Harrison Phillips claims he's been destined to play nose tackle since Jan. 25, 1996, the day he tied a record for the longest baby ever born at Clarkson Hospital in Omaha.
But his mother, Tammie, a self-described "broad-shouldered German farm girl," says young Harry's NFL destiny actually started in the womb weeks before his birth when his rapidly increasing size raised some medical eyebrows.
"I went to my doctor, and she said, 'Oh my, we have to get him out of there now,'" said Tammie Phillips of the now 6-3, 307-pound behemoth whose Vikings debut comes Sunday against the Packers at U.S. Bank Stadium.
"Thank goodness for C-section," Tammie continued. "The doctor said Harry would have been about 13 pounds if we hadn't gotten him out of there two weeks early."
Phillips was 10.1 pounds and a record-tying 23¾ inches long at birth.
"He was 11 pounds when we left the hospital," Tammie said. "Most babies lose a little weight initially. Harry gained weight. I couldn't get him off my boob the entire time we were in the hospital."
Big, fast and relentless. That's exactly what the Vikings were looking for when they signed the 26-year-old Phillips away from Buffalo's top-ranked defense in March to anchor the front of defensive coordinator Ed Donatell's new 3-4 scheme.
"Harrison was really stout against the run for us and from time to time gave us a nice push inside on third down," said Bills defensive coordinator and former Vikings coach Leslie Frazier, whose defense ranked No. 1 in fewest yards and points allowed. "He's great with his hands, has a knack for knowing where plays are going, able to get rid of his blocker, maintain his gap and make plays all over the field."