It was May 1974 when Jim Finks, who had hired Bud Grant and been a part of the Vikings winning five division titles and appearing in two Super Bowls over a 10-year span, resigned as the team's general manager.
Finks quit because, No. 1, the team refused to award him the stock that fired coach Norm Van Brocklin had held, and No. 2, he was upset that then-NFL Commissioner Pete Rozelle had ordered all team owners to have offices at their franchises, meaning that Finks' boss, Max Winter, would be a daily presence.
Winter was a frustrated man at the time; he had 17 unsigned players and little experience with player contracts. He went to a league meeting in Memphis looking for advice from fellow owners for some recommendations on a person they thought would make a good GM.
There was a young man Winter had befriended named Mike Lynn, who while being occupied managing some movie theaters in Memphis was always hanging around NFL meetings trying to get a franchise for the city.
Unable to find anybody to replace Finks, Winter hired Lynn as an assistant to the president with the promise of making him general manager if he proved he could do the job.
Well, the rest is history. Lynn, who died Saturday at age 76, saw the Vikings win the NFC Central and appear in the Super Bowl in his one season as an assistant. Named GM in 1975, the Vikings went on to win division titles each of the next three seasons, appearing in the Super Bowl again after the 1976 season, the last time the team has reached the NFL's biggest game.
While Lynn is being given credit for all the Vikings' top draft choices during his stay, the truth of the matter is that Grant had the final say on personnel under Lynn as per a contract he signed with Finks.
However, Jerry Burns -- who became coach in 1986, following Grant's one-year return after the Les Steckel 3-13 campaign in 1984 -- didn't have that control, and despite the fact that he utterly opposed the famous Herschel Walker trade with the Dallas Cowboys, Lynn made it.