Decisions about the Vikings coaching staff — including head coach Leslie Frazier’s future — will be made now that the 2013 season is over but there will be a lot of disappointed players if Frazier doesn’t return next year.
Speculation increased today that Frazier will not return as coach. Commanding the most attention this afternoon was a report by Jay Glazer of Fox Sports that Frazier will be dismissed tomorrow.
Frazier said at his post game press conference today he “doesn’t get concerned about reports about my job.” He also said he hasn’t been told about a meeting with ownership tomorrow.
Vikings owner Zygi Wilf watched today’s Vikings-Lions game at Mall of America Field. He declined to talk with media about Frazier’s future.
“I think the guys in this locker room all support coach Frazier,” Vikings tight end Kyle Rudolph told Sports Headliners on Friday.
Frazier was a defensive back on the 1985 Bears Super Bowl champions and Rudolph said the Vikings appreciate the playing experience of their coach. “There’s nothing worse than a coach that’s never played the game; (someone) that kind of expects things from you that are not realistic.
“He knows what it’s like to be in our shoes. He has realistic expectations from us. It’s out of our control what happens in the next couple weeks but I think he definitely has the support of the guys in this locker room.”
The Vikings, who were 10-6 last season and made the playoffs, finished their year with a 14-13 win over the Lions. The 2013 season record was 5-10-1. Asked if the team psyche could be described as shocked, Rudolph answered: “Definitely.”
The Vikings lost four games by four points or less, plus a tie with the Packers. If those games had been wins, the Vikings would have won the NFC North and made the playoffs again.
Rudolph said before the season expectations were for a deep playoff run. “If your expectations weren’t to win the Super Bowl this year, then I don’t know why you would have been here,” he said.
Instead, Frazier has finished up his second losing season in the last three (3-13 in 2011). The disappointment of 2013 hasn’t changed the admiration Rudolph and others have of Frazier, though.
“I don’t think you can find a better person,” Rudolph said. “You may find other people as good as him in that (coaching) profession, but you won’t find anyone that’s a better person than he is.”
Worth Noting
The outside temperature at kickoff for today’s game was about minus four. The Vikings are likely to play in that kind of cold next year at outdoor TCF Bank Stadium. Spokesman Jeff Anderson said the club expects to soon choose a state-of-the-art heating system for the stadium field that will be installed for next season. Without such a system, the playing surface would be too hard and unsafe for December and January games.
Vikings running back Toby Gerhart joking after being asked about the team playing outdoors next season: “A lot of Minnesotans think we’re soft playing at the dome.”
Gerhart, a free agent for 2014, is not sure where he wants to play next season but when asked said he could be interested in joining his ex-college coach Jim Harbaugh with the 49ers. “I had a good relationship with him,” Gerhart said. “It would be fun to reunite.”
Former Viking Robert Smith addressed the Mall of America Field crowd today at the final game ever in the Metrodome, a facility that opened in 1982. He quoted Dr. Seuss: “Don’t cry because it’s over, smile because it happened.”
Joe Webb, another Vikings free agent, has finished his first NFL season as a wide receiver but admitted quarterback is still in his “heart” after playing the position “all my life.” Has he considered Canadian pro football where running quarterbacks are valued? “I’ve never been in Canada a day in my life,” he said. “God’s will. Whatever he has in store for me, that’s what I’ll take.”
Quarterback Josh Freeman was acquired by the Vikings in October but except for one game didn’t play. Webb, who played quarterback for the Vikings from 2010-2012, said it can “take a year” before a quarterback masters a team’s offensive system.
Former Vikings Pro Bowl running back Dave Osborn, who played in three Super Bowls, will be the CORES luncheon speaker on Thursday, January 9 at the Knights of Columbus Hall in Bloomington. A social period from 11:15 a.m. to noon will precede the lunch and talk by Osborn. More information, including reservations, is available from Jim Dotseth, dotsethj@comcast.net. CORES is an acronym for coaches, officials, reporters, educators and sports fans.
Gophers radio analyst and all-time leading rusher Darrell Thompson after being asked how many times Minnesota would beat Syracuse if the two teams played 10 games on a neutral field: “They are (Syracuse) better than they look on film. Gophers probably win six of 10 times.”
Gophers coach Jerry Kill said this morning on WCCO Radio star tight end Maxx Williams will not need knee surgery after being hurt in the Texas Bowl loss to Syracuse Friday night.
Washburn running back Jeff Jones plays in the Under Armour All-America High School Football Game in St. Petersburg on Thursday. Jones hasn’t made all his official visits to colleges that interest him so it’s unlikely he will announce his choice at the prestigious prep all-star game that will be televised on ESPN beginning at 3 p.m. Minneapolis time.
Marv Wolfenson, the original Timberwolves owner who died earlier this month, once told me he thought about naming his NBA expansion club the Polars. Wolfenson attended North High School and played basketball for the Polars.