02-04-2026, 04:48 PM
As long as the NFL has had a salary cap, Brzezinski has helped a team manage it. He started with the Dolphins in 1993, the year before the cap was introduced. He spent six seasons in Miami, finishing his law degree at Nova Southeastern in 1995. He worked with business and legal affairs, salary cap administration, contract negotiations and team operations during his time with the Dolphins before the Vikings hired him in 1999.
Brzezinski was part of the power structure dubbed the “Triangle of Authority” during the Wilfs’ early years of ownership. He had equal say in roster decisions with Rick Spielman (then the team’s vice president of player personnel) and the Vikings’ head coach (first Brad Childress, then Leslie Frazier), with all three reporting directly to ownership. The Vikings won back-to-back NFC North titles in 2008 and 2009, which still represents the only time in the Wilfs’ tenure that the team has made the playoffs in consecutive seasons. But the structure also created confusion about who had the final say over the roster. After the Vikings’ attempts to retain an aging roster resulted in a 6-10 season in 2010 and a 3-13 record in 2011, the team scrapped the three-person arrangement and gave Spielman full control of the roster as general manager in 2012.
When the Wilfs fired Frazier after the 2013 season, Spielman led the coaching search that resulted in the team hiring Mike Zimmer, and the Vikings fully assumed a more traditional power structure. Brzezinski worked closely with Spielman, continuing to sit in on personnel meetings even as his primary role returned to salary cap management. His relationships with agents and his adroit contract design helped the Vikings seal deals that made Randy Moss, Matt Birk, Adrian Peterson, Harrison Smith, Kirk Cousins, T.J. Hockenson and Justin Jefferson the highest-paid players at their positions at various points during Brzezinski’s tenure. And when the Vikings sought to retain veterans across the roster after their run to the 2017 NFC title game while giving Cousins the first fully guaranteed contract in the NFL’s free agency era, they counted on Brzezinski to make it all work.
“Rob is such a seasoned executive, and we’re so fortunate to have him as an integral part of our negotiations, our structuring of contracts, and where [the] salary cap fits,” Wilf said during an interview in December 2024. “The fans want championships, and we want championships. And so our motto is: Whatever it takes in terms of providing resources. We do have a salary cap environment we have to live with, [so we see] if there’s ways we can work within that system to give us the maximal chance of success.”
Clearing salary cap space, possibly by cutting or restructuring the contracts of several veteran players, was already scheduled to be on Brzezinski’s offseason to-do list. The Vikings need to cut roughly $40 million of costs by March 11. After Adofo-Mensah’s firing, Brzezinski will be asked to do that work while overseeing a Vikings front office in need of continuity and cohesiveness during an offseason full of critical decisions.
The stability Brzezinski brings to the job, as much as anything, seems to be why the Wilfs turned to him to run the show while they hire their next GM. It’s possible that hire will be Brzezinski, should he choose to pursue the Vikings’ top front-office job toward the end of his NFL career. Wilf said the team will conduct an “open process” during its GM search, adding he wouldn’t rule out Brzezinski as a candidate for the permanent job.
Brzezinski will get something of a trial run this spring, as the Vikings ask him to steady their front office before a pivotal series of decisions that include, but are not limited to: How aggressively they will pursue a veteran alternative to quarterback J.J. McCarthy; how they will spend a projected nine draft picks, including four in the top 100; the composition of their secondary with safety Harrison Smith’s possible retirement looming; and the makeup of their offensive line, with right tackle Brian O’Neill entering a contract year and center Ryan Kelly’s future in doubt.
Coach Kevin O’Connell and defensive coordinator Brian Flores will have prominent voices in the Vikings’ offseason decisions, while the team’s scouting department searches for young talent that can ameliorate some of the Vikings’ cap issues. Brzezinski will act as a point guard in the process, valued as much for his relationships across departments as for his years of institutional knowledge.
“He going to build a collaborative team, work with the team we have, and that’s where the expertise comes in here,” Wilf said. “He knows what we’re strong at. He’s going to know, with his experience, who he can lean on, and there are a lot of people to lean on in this building. I’m very confident in Rob, with Coach O’Connell and our entire football staff that we’ll be able to navigate this.”
STRIB
Brzezinski was part of the power structure dubbed the “Triangle of Authority” during the Wilfs’ early years of ownership. He had equal say in roster decisions with Rick Spielman (then the team’s vice president of player personnel) and the Vikings’ head coach (first Brad Childress, then Leslie Frazier), with all three reporting directly to ownership. The Vikings won back-to-back NFC North titles in 2008 and 2009, which still represents the only time in the Wilfs’ tenure that the team has made the playoffs in consecutive seasons. But the structure also created confusion about who had the final say over the roster. After the Vikings’ attempts to retain an aging roster resulted in a 6-10 season in 2010 and a 3-13 record in 2011, the team scrapped the three-person arrangement and gave Spielman full control of the roster as general manager in 2012.
When the Wilfs fired Frazier after the 2013 season, Spielman led the coaching search that resulted in the team hiring Mike Zimmer, and the Vikings fully assumed a more traditional power structure. Brzezinski worked closely with Spielman, continuing to sit in on personnel meetings even as his primary role returned to salary cap management. His relationships with agents and his adroit contract design helped the Vikings seal deals that made Randy Moss, Matt Birk, Adrian Peterson, Harrison Smith, Kirk Cousins, T.J. Hockenson and Justin Jefferson the highest-paid players at their positions at various points during Brzezinski’s tenure. And when the Vikings sought to retain veterans across the roster after their run to the 2017 NFC title game while giving Cousins the first fully guaranteed contract in the NFL’s free agency era, they counted on Brzezinski to make it all work.
“Rob is such a seasoned executive, and we’re so fortunate to have him as an integral part of our negotiations, our structuring of contracts, and where [the] salary cap fits,” Wilf said during an interview in December 2024. “The fans want championships, and we want championships. And so our motto is: Whatever it takes in terms of providing resources. We do have a salary cap environment we have to live with, [so we see] if there’s ways we can work within that system to give us the maximal chance of success.”
Clearing salary cap space, possibly by cutting or restructuring the contracts of several veteran players, was already scheduled to be on Brzezinski’s offseason to-do list. The Vikings need to cut roughly $40 million of costs by March 11. After Adofo-Mensah’s firing, Brzezinski will be asked to do that work while overseeing a Vikings front office in need of continuity and cohesiveness during an offseason full of critical decisions.
The stability Brzezinski brings to the job, as much as anything, seems to be why the Wilfs turned to him to run the show while they hire their next GM. It’s possible that hire will be Brzezinski, should he choose to pursue the Vikings’ top front-office job toward the end of his NFL career. Wilf said the team will conduct an “open process” during its GM search, adding he wouldn’t rule out Brzezinski as a candidate for the permanent job.
Brzezinski will get something of a trial run this spring, as the Vikings ask him to steady their front office before a pivotal series of decisions that include, but are not limited to: How aggressively they will pursue a veteran alternative to quarterback J.J. McCarthy; how they will spend a projected nine draft picks, including four in the top 100; the composition of their secondary with safety Harrison Smith’s possible retirement looming; and the makeup of their offensive line, with right tackle Brian O’Neill entering a contract year and center Ryan Kelly’s future in doubt.
Coach Kevin O’Connell and defensive coordinator Brian Flores will have prominent voices in the Vikings’ offseason decisions, while the team’s scouting department searches for young talent that can ameliorate some of the Vikings’ cap issues. Brzezinski will act as a point guard in the process, valued as much for his relationships across departments as for his years of institutional knowledge.
“He going to build a collaborative team, work with the team we have, and that’s where the expertise comes in here,” Wilf said. “He knows what we’re strong at. He’s going to know, with his experience, who he can lean on, and there are a lot of people to lean on in this building. I’m very confident in Rob, with Coach O’Connell and our entire football staff that we’ll be able to navigate this.”
STRIB
Hurry-up Vikings, we ain't getting any younger!


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