In 2005 Minnesota was struggling with now three-time Pro Bowler
Daunte Culpepper starting at quarterback.
Randy Moss had been traded in 2004, and four-time Pro Bowl Center
Matt Birk was injured so Daunte was expected to carry the offense against the top defenses in the NFL. While playing without any offensive weapons, and falling behind early in games the Vikings began the season at 2-5 with Culpepper throwing twice as many interceptions - twelve - as touchdowns - six - and five fumbles (three lost) before tearing his MCL, ACL, and PCL in the seventh game.
Johnson then took over as starting quarterback and the team then finished the season 7-2 with a six-game winning streak needing only one more win to go to the playoffs. However this was mostly due to entering the soft part of the schedule and an improved defense/special teams which set an NFL record for returning an interception, kickoff, and punt for touchdowns all in one game. Brad played very well and set a team record for lowest interception to attempt ratio (1.3% - same as his record in Tampa) which was the lowest in the NFL among starting QBs. While starting against teams that included the second (Bears), fourth (Ravens), fifth (Steelers), and seventh (Packers) ranked defenses in the NFL his
passer rating was the third best in the
NFC among starting quarterbacks, and was also better than three QBs selected to the
Pro Bowl. But he struggled in those particular games with the exception of the Bears game in which the Bears had already clinched the division and played all of their 2nd and 3rd stringers. He also scored more touchdowns per game than four selected to the
Pro Bowl. And despite his age he threw just as many 40+ yard passes as top 29 yr old QB
Peyton Manning - six - in seven fewer games, which was the same amount as his Super Bowl year which had four more games.
Johnson was starting quarterback the 2006 season for the Vikings, and a few days before the second game he turned 38 which makes him the oldest starting quarterback in the league. Many feel his quick-release style is a good fit for new coach
Brad Childress's highly touted
West Coast system. The knowledge he's acquired from going to the playoffs under four different coaching systems and having winning records with seven different head coaches is an asset for first time head coach Childress too. In the pre-season Johnson had a passer rating of 110.7, one of the top 10 in the league out of more than 100 quarterbacks who performed.
However in the regular season Johnson has struggled almost as much as Daunte Culpepper did in 2005, throwing eight touchdowns to fourteen interceptions. Midway through the season, he has already set an NFL record for passes completed short of a first down on third down in a season. Many fans have gotten restless for the benching of Johnson because of his conservative checkdowns, immobility, and at the same time reckless decisions coupled with a #1 receiver
Troy Williamson who is among the league leaders in dropped passes which have plagued the Vikings offense. Also his quarterback-rating on 3rd downs, with a lead, from behind, and in the redzone are the worst in the entire league. 26 QBs have thrown more touchdown passes than Johnson in the 2006 NFL season.
On
February 28, 2007, the Vikings released Brad Johnson.