Rick Spielman sat on his golf cart off the practice field at the Vikings' 2017 training camp. In a one-on-one interview the general manager discussed the organization's financial strategy in spending big money on a core of Pro Bowl players in the prime of their careers.
In the previous 15 months, Spielman had authorized $135 million in guaranteed money to re-sign key defensive contributors: Harrison Smith, Everson Griffen, Xavier Rhodes and Linval Joseph.
Spielman and salary cap wizard Rob Brzezinski already had crafted plans to reward Anthony Barr, Eric Kendricks and Danielle Hunter with lucrative paydays, too.
"You know that eventually you have to pay the credit card," Spielman told me that day.
The bill came due. The Vikings paid it. In exchange, those players achieved different levels of individual success and the Vikings reached one NFC Championship Game. Then they grew older, the performance of a few core pieces no longer matched their contract and the team's front office arrived at an inevitable destination: a page-turning offseason that makes it imperative to strike draft gold this weekend.
The Vikings had an impressive first night in selecting LSU wide receiver Justin Jefferson at No. 22 and TCU cornerback Jeff Gladney at No. 31 after trading with San Francisco.
Spielman likely needs to find three immediate starters from this draft class. That's a tall order under normal circumstances. Nothing is normal right now.
The Vikings' blueprint is complicated. Spielman and coach Mike Zimmer are entering the final year of their contracts and need a successful season, but they traded one of their best players for draft picks. Rookies will be expected to play pivotal roles, but the COVID-19 pandemic likely will wipe out the entire offseason program, stripping young players of valuable development time.