In a sweeping set of moves unlike any they've made since they bought the team in 2005, Vikings owners Mark and Zygi Wilf fired coach Mike Zimmer and General Manager Rick Spielman on Monday, a day after the conclusion of consecutive losing seasons that had exhausted the Wilfs' patience with both men.
Spielman, who had been with the team since 2006, hired Zimmer to replace Leslie Frazier in 2014. Both had two years remaining on the contract extensions they signed in 2020, but after the team finished 8-9 and missed the playoffs for the second year in a row, the Wilfs opted for a total reset.
"We're very proud of the fact that we, as an ownership, try to think long-term," Mark Wilf said at a Monday news conference. "We know we want to be consistent, but at the same time we evaluated where we've been. … We're clearly disappointed in the football results this year, and over the past few weeks, this is something we've been thinking and deliberating quite a bit."
Mark Wilf said the Vikings had already begun both searches, but would hire a GM first so the person could help pick the head coach.
The tenures of Spielman and Zimmer had strings of success. Zimmer finished his eight seasons with a 72-56-1 mark, trailing only Bud Grant and Dennis Green in games coached (129) and winning percentage (.562) among the Vikings' nine head coaches. The Vikings were 131-123-2, with six playoff trips, in Spielman's 16 years.
But their struggles often centered on the same position: Quarterback.
A disastrous 2010 season and three-win year in 2011 led the Wilfs to abandon the "triangle of authority" power structure that gave Spielman, the head coach and vice president of football operations Rob Brzezinski equal say over the roster. Ownership made Spielman the GM in 2012; he promised to build a contending roster with homegrown players, and stockpiled top-end talent, taking seven first-round picks from 2012-14. Six — Matt Kalil, Harrison Smith, Xavier Rhodes, Cordarrelle Patterson, Anthony Barr and Teddy Bridgewater — became Pro Bowlers.
But Spielman's inability to solve the Vikings' longstanding need at quarterback might have affected his tenure more than anything else.