12-09-2021, 04:57 PM
Mike Zimmer's five-week fight for his Vikings head coaching life begins Thursday vs. SteelersAnother difficult ownership decision looms over coach Mike Zimmer and possibly general manager Rick Spielman with the Vikings 5-7 and still alive in the playoff race.
Brad Childress chuckled when asked when he first sensed his time as Vikings head coach was coming to an end.
"When Mark and Zygi were standing in my doorway at Winter Park at 7:45 in the morning on a Monday," Childress said.
It was Nov. 23, 2010. The Vikings were 3-7 after losing to the Packers 31-3 at home the day before. The Wilf brothers were not there to chit-chat. The team owners were there to fire the first head coach they hired 10 months after he took them to the NFC Championship game.
What's that like?
"It's hard," Childress said. "But there were emotions on both sides. Mark and Zygi, it was hard for them. As hard, I think, as it was for me to pick up and walk out."
Eleven years later, every sense of how the NFL works strongly suggests another difficult ownership decision looming over coach Mike Zimmer and possibly general manager Rick Spielman as the team enters the season's final five weeks still alive in the soft NFC playoff race.
The Vikings are 5-7. They're coming off a humiliating loss to the winless Lions. And they're staring at the possibility of a hostile prime-time home crowd as the Steelers (6-5-1) visit U.S. Bank Stadium for "Thursday Night Football."
Zimmer has stiff-armed the NFL's impatient hiring cycle into his eighth season in Minnesota. Only six coaches have been with their teams longer. All six — Bill Belichick, Sean Payton, Mike Tomlin, John Harbaugh, Pete Carroll and Andy Reid — have won at least one Super Bowl while Zimmer has two playoff victories, a 12-16 record since his last postseason game, and needs a late-season surge to avoid missing the playoffs in consecutive seasons for the first time with the Vikings.
"I feel pressure every year," Zimmer told the Star Tribune in August. "So I don't look at it like I'm coaching for my job. I've always felt like I'm going to put my resume out there on the field just like the players. And if people don't think I'm good enough to do it, so be it. Somebody does … so I don't really worry about all that stuff."
https://www.startribune.com/vikings-stee...600125324/
Brad Childress chuckled when asked when he first sensed his time as Vikings head coach was coming to an end.
"When Mark and Zygi were standing in my doorway at Winter Park at 7:45 in the morning on a Monday," Childress said.
It was Nov. 23, 2010. The Vikings were 3-7 after losing to the Packers 31-3 at home the day before. The Wilf brothers were not there to chit-chat. The team owners were there to fire the first head coach they hired 10 months after he took them to the NFC Championship game.
What's that like?
"It's hard," Childress said. "But there were emotions on both sides. Mark and Zygi, it was hard for them. As hard, I think, as it was for me to pick up and walk out."
Eleven years later, every sense of how the NFL works strongly suggests another difficult ownership decision looming over coach Mike Zimmer and possibly general manager Rick Spielman as the team enters the season's final five weeks still alive in the soft NFC playoff race.
The Vikings are 5-7. They're coming off a humiliating loss to the winless Lions. And they're staring at the possibility of a hostile prime-time home crowd as the Steelers (6-5-1) visit U.S. Bank Stadium for "Thursday Night Football."
Zimmer has stiff-armed the NFL's impatient hiring cycle into his eighth season in Minnesota. Only six coaches have been with their teams longer. All six — Bill Belichick, Sean Payton, Mike Tomlin, John Harbaugh, Pete Carroll and Andy Reid — have won at least one Super Bowl while Zimmer has two playoff victories, a 12-16 record since his last postseason game, and needs a late-season surge to avoid missing the playoffs in consecutive seasons for the first time with the Vikings.
"I feel pressure every year," Zimmer told the Star Tribune in August. "So I don't look at it like I'm coaching for my job. I've always felt like I'm going to put my resume out there on the field just like the players. And if people don't think I'm good enough to do it, so be it. Somebody does … so I don't really worry about all that stuff."
https://www.startribune.com/vikings-stee...600125324/