Minicamps were a concept a couple of decades in the future. Any football player that mentioned "OTA," teammates would have figured his family was buying an appliance from Sears "on time."
Getting ready for an NFL season in 1961 was based 100% on what took place in training camp. The 60th Vikings team was forced into an abbreviated camp by the coronavirus this year, but the expansion Vikings started practices in Bemidji on July 8 and did not pack up everything and bus the 240 miles back to the Twin Cities until Sept. 1.
The first five camps for the Vikings were held in Bemidji from 1961 to '65, and the time frame was similar each year, with brief departures for exhibitions.
"We needed a long training camp — maybe not seven weeks, but long — because we had to get in shape," said Jerry Reichow, a Vikings receiver from 1961 to '64, and a super scout in various forms for the next 55 years. "We didn't work out that much in offseason, because we were actually working. With the money we made in football, most of us had other jobs."
A large percentage of tales from the five late summers in Bemidji revolve around coach Norm Van Brocklin — occasionally brilliant, more often tyrannical, abrasive when sober, worse when full of whiskey at Jack's, located a few miles away in Wilton and the Dutchman's main hangout.
Van Brocklin quarterbacked Philadelphia to an NFL title and was league MVP in 1960, then quit before his 35th birthday to become the Vikings coach and had autocratic personnel powers.
Reichow was a receiver for Van Brocklin with the 1960 Eagles. He wasn't acquired by the Vikings until the week before the regular season opener and thus missed the first camp in Bemidji.
"I was there for the next one in 1962," Reichow said. "It was brutal … the worst I ever was involved with, or that I've watched. Norm always believed in hitting for two hours in two practices daily, but that year was different.