Xavier Rhodes has the highest PFF grade among CBs in 2020

This comes a year after Rhodes had the worst season of his career according to Pro Football Focus.

The Vikings didn’t need him . . .

A year after finishing with a career-worst 47.9 Pro Football Focus grade, Xavier Rhodes leads the league with a grade of 89 three weeks into the 2020 season.

Rhodes signed with the Colts this offseason on a prove-it deal after seven seasons with the Vikings.

Meanwhile, the Vikings have been miserable in their pass coverage. To say that Rhodes would find this same success in Minnesota isn’t fair, but it’s hard to imagine he wouldn’t be able to help the Vikings.

The highest graded Vikings’ cornerback per PFF is rookie Cameron Dantzler, who has a grade of 59.8, a mark that ranks 57th in the league. Mike Hughes ranks 76th, Jeff Gladney ranks 93rd and Holton Hill is all the way down at 104.

It’s still early in the season and these numbers could and likely will change.

Obviously, nobody is rooting for Rhodes to not be successful, but for a Vikings’ fan, his success is a little bittersweet.

Pro Football Focus tabs Holton Hill as the Vikings’ breakout player

Pro Football Focus explains why Vikings CB Holton Hill could be a breakout player for Minnesota.

After a tumultuous 2019 where Holton Hill served two four-game suspensions, the Vikings cornerback has a chance to be a big contributor on a new-look Minnesota defense.

Hill was listed as a starter on the Vikings unofficial depth chart.  With Xavier Rhodes, Trae Waynes and Mackensie Alexander all departing in free agency, Hill is all of a sudden one of the more experienced cornerbacks on the roster.

Pro Football Focus thinks Hill has a chance to be a breakout player on the Vikings. Here’s what the outlet said about Hill:

“Hill enters the 2020 season as a likely starter for the Vikings after Trae Waynes, Xavier Rhodes and Mackensie Alexander departed this offseason. He has only three starts in his NFL career, but he exceeded expectations by posting coverage grades above 80.0 in two of the three outings. In his two years on the field, Hill has produced a 73.0 coverage grade on just over 300 coverage snaps. He’s allowed under a yard per cover snap in that span, which is impressive for a former UDFA.

Some of his best work has come in tight coverage, where he brings physicality and allowed just two of 16 targets to be caught while forcing eight incompletions. Minnesota needs multiple of the young corners on its roster to step up in 2020, and Hill looks like he can fulfill that.”

If Hill steps up, Mike Hughes is decent in the slot and Cameron Dantzler is a quick study, I think the cornerback group might actually be better than in 2019. None of those are givens, though. We’ll get a good glimpse into the group come Sunday.

How will Vikings try to cover Davante Adams?

In two games against the Vikings last season, Adams had 20 catches for 222 yards.

It’s been well-documented that the Vikings went through quite the transformation at cornerback this offseason.

Xavier Rhodes (Colts), Trae Waynes (Bengals) and Mackensie Alexander (Bengals) are gone.

While those names are familiar, they weren’t a very productive group in 2019.

Instead, the Vikings drafted Jeff Gladney in the first round of the NFL Draft and Cam Dantzler in the third. Those two will join Mike Hughes and Holton Hill as the Vikings’ top corners in 2020.

That group will have a big challenge in Week 1 of the 2020 season, facing off against Packers star wideout Davante Adams.

The best guess is that we’ll see Hughes, a 2018 first-round pick, on Adams for most of the afternoon.

The Vikings managed to keep Adams out of the end zone in 2019, but he also finished with 20 catches for 222 yards in two games, so not exactly a win.

The good news for the Vikings is that after Adams, the Packers are pretty limited at wide receiver.

Vikings’ CB group at 11th in NFL.com ranking

They might be young, but Cynthia Frelund is high on the Vikings’ cornerback group.

Heading into the 2020 season, most are down on the Vikings’ cornerback group.

And it makes sense.

After losing players like Xavier Rhodes, Mackensie Alexander and Trae Waynes, the Vikings will rely on players like Mike Hughes, Holton Hill, Jeff Gladney and Cam Dantzler.

Not exactly household names.

Cynthia Frelund over at NFL.com doesn’t seem to be worried, though. In her cornerback rankings heading into the season, she has the Vikings’ cornerback group ranked 11th in the entire league.

If the Vikings were to live up to these expectations, that would be huge for a Mike Zimmer defense that already has one of the league’s better safety and linebacker groups.

So far, it sounds like the rookies, especially Dantzler, have impressed in training camp. Of course, without preseason games, we aren’t able to see that as fans.

To round out the NFC North, the Lions rank 18th, the Packers rank 12th and the Bears rank 10th.

Longhorns in the NFL: Training Camp news and notes

In the first NFL training camp update of the year we look at Holton Hill, Kris Boyd, Connor Williams and Devin Duvernay.

NFL is in full swing with training camps getting going. For the Texas Longhorns there a list of former players in the mix for various position battles across the league.

Continue reading “Longhorns in the NFL: Training Camp news and notes”

Will Vikings’ new-look CB group step up in 2020?

The cornerback group from 2019 didn’t set this bar very high.

The biggest question facing the Vikings in 2020 will be how the defense survives the loss of familiar faces like Xavier Rhodes, Trae Waynes and Mackensie Alexander.

The new-look cornerback group will be led by third-year players Mike Hughes and Holton Hill, along with rookies Jeff Gladney (1st-round pick) and Cam Dantzler (3rd-round pick).

While Rhodes was once an All-Pro cornerback and Waynes was a former top-10 pick, replacing these players won’t be as hard to replace as one might think.

This group was really bad last season.

Last season, Rhodes finished with a Pro Football Focus grade that ranked tied for 109th among cornerbacks. Waynes finished 48th. Alexander finished 51st.

That’s not ideal.

It’s certainly no guarantee that a younger group will do any better than this group, but it’s hard to imagine their rankings being much worse than the top-three cornerbacks on Minnesota’s roster.

There will be a challenge with the rookies especially not having a full offseason getting to know Mike Zimmer’s system, but young cornerbacks have succeeded under Zimmer before.

The Vikings hope they can do it again.

The bar isn’t very high.

PFF says Vikings CB Mike Hughes needs a strong training camp

Will Hughes be the top cornerback for the Vikings in 2020?

Sam Monson over at Pro Football Focus put together a list of players who need to have a strong training camp in order to earn a bigger role in 2020 for their respective teams.

Vikings cornerback Mike Hughes, who is suddenly the best cornerback on the team, is on the list.

Here’s a bit of what Monson wrote about Hughes:

The entire Vikings cornerback depth chart is a free-for-all, but Hughes likely has the inside track to being their No. 1 guy if he can have a strong camp and show he is indeed a first-round talent. If he can’t improve on back-to-back PFF coverage grades of around 60.0, though, he could find himself slipping to a nickel corner role or even further if the rookies hit the ground running.

The Vikings’ cornerback group will certainly be an interesting one to watch in 2020. While Hughes is the favorite to win the top cornerback spot, he’s not good enough where we should expect him to win the job. Maybe that will be Jeff Gladney or Holton Hill.

In Mike Zimmer we trust.

The Vikings’ young corners will be just fine

Don’t worry, Vikings fans. Despite the offseason losses, the Vikings might have upgraded at cornerback for 2020.

Minnesota lost two starters out wide, Xavier Rhodes and Trae Waynes, in addition to the team’s nickel corner from 2019, Mackensie Alexander.

That might add up to trouble in 2020 for some teams, but honestly those three as a unit left something to be desired, something that maybe the younger, more inexperienced cornerbacks can build off of.

There’s Rhodes, who had zero interceptions last season. Picks don’t tell the whole story, so let’s look at advanced stats. He earned a coverage grade of 46.5 last season, according to PFF.

There’s also Waynes, who was decent, but only had eight pass deflections and one interception. He earned an overall grade of 65.1 from PFF.

Now let’s look at Alexander. I’d say of the three corners the Vikings let walk, he might have been the best, despite being the nickel corner. Earlier I made the case for the Vikings to re-sign him, but to no avail; he’s gone.

Alexander was a good nickel corner, but the Vikings have a first-round pick who could possibly play that position: Jeff Gladney. He was the No. 31 overall pick out of TCU. He is a physical corner who might be a good fit for the slot due to his strength and relatively small size.

There’s also Mike Hughes and Holton Hill, both of whom have had their question marks at times, but both have also been good when on the field. If Hughes can stay healthy and Hill can play all 16 games, I actually kind of like Minnesota’s chances of having a better cornerback unit than in 2019.

Cameron Dantzler is another corner. He may be more of a project due to his weight. But you never know, maybe he’s able to put on some pounds this offseason and be big enough to play outside.

You also can’t forget about the Vikings having two of the best safeties in the NFL: Harrison Smith and Anthony Harris. That duo can minimize mistakes the young corners make, and maybe Smith will play back deep more now that the cornerbacks are a little less experienced.

Overall, there are definitely unknowns regarding this current Vikings secondary, but those unknowns could prove to be an upgrade over Rhodes and Waynes, two players who were inconsistent while with the Vikings.

Poll: Do you think the Vikings corners will be better, the same or worse?

Poll: Do you think the Vikings corners will be better, the same or worse?

Minnesota has had some turnover this offseason at cornerback, but whether that’s a good or bad thing still remains to be seen.

The Vikings saw Trae Waynes, Xavier Rhodes and Mackensie Alexander leave. However, the team still returns players such as Mike Hughes, Holton Hill and Kris Boyd.

Not only that, but the Vikings took Jeff Gladney, Cameron Dantzler and Harrison Hand in the draft. I think at least Gladney and Dantzler could possibly compete and win starting positions outside in 2020. But will they be better than the unit that featured Waynes, Rhodes and Alexander in 2019?

Many have suggested that the Vikings cornerback corps could actually be better than it was before, considering Rhodes’ lackluster play towards the end of his time with the Vikings.

There’s also a possibility that the corners aren’t experienced enough to succeed in huge roles right away.

Vikings fans, what do you think?

[polldaddy poll=10574116]

Holton Hill intercepting three or more passes in 2020 named as a bold prediction

Do you see Holton Hill as one of the Vikings’ top corners in 2020?

SKOR North discussed bold predictions for the Vikings’ season recently and Holton Hill’s name came up.

Judd Zulgad predicted that Hill will not only play in all 16 regular season games for Minnesota, but that he will have three interceptions, despite only having one in two NFL seasons.

Here’s what he said:

“I think Holton Hill is going to be used extensively,” Zulgad said. “I think Holton Hill is going to keep his nose clean and prove that he’s a pretty good player and I think that he will have three or more picks, because he is going to get picked on by quarterbacks, and I think he’s better than they probably think he is.”

Hill has a chance to step up into a bigger role this season after 2019 starters Xavier Rhodes and Trae Waynes both signed elsewhere in the offseason.

Rookie Jeff Gladney gets the spotlight as the first-round pick, but Hill definitely has a shot at nickel corner or one of the two spots out wide.