Kirk Cousins' birthday falls on Aug. 19, arriving as a signpost each year in the middle of the NFL preseason to mark the continuation of a career that once seemed fated to end long before the quarterback reached his 30s.
He turned 32 this year, on the day the Vikings practiced in pads for only the third time since their NFC divisional playoff loss to San Francisco in January. Cousins spent the day throwing passes to rookie receiver Justin Jefferson, whose brother Jordan (older by eight years) worked out with Cousins at the 2012 NFL combine after playing quarterback at LSU.
"I said, 'Well, how old were you when Jordan was the quarterback at LSU?' " Cousins recalled. "[Justin] was like, 'Eight or nine years old.' That made me feel a little old. … But it's an honor. I've always said, if there's one place you feel good getting old, it'd be pro football, because the NFL does stand for Not For Long."
The coronavirus pandemic has scrambled the NFL schedule, jarring the routines of a sport steeped in mechanistic precision and leading stable organizations to be regarded as havens.
The Vikings doubled down this offseason on the structure they've built in recent years, with co-owner Mark Wilf citing a "body of work," as much as any postseason success, as the club's reason for extending the contracts of General Manager Rick Spielman and coach Mike Zimmer through 2023. The Vikings also wasted little time in offering Gary Kubiak the chance to return to play-calling duties, opting for continuity after offensive coordinator Kevin Stefanski became the Browns' head coach in January.
Cousins is, as much as any player in the Vikings organization, the on-field personification of their approach, heading into his ninth season as a quarterback who crowbarred his way into the NFL's loftiest tax bracket through preparedness, perseverance and an ability to keep things on track.
He is a former fourth-round pick, playing for a coach who has found a home after being turned down for multiple head coaching jobs and a GM who spent six years with the team before getting full control of the roster. The Vikings' men in power got there the same way Cousins did; no one will call his attributes flashy, but they've delivered him the stability he craves in an organization that values it just as much.
"Last season, I found myself saying, 'I don't want to move. I don't want to leave,' " Cousins said. "You find yourself saying, 'Hey, it's a lot easier to play if it's with the Minnesota Vikings. It's a lot easier to talk about playing into my late 30s if it's assumed I'm going to be here. Part of what makes that thought enjoyable is thinking that it would be in purple and gold."