09-05-2018, 02:08 AM
Vikings coach Mike Zimmer is set up to win big, which means he is set up to be blamed if he doesn't. Vikings coaches have been here before.The last meaningful game played in the NFL was a spectacle, a boondoggle, an advertisement encouraging tourists to avoid Minnesota in February and, to Mike Zimmer, an affront. At least, he should have taken it that way.
In Super Bowl BRRR, played blessedly inside U.S. Bank Stadium, a former high school coach won the Lombardi Trophy with a journeyman backup quarterback and a roster more notable for depth than exceptional talent.
Doug Pederson beat Bill Belichick, who lugged another team to another Super Bowl with an average roster propped up by his brain and Tom Brady’s arm.
These acts of coaching genius left Zimmer looking more like an applicant to, rather than a member of, the NFL’s VIP coaching lounge. He can earn entry by proving himself in 2018.
Zimmer already has proved his worth as a builder and a teacher. He has improved the Vikings’ quality of play steadily over his four seasons, with only devastating offensive line injuries in 2016 interrupting an otherwise steady climb.
He can teach a raw athlete to play the game. He can scheme, and identify talent. He has instilled toughness like a true Bill Parcells disciple, and has won despite injuries that have subtracted three starting quarterbacks in four seasons if you count Matt Cassel, and why not be charitable?
But January and February did his reputation no favors. Not if he is going to become, to a deliriously desperate fan base, The One.
http://www.startribune.com/with-the-viki...492454111/
In Super Bowl BRRR, played blessedly inside U.S. Bank Stadium, a former high school coach won the Lombardi Trophy with a journeyman backup quarterback and a roster more notable for depth than exceptional talent.
Doug Pederson beat Bill Belichick, who lugged another team to another Super Bowl with an average roster propped up by his brain and Tom Brady’s arm.
These acts of coaching genius left Zimmer looking more like an applicant to, rather than a member of, the NFL’s VIP coaching lounge. He can earn entry by proving himself in 2018.
Zimmer already has proved his worth as a builder and a teacher. He has improved the Vikings’ quality of play steadily over his four seasons, with only devastating offensive line injuries in 2016 interrupting an otherwise steady climb.
He can teach a raw athlete to play the game. He can scheme, and identify talent. He has instilled toughness like a true Bill Parcells disciple, and has won despite injuries that have subtracted three starting quarterbacks in four seasons if you count Matt Cassel, and why not be charitable?
But January and February did his reputation no favors. Not if he is going to become, to a deliriously desperate fan base, The One.
http://www.startribune.com/with-the-viki...492454111/