On Monday morning, as Vikings players gathered for a team meeting a day after beating the Chicago Bears in the final game of the season, General Manager Rick Spielman was there to give them news he did not expect to deliver. Coach Mike Zimmer was not there at all.
Vikings owners Zygi and Mark Wilf had decided late Sunday night to fire both men from jobs they'd held longer than most of their NFL counterparts. Zimmer's firing seemed a foregone conclusion after back-to-back losses to the Rams and Packers ensured the Vikings would miss the playoffs for the second straight year. Spielman showed up at work on Monday morning expecting the coach's dismissal, but not his own.
The general manager, who'd run the Vikings' football department for 16 years, told a roomful of players he'd signed and drafted what was going to happen, in a meeting that brought some in the room to tears and left others unsure how to react. Spielman spent the day at the Vikings' facility saying goodbyes and thank-yous.
Zimmer had shared his appreciation for the team's work ethic in a Saturday night meeting before the Bears game. He released a statement through the team Monday afternoon, saying, "I'll miss coaching the players, some who have been with me for all eight years. I want to thank the players who welcomed me in 2014 and believed in me that I could lead them to be great."
But those words would have to serve as the final goodbye to his team.
The Vikings began their searches for a new general manager and head coach last week, following the biggest set of leadership changes they've made in 16 years. In a Monday news conference, co-owner Mark Wilf emphasized a focus on "strong leaders, communicators, collaborators."
For eight years, Zimmer's unremitting approach yielded more wins than any coach in Vikings history not named Bud Grant or Dennis Green, but ultimately wore thin without consistent postseason success to provide a buffer.
This article is based on conversations with more than 20 people with the team or close to the organization, who were granted anonymity to speak freely about their experiences during Zimmer and Spielman's eight years together. Some saw a coach whose constant prodding and demand for precision brought out the best in players, particularly on defense (the Vikings ranked in the top 10 in points allowed each year from 2015-19). But as the team finished out of the playoffs the past two seasons, losing key late-season games each time, many described a working environment that was too impersonal, too unresponsive to change and left them too much on edge.