willing to lament the loss of Chester Taylor as a reason for concern in the season ahead. This is a stretch even for those Purple loyalists steeped in a tradition of paranoia.
The Vikings were able to drain the best from Taylor during four seasons and had no qualms in seeing him leave as a free agent. The fact Chicago was willing to guarantee $7 million for a backup running back who will turn 31 next month was more a Bears blunder than a Vikings setback.
There are enough options to assist Adrian Peterson in this training camp that a couple of Vikings running backs could wind up being cut and landing with other teams.
The Vikings traded upward to get Stanford's Toby Gerhart. They have been grooming Iowa's Albert Young for two seasons, first on the practice squad and then as a special-teamer.
They are also taking a look at veteran Ryan Moats and Ian Johnson, a Boise State standout who spent 2009 on the practice squad.
Darius Reynaud, fourth in the NFC last season with an average of 10.9 yards on punt returns, also is listed as a running back. On Wednesday, he twisted an ankle in a special teams practice and was taken off the field on a cart.
Rick Spielman, the Vikings' vice president for player personnel, said Wednesday that running back and cornerback were the areas where the front office was aggressive in finding options. Taylor's departure and right corner Cedric Griffin's torn ACL in the NFC Championship Game were the motivations.
This strategy was obvious in the draft, where cornerback Chris Cook and Gerhart were the team's first two picks as second-rounders.