This will not be an easy opinion piece to offer. It will go against decades of tradition, based on my belief that balance is required in our public sports commentary.
The Vikings were the golden boys when I started writing sports columns in Twin Cities dailies those many years ago. And, thus, the favored option was not to join in the adulation.
For instance, there was once this exchange with Remarkable Mike Lynn, my all-time favorite Vikings executive.
More quizzically than angrily, Lynn asked: “Ric-eey, what’s your theory when writing about our Vikings?”
Response: “It is quite simple, sir. When you lose, I rip you. When you win, I rip the other team.”
This was more a joke than a fact, by a ratio of 60-to-40.
As the local media has grown larger, the homerism here has gone from substantial to outrageous.
Zygi Wilf and the entire Wilf family are honored as being generous owners, even as seat licenses, new sponsorships and public funds took care of a gigantic share of the $1.15 billion spent for the U.S. Bank Stadium to serve as a Vikings profit center. Now, there’s going to be a little tab for $280 million in maintenance in the years ahead, with no dollars publicly committed yet from the Wilf empire.