Gil Brandt was in his final year working for the Dallas Cowboys, for whom he was one of the architects of a 1970s dynasty and a scouting pioneer, when he pushed the team brass to draft one more Hall of Famer.
Michael Irvin wasn't the fastest or shiftiest wide receiver in that 1988 draft class, which included top-10 picks in Tim Brown and Sterling Sharpe. But the flamboyant University of Miami star was big, strong and crazy competitive. And Irvin, the 11th overall pick, ended up being the best of the bunch.
"There were a lot of wide receivers over the years I thought were pretty good," Brandt said. "But the one I was most proud of was Michael Irvin."
Four years after Brandt left the Cowboys, Irvin played a starring role as Dallas won the first of three Super Bowls in four years. Their play-caller was Norv Turner, who sent Irvin across the middle and through the hearts of defenses on Irvin's signature "bang eight" route, also known as the skinny post.
Flash forward to 2016, and the Vikings hope to find another Irvin for Turner, their offensive coordinator. His offense lacks a physical receiver with size who can make contested catches for quarterback Teddy Bridgewater.
After addressing both their porous offensive line and the safety position in free agency, General Manager Rick Spielman and the Vikings, who have gotten up close and personal with the top wide receivers in this draft class, seem poised to draft one of them with their 23rd overall pick Thursday night.
But drafting and developing wide receivers can be a crapshoot for even the NFL's best — not that anyone needs to tell Spielman and the Vikings. The franchise has been searching for a top-flight wide receiver since the first stint for the mercurial Randy Moss ended too early in 2005.
Quarterback counts
Since Moss dropped into their laps at pick No. 21 overall back in 1998, the Vikings have selected just five wideouts in the draft's first three rounds.