Players' Council Helps Vikings Win
A players’ council that meets frequently
with head coach Brad Childress has helped improve communications
and morale, contributing to the team’s 5-0 start, according to offensive
tackle Bryant McKinnie and kicker Ryan
Longwell. Both are council members who spoke to Sports Headliners
about the group that meets with Childress and then reports back to the
team.
The council has more than a dozen members,
has grown larger since last year and brings various discussion items to
Childress including practice times. In an interview with McKinnie last
week, he was initially asked if Childress’ 14-4 record in the last 18
regular season games was a vindication of the much criticized head coach
who has been the Vikings’ boss since 2006.
“A combination of that and then everybody
finally I think is on the same page, and is going in the right direction
to win a lot of football games and try to get to the Super bowl,”
McKinnie said.
Longwell answered the vindication question
this way: “I think it is a little bit of a vindication of all of us.
We’re all part of it. There was a lot that had to be done when coach
Childress came in here beyond the X’s and O’s and the 53 guys on the
field.”
Off the field player behavior problems
somewhat characterized the Vikings when Childress arrived in 2006.
Initially he didn’t have the council and Longwell was asked what the
impact of it has been. “I think it’s been really good because when
coach first came in here he kind of drew a hard line, which you have to
do to change the culture and get it the direction that he wanted,”
Longwell said.
McKinnie and Longwell were both with the
Vikings in 2006. McKinnie is in his eighth NFL season, Longwell his 13th.
McKinnie said the players appreciate the
communication opportunity provided by the council. Longwell said the
“give and take” is good, acknowledging there are times Childress says
“no” to suggestions.
Longwell also said this is the “best group
we’ve had” while describing his teammates and the locker room atmosphere
of the 2009 team. He said the players aren’t satisfied with just
winning, they want to keep improving, and they’re also able to enjoy one
another’s company.
Longwell said the attitude and
relationship is what winners are about. “I think you can have the
greatest scheme, you can have the best talented players, and you can
have the greatest coaches, but if there is a disconnect in the locker
room, you’re not going to win football games,” Longwell said. "So the
locker room and everybody in the locker room being on the same page is
vitally important.
"You can look at teams where roster against
other rosters are not as talented, but their chemistry is better, and
they win more football games because of it. And they win championships
because of it. I think that’s what the players’ council has given coach
(Childress); a direct pipeline to the heartbeat of the locker room and
what guys are thinking, feeling, doing. Guys are a little bit more
banged up than he thought, or fresher than he thought. It’s a direct
pipeline for that and that’s a good situation to have.”