(Editor's note: We asked some of our sports department colleagues to share this week what their lives have been like without the usual routines of news, practice and games to guide them. This is a six-part series.)
On March 13 — the same day Gov. Tim Walz declared a "peacetime emergency" that started to dramatically reshape life in Minnesota — the Vikings released Xavier Rhodes and Linval Joseph. Three days later, they signed Kirk Cousins to a new three-year deal. That night they traded Stefon Diggs after the wide receiver tweeted "it's time for a new beginning" in the wake of Cousins' contract extension.
Since then, as other sports lurched to a halt, the Vikings haven't stopped making news.
They used the franchise tag for the first time in nine years on safety Anthony Harris. They signed former Ravens defensive tackle Michael Pierce to a three-year, $27 million contract. They brought back a handful of their own free agents while letting Trae Waynes and Mackensie Alexander sign elsewhere. They assembled the largest seven-round draft class in NFL history, released a schedule that has them playing on Christmas Day for the first time in 15 years and started a virtual offseason program with their facilities closed.
How has my job changed during quarantine? Mostly, it hasn't.
At least this one hasn't.
I also spend my spring coaching the distance runners on the Apple Valley boys' track and field team. And there's perhaps no change I feel more acutely from the coronavirus outbreak than the loss of time with the guys I coach there.
Last year our 4x800-meter relay team missed going to the state meet by two-hundredths of a second, after a two-hour review of a photo finish — I know a thing or two about gut-punch losses, in other words. We were set to come back with two of the top eight returning 800 runners in Class 2A (one a senior, the other only a sophomore).