09-10-2021, 11:25 AM
By Sam EkstromEAGAN — Mike Zimmer claims he remembers his bad games more clearly than his good ones, so his first attempt as an NFL playcaller is etched in his brain.
“I think I gave up 200 yards rushing that day,” the Vikings head coach said. “I think they onside kicked us the first kickoff and then it was pretty ugly after that.”
Eagles 41, Cowboys 14 was the score on Sept. 3, 2000 when Zimmer debuted as the Dallas defensive coordinator. Indeed, David Akers successfully onside-kicked to start the game, and the 200 yards Zimmer’s ‘Boys gave up on the ground was actually 306 total, 201 of them to Duce Staley.
Nowhere to go but up, right Zim?
“Luckily,” he said, “we persevered.”
You never forget the first time on headset, and Zimmer still remembers his as he nears 400 games called on defense. On the other side of the ball, Sunday will be Klint Kubiak’s first regular season game calling plays. He’s the second debuting playcaller the Vikings have unveiled since late 2018 when Kevin Stefanski replaced John DeFilippo in-season.
The move worked brilliantly as Stefanski went 12-7 and won a playoff game in his short stint as coordinator before becoming one of league’s most valuable young head coaches in Cleveland. Nobody is mentioning Kubiak in head coaching conversations yet, but in a league where every team wants the next young offensive mind, Kubiak fits the criteria as a playcaller that could quickly climb the ladder.
That is, if he proves his mettle as a playcaller.
Calling the gameBeing an offensive coordinator is a multi-faceted job that encompasses teaching, researching and interacting with players. But if you’re great at all those things and not calling plays, well, that probably means you’re a quarterbacks coach.
Klint Kubiak got three dry runs in the preseason but it never felt as authentic as it should. His starting quarterback only played a handful of series and was not outfitted with most of his playmakers, while both Vikings backups, Jake Browning and Kellen Mond, were raw and seemingly overwhelmed.
Week 1 at Cincinnati will be the real thing.
For some perspective on debuting as a playcaller, Purple Insider spoke with Vince Varpness, who started his coaching career as a grad assistant under Glen Mason at the University of Minnesota. He called plays for St. Olaf in 2013 and is currently the head coach at Burnsville High School.
“A lot of the things that you do to prepare to call a game for the first time are things you learned from the staffs that you've been on,” Varpness said, “so I kind of took the approach from the University of Minnesota when I was up there working with those guys. A lot of times as a first-time coordinator you almost over-analyze it. The big mistake is you try to do too much — more than what the players can handle. You sometimes get so schematic that you lose track of the matchups. With this play, who are we matched up against, and who's the best player to get the ball against the matchup situation?”
As Varpness points out, your offense is shaped by who you’ve worked with. In Kubiak’s case, there are plenty of college influences from his years at Texas A&M and Kansas, not to mention his first stint with the Vikings when he worked under Bill Musgrave and Norv Turner doing quality control.
The anchoring factor, which may keep Kubiak grounded, is the influence of his father’s scheme, the tried-and-true wide zone that should keep Kubiak from over-analyzing. And Zimmer is the compass that will keep him pointed that way.
“At the end of the day,” said Zimmer, when asked what he’s been telling Kubiak, “I think it's important we are who we are all the time, whether that's offense, defense or special teams. You got to be who you are and make little adjustments to the things you can do well.”
It’s reasonable to expect a hiccup or two in the early season, but Kubiak’s ability to self scout be another test of his acumen; recognizing what’s working and emphasizing those elements.
“I think the easy way to say it is when we turn the film on after practice and we find out what we’re doing well,” said Kubiak said, “that’s what we want to major in.”
And on the other end of the spectrum, being honest about why things weren’t working.
“You analyze, is that a coaching adjustment that needs to be made?” said Varpness. “Maybe we're not teaching something the right way if players are making the same mistakes over and over again. Or is it an individual player?”
Kubiak grew up in a football family, says Varpness, and has toiled for years to get to this point. The process shouldn’t overwhelm him, and there’s no time to have nerves or regrets — not when you have to get up at the crack of dawn the next morning and fix the mistakes.
“Obviously they're excited about it, they're in it and they're locked in and they're not even thinking about being a first-year coordinator anymore,” Varpness said. “They're just trying to win a football game. After the game I think that's when it really kind of sinks in, after you've had that time and did the first game and then you can sit back for a couple minutes after the game and kind of take it all in. Then it's right back at it at 5 o'clock or 6 o'clock or whatever time they get up and they're back to work the next day.”
As for Varpness’s debut? It was a win, 37-18. St. Olaf’s only win of the season.
“I think I gave up 200 yards rushing that day,” the Vikings head coach said. “I think they onside kicked us the first kickoff and then it was pretty ugly after that.”
Eagles 41, Cowboys 14 was the score on Sept. 3, 2000 when Zimmer debuted as the Dallas defensive coordinator. Indeed, David Akers successfully onside-kicked to start the game, and the 200 yards Zimmer’s ‘Boys gave up on the ground was actually 306 total, 201 of them to Duce Staley.
Nowhere to go but up, right Zim?
“Luckily,” he said, “we persevered.”
You never forget the first time on headset, and Zimmer still remembers his as he nears 400 games called on defense. On the other side of the ball, Sunday will be Klint Kubiak’s first regular season game calling plays. He’s the second debuting playcaller the Vikings have unveiled since late 2018 when Kevin Stefanski replaced John DeFilippo in-season.
The move worked brilliantly as Stefanski went 12-7 and won a playoff game in his short stint as coordinator before becoming one of league’s most valuable young head coaches in Cleveland. Nobody is mentioning Kubiak in head coaching conversations yet, but in a league where every team wants the next young offensive mind, Kubiak fits the criteria as a playcaller that could quickly climb the ladder.
That is, if he proves his mettle as a playcaller.
Calling the gameBeing an offensive coordinator is a multi-faceted job that encompasses teaching, researching and interacting with players. But if you’re great at all those things and not calling plays, well, that probably means you’re a quarterbacks coach.
Klint Kubiak got three dry runs in the preseason but it never felt as authentic as it should. His starting quarterback only played a handful of series and was not outfitted with most of his playmakers, while both Vikings backups, Jake Browning and Kellen Mond, were raw and seemingly overwhelmed.
Week 1 at Cincinnati will be the real thing.
For some perspective on debuting as a playcaller, Purple Insider spoke with Vince Varpness, who started his coaching career as a grad assistant under Glen Mason at the University of Minnesota. He called plays for St. Olaf in 2013 and is currently the head coach at Burnsville High School.
“A lot of the things that you do to prepare to call a game for the first time are things you learned from the staffs that you've been on,” Varpness said, “so I kind of took the approach from the University of Minnesota when I was up there working with those guys. A lot of times as a first-time coordinator you almost over-analyze it. The big mistake is you try to do too much — more than what the players can handle. You sometimes get so schematic that you lose track of the matchups. With this play, who are we matched up against, and who's the best player to get the ball against the matchup situation?”
As Varpness points out, your offense is shaped by who you’ve worked with. In Kubiak’s case, there are plenty of college influences from his years at Texas A&M and Kansas, not to mention his first stint with the Vikings when he worked under Bill Musgrave and Norv Turner doing quality control.
The anchoring factor, which may keep Kubiak grounded, is the influence of his father’s scheme, the tried-and-true wide zone that should keep Kubiak from over-analyzing. And Zimmer is the compass that will keep him pointed that way.
“At the end of the day,” said Zimmer, when asked what he’s been telling Kubiak, “I think it's important we are who we are all the time, whether that's offense, defense or special teams. You got to be who you are and make little adjustments to the things you can do well.”
It’s reasonable to expect a hiccup or two in the early season, but Kubiak’s ability to self scout be another test of his acumen; recognizing what’s working and emphasizing those elements.
“I think the easy way to say it is when we turn the film on after practice and we find out what we’re doing well,” said Kubiak said, “that’s what we want to major in.”
And on the other end of the spectrum, being honest about why things weren’t working.
“You analyze, is that a coaching adjustment that needs to be made?” said Varpness. “Maybe we're not teaching something the right way if players are making the same mistakes over and over again. Or is it an individual player?”
Kubiak grew up in a football family, says Varpness, and has toiled for years to get to this point. The process shouldn’t overwhelm him, and there’s no time to have nerves or regrets — not when you have to get up at the crack of dawn the next morning and fix the mistakes.
“Obviously they're excited about it, they're in it and they're locked in and they're not even thinking about being a first-year coordinator anymore,” Varpness said. “They're just trying to win a football game. After the game I think that's when it really kind of sinks in, after you've had that time and did the first game and then you can sit back for a couple minutes after the game and kind of take it all in. Then it's right back at it at 5 o'clock or 6 o'clock or whatever time they get up and they're back to work the next day.”
As for Varpness’s debut? It was a win, 37-18. St. Olaf’s only win of the season.