The Minnesota Vikings signed head coach Brad Childress to a contract extension today, rewarding the man they consider responsible for bringing Brett Favre to the Twin Cities and mentoring the team to an 8-1 start in 2009. The move came at an odd time – the same day the Metropolitan Sports Facility Commission produced its puzzling resolution/offer for a lease extension to keep the Vikings in the Metrodome, which was roundly and enthusiastically rejected by team management.
The offer was essentially that the Vikings, who have made it abundantly clear that no lease extension will be signed unless a new stadium deal had been inked, would be able to pocket all playoff-game receipts if they signed a 3-year renewed lease agreement. If they balked, the resolution stated, the City retained the right to start charging rent at the Dome again to the tune of $4M per year. The offer was met with disgust by the Purple Front Office, who quickly announced the signing of Brad Childress to a contract that outlived the current Metrodome lease.

Regardless of whether Childress’ contract extension was somehow politically timed to show control and resolve, there is a significant portion of the fanbase that views this development with raised eyebrows.
While the product on the field has no doubt been elite and talent-laden in 2009, that wasn’t the case during the first three seasons of Childress’ tenure at Winter Park. Coming into the current season, Brad Childress was exactly .500 at 24-24, and had been given three full seasons to nurture QB talent, which was supposedly his forte. Childress had done nothing of the sort until after this season’s training camp ended, when Brett Favre came jogging predictably out of retirement.
The few true Childress advocates out there may argue that Childress is the coach that brought Favre here, and they would be right, technically. But there are a handful of pedestrian West-Coast offense devotee coaches out there that Favre would play for. It was the prospect of playing with a highly-ranked defense and a Hall of Fame-caliber tailback that made it an option Favre couldn’t pass up. Without Adrian Peterson, Favre is still playing catch with high-school kids.
With Favre no guarantee for next season, the signing is indeed cause for skepticism. What will Childress do after Favre actually does hang ‘em up? Tarvaris Jackson doesn’t appear to have much involvement on game day, and Sage Rosenfels can’t be the act to follow the Silver Fox.
By contrast, is there a chance that Favre could continue to play at this same level for 2 or 3 more years? And at the same time win Championships? I don’t see why not. He has a strong foundation all around him. The Vikes are an impressive mix of youth and experience.
But why extend Chilly now? He has yet to win a playoff game with the Vikings. Brett Favre last went to a Super Bowl in 1997, that was 12 seasons ago. Things look great right now, but wouldn’t you at least make Childress win a playoff game before you give him an extension worthy of a title-winning coach? Zygi’s been caught up in the moment.

Does MN ownership really think that his players are kicking ass for this guy?
In all fairness, Vikings owner Zygi Wilf knows he can sh*tcan Childress whenever he wants to, and even if there is a hefty buyout, Wilf will pay it if it is what’s best for the team. Which is why the timing seems all the more fishy. It was as if he stated that his schedule to keep a winner on the field didn’t revolve around whether or not the team was actually in Minnesota.
Further complicating matters is the fact that MN Governor Tim Pawlenty isn’t running for another term, and the 20-some candidates (seriously) all pretty much refuse to touch this issue. No politician running for a Governor’s office that will inherit massive budget deficit issues can advocate spending upwards of several hundred million dollars on a football stadium. Fortunately for the Wilfs’ leverage interests, there are people in Los Angeles rich enough to build a football stadium by themselves. Which they happen to be doing. And they’ve made sure that artists’ renderings more than subliminally feature Purple and Gold.

You’re Zygi Wilf. You can stay in the Metrodome…or you can have your team play here.
The threats of moving the team to Los Angeles should not be ignored by the state of Minnesota. People thought the Cleveland Browns would never move either, and ironically Baltimore Colts fans thought the same thing. The problem seems to be that ownership and the City of Minneapolis simply aren’t on the same page. Wilf is doing everything he can to get a new stadium, and the city is doing everything they can to keep them in the Metrodome, which should be considered a crime by itself. You understand if you’ve ever been to The Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome Mall of America Field, and then visited to any other NFL stadium. MOAF is, quite simply, a really, really sh*tty place to watch anything.
Ultimately Wilf has the leverage. It’s his team, and he has good reason to want out of The Worst Stadium in the National Football League. The city’s offer gives no indication that Minneapolis is too interested in keeping the team, and Wilf’s reaction gives no indication he’s interested in staying. For Childress, perhaps he’s banking on it. That moustache would be fantastic in a porn flick.
contact – nick.thomas@flyingpigskin.com










