Vikings/Ravens

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Key for Vikings tonight is don't get anyone hurt
Sure we want to see what Tarvaris Jackson and the defense can do, but health is what matters.

By PATRICK REUSSE, Star Tribune

Last update: August 16, 2008 - 12:42 AM

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Well that
was a nice history lesson in injuries of seasons past. And as for the statement "and all the Vikings have for a replacement is rookie ? read more Tyrell Johnson, a second-round draft choice from Arkansas State". I could swear I read locally and nationally that Johnson might have some talent. Usually the best safety in the draft does.

Madieu Williams

Andy King, Associated Press

The play of Tarvaris Jackson? Certainly, further examples of his progress as a quarterback are worth monitoring as he stretches out his workload to the first half against the Ravens.

More life from the first-team defense? Again, it would be reassuring to see those much-ballyhooed defenders dominate the feeble Ravens offense, particularly after offering little resistance in their brief action against Seattle.

These are issues worth monitoring, but what matters tonight for the Vikings is that no one of importance gets escorted off the field with a leg bent at the knee, or sent to the locker room on an equipment cart.

There are four main factors for a football team: offense, defense, special teams and injuries.

And, injuries have the same ability to build momentum as do those other areas.

By all accounts, Brad Childress was as committed to nonviolence for three weeks in Mankato as is the prairie pacifist, St. John's John Gagliardi, when he gathers his Johnnies for preseason camp.

No matter.

The Vikings came to Mankato without starting defensive end Kenechi Udeze, lost for the season because of leukemia. They have lost three more significant players in the past three weeks: starting safety Madieu Williams, star special-teamer Heath Farwell and backup defensive end Jayme Mitchell.

Williams is the most significant absence. He has a neck problem. The Vikings have refused to identify the source of this injury. What's known is they gave $13 million guaranteed to a player with an injury history in Cincinnati, and now he has a malady in the worst possible location -- neck -- for an NFL safety.

If Williams turns out to be damaged goods, the Winter Park brain trust figures to declare abstinence when it comes to signing veteran safeties.

In 2006, the Vikings signed Tank Williams (injury history) and Dwight Smith (off-field issues). Williams missed 2006, played some last season and then was hurt again. Smith started 28 of 32 games in two seasons, mixing in an arrest for sex in a stairwell and an incident with police while parked in front of a downtown strip club.

Too bad Dewey wasn't around when the Love Boat sailed in the fall of 2005. He might've been wearing the captain's hat.

Smith signed with Detroit, where the headline could have read, "Losers sign loser." Williams signed with New England and suffered a possible career-ending knee injury in the exhibition opener.

The Vikings took a shot at another veteran safety -- Mike Doss -- last season. He was injured for half of the season.

They went big-bucks this time in signing Madieu Williams, who came with the highest recommendation of defensive coordinator Leslie Frazier. And now Williams has a bad neck, and all the Vikings have for a replacement is rookie Tyrell Johnson, a second-round draft choice from Arkansas State.

The eternal battle cry is, "Injuries are part of the NFL," but the addendum to that is, "If injuries become too much a part of it, they will ruin a season."

Go back to 2005. Mike Tice's team had backed into the playoffs a year earlier, then won a wild-card game at Green Bay. There was a modest degree of optimism entering the '05 season, even though Randy Moss had been traded.

And then: Running back Onterrio Smith was suspended for the season. Center Matt Birk missed the season to injury. Quarterback Daunte Culpepper missed the last nine games after finally showing signs of getting his act together. Udeze and special-teams ace Willie Offord missed most of the season. Another handful of defensive starters missed two or more games.

You look back at the injuries, along with the tight-fistedness of previous owner Red McCombs in compiling a roster, and Tice deserved Coach of the Year votes for the 9-7 record rather than to be fired.

The optimism the Purple Faithful is feeling right now remains legitimate, but there is a five-game start to the schedule to fret: road games at Green Bay, Tennessee and New Orleans, and home with Indianapolis and Carolina.

The Vikings figure to be underdogs in four of those games, and that's if this injury thing stops right now.

Patrick Reusse can be heard weekdays on AM-1500 KSTP at 6:45 and 7:45 a.m.and 4:40 p.m. ? preusse@startribune.com
 

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Vikings at Baltimore: 6:30 p.m. Saturday
Last update: August 15, 2008 - 10:08 PM


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ABOUT THE VIKINGS
Coach Brad Childress plans to play his starters for about two quarters tonight. The first-team offense played three series in the Vikings' 34-17 loss to Seattle on Aug. 8; the first-team defense was in for two series. ... This will be running back Chester Taylor's first game in Baltimore since he left the Ravens to sign with the Vikings as a free agent in 2006. ... The Vikings cruised to a 30-7 victory over Baltimore in the only other preseason meeting between these teams, in 2006. The Ravens hold a 2-1 edge over the Vikings in regular-season games. ... S Madieu Williams (neck), OT Drew Radovich (shoulder), DT Kenderick Allen (hand), OT Marcus Johnson (knee) and DE Brian Robison (leg) all are expected to miss tonight's game.

ABOUT THE RAVENS
This is the first game at home for new Ravens coach John Harbaugh, who was an assistant along with Childress on the Eagles staff for several seasons. ... Harbaugh ran a physical training camp that sounded much like the camp Childress conducted in 2006 in his first year with the Vikings. "We're a better football team," Harbaugh told reporters. "How much better is yet to be determined, but we're getting better out there." ... Kyle Boller and former Ohio State star Troy Smith are competing for the starting quarterback job. Smith, the 2006 Heisman Trophy winner, will get his first start tonight after Boller had two turnovers in a 16-15 victory over New England. Harbaugh said it's possible Smith will play the entire first half. ... RB Willis McGahee (knee) and S Ed Reed (shoulder) are out.

JUDD ZULGAD
 

BobbyBlueChip

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Belly of the Beast
Ravens QB Smith gets big chance against Vikings
Ravens second-year quarterback Troy Smith may have to deliver a knockout performance tomorrow night if he wants to win the the starting job, at least to start the regular season.

Reports from Sun reporters in Westminster put Kyle Boller ahead in the three-way quarterback competition but that's not to say Boller's performance has towered above that of Smith or rookie Joe Flacco. If it were a prize fight, you could say Boller is ahead on points and that's why I say Smith would need a "knockout" performance when he gets the start tomorrow night against the Minnesota Vikings at M&T Bank Stadium.

It could still happen that Smith wins this starting job because head coach John Harbaugh is going to weight the games more than the practices, or at least that is what he has said. And there is always the possibility that Boller could play himself out of a job but I don't think so -- he's developing into too smart a QB to do that. What could happen is that Boller starts the season but is eventually replaced. In all cases, though, the quarterbacks are being held hostage to a situation where injuries have sidelined half of the offensive starting lineup, including the two tackles.

Interestingly, from among this year's draft class, it might be running back Ray Rice who winds up being the most productive, particularly if Willis McGahee doesn't come back from from arthroscopic knee surgery as quickly as projected or if the knee winds up being a chronic problem. So Rice is one of those players you want to watch and a lot will depend on how he handles his duties when he doesn't have the football. It doesn't help if a running back gets you five yards on a carry and then gives up a 10-yard sack because of a bad blitz pick-up.

Because Ed Reed is still nursing an injury, you might want to keep an eye on the Ravens' two rookie safeties, Haruki Nakamura and Tom Zbikowski, and you have to wonder if defensive coordinator Rex Ryan will find a spot in some of his defensive formations for fourth-year safety Jim Leonhard.

Photo: Patrick Smith/Sun
 
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