The four-game suspension
settles it. The Vikings haven't gotten what they
paid for, on the field and off, when they
committed to the big offensive tackle in 2006.
Three days before Brad Childress coached his first game
with the Vikings in 2006, the franchise rewarded Bryant
McKinnie with a seven-year, $48.4 million contract
extension that included $18 million guaranteed.
The deal was significant for two reasons: It indicated
the Vikings felt McKinnie was becoming an elite left
tackle. And it showed they were confident his
off-the-field troubles were behind him.
They have been proven wrong on both counts.
McKinnie was a Pro Bowl alternate in 2007 but has yet
to join the NFL's elite at one of the most difficult
and important positions in the game. More important, he
isn't going to ascend to that until he gets his act
together away from football.
McKinnie's most recent transgression -- a brawl outside
a Miami nightclub in February that led to him facing
four charges -- caused NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell
to suspend him Friday for the first four games of the
regular season. It marked the fourth time McKinnie has
been in trouble with the law since the Vikings selected
him in the first round of the 2002 draft.
Childress has not been available for comment since the
announcement, but this is exactly why he told reporters
in March that he faced a potentially "difficult"
decision on McKinnie's future. Childress couldn't be
faulted then, and he shouldn't be now, if he feels
betrayed.
A coach who preaches accountability among his players
no doubt had a major role in rewarding McKinnie with
that big contract. The thanks Childress received two
years later: The Vikings will have to play a quarter of
the season without McKinnie, and that doesn't even take
into account that his legal case in Miami has yet to be
resolved. (McKinnie has pleaded not guilty to all
charges.)
If McKinnie is going to change his ways, he must start
now. The conditions of the NFL suspension -- which the
Vikings appealed but failed to get reduced -- include
no contact with the team except to arrange off-site
medical treatment.
This means McKinnie theoretically could return home to
the Miami area during his mandated absence. But if
McKinnie has learned anything, he will spend his time
near the Vikings facility in Eden Prairie working out
and staying away from anything that even resembles a
nightclub.
If Childress is the person most upset with McKinnie,
the second person on that list should be quarterback
Tarvaris Jackson.
Jackson, already hobbled by a knee injury, has said he
definitely will be ready to play in the Vikings' opener
a week from Monday at Green Bay. He will have to do it
without his blind side being protected by a guy who had
started 89 consecutive games at left tackle.
The Vikings' plan is to have Artis Hicks replace
McKinnie. The good news for the Vikings is that Packers
pass-rush specialist Kabeer Gbaja-Biamila might miss
the opener because of a knee injury.
The bad news is that Hicks is still scheduled to face
Indianapolis' Dwight Freeney, Carolina's Julius Peppers
and Tennessee's Kyle Vanden Bosch in the following
three games. The Vikings' plan to start Hicks could
change, but keep in mind this is not a position at
which teams can easily find a replacement.
"It's a shame because I thought that line had grown
some cohesion last year, and everybody knows how
important the left tackle position is," said NFL
Network analyst Mike Mayock, who worked the Vikings'
preseason telecasts. "But the good thing is I think the
Vikings understood this potentially could happen. From
what I've seen in practice and on tape Hicks is a
natural left-side player.
"I think they got him a significant number of snaps on
the left side [in training camp] just in case. Do you
want to open against Green Bay, Indianapolis, Carolina
and Tennessee without McKinnie? No way. But I think
they are good enough up front to weather that storm.
Especially because they run the football so
effectively."
If the Vikings are so lucky -- and this is a team that
has big expectations entering 2008 -- they can only
hope McKinnie has learned his lesson.
(startribune.com)