While building his 28-person coaching staff — the largest in team history — this offseason, new Vikings head coach Kevin O'Connell knew there was one specific role that very few could fill: A former head coach who could help guide the 37-year-old through the demands of a job that's seemingly become almost as much about the boardroom as the film room.
Who better to be O'Connell's sounding board, he figured, than the former head coach that gave him his first NFL job?
Mike Pettine, the former Browns head coach who hired O'Connell in 2015 and spent eight years as a NFL defensive coordinator for three teams (most recently the Packers), joined the Vikings' staff in February as something of an aide-de-camp for O'Connell. The new Vikings head coach could learn from the experiences of the 55-year-old Pettine, delegate some tasks and check his own instincts against those of the plain-speaking Doylestown, Pa., native whose first NFL job was on a defense with Ray Lewis and Ed Reed.
The transition to being the head coach of a NFL team — and, effectively, the face of an organization worth billions of dollars — can be a shock to even the most prepared former assistant coach. Making public appearances, connecting with other departments in the building, conducting near-daily news conferences, receiving late-night phone calls about a player in legal trouble, holding weekly conference calls with ownership, managing a coaching staff, working with the front office, understanding the salary cap and navigating the complexities of a 53-man roster are all staples of a NFL head coach's job. No other coach, in any position at any level of football, faces the same set of demands.
That's where Pettine comes in.
His official title is Assistant Head Coach; he makes "Assistant to the Regional Manager" jokes with a level of self-deprecative humor that Dwight Schrute never possessed. He is there when O'Connell needs another perspective on schemes or roster-building, or perhaps in handling requests from the marketing department or questions from reporters. He is there to remind O'Connell, sometimes forcefully, that he needs time to be a coach.
The importance of delegation
Pettine and O'Connell had been talking about the role since O'Connell's name started to surface as a potential head coach. The Vikings' decision to hire O'Connell as their 10th head coach was "a proud papa moment for me," Pettine said.