The Minnesota Vikings
are a professional American football team based out of Minneapolis, Minnesota. The Vikings compete in the North Division of the National Football Conference (NFC) in the National Football League (NFL). Prior to divisional realignment in 2002, they had been a member of the Central Division, also known as the Black & Blue Division. The Vikings have won one NFL championship (Pre-1970 AFL-NFL Merger), but subsequently lost 23-7 to the Kansas City Chiefs in Super Bowl IV. The Vikings were the first team to both play in and lose four Super Bowls. The Vikings have won their division 17 times, third most among teams currently playing in the NFL.
The team played home games at Metropolitan Stadium through the 1981 NFL season and have played their home games at Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome (also the home of the American League baseball team Minnesota Twins) since 1982.
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MINNESOTA VIKINGS TICKETS
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Franchise history
Pro football in the
Minneapolis-St. Paul area (the "Twin Cities") began with the
Minneapolis Marines/Red Jackets, an NFL team that played intermittently in the 1920s-30s.
[1] However, a new professional team in the area did not surface again until August 1959, when three Minneapolis businessmen Bill Boyer, H. P. Skoglund and
Max Winter were awarded a franchise in the new
American Football League. Five months later in January 1960, the ownership group along with Bernie Ridder forfeited its AFL membership and then was awarded the National Football League's 14th franchise with play to begin in 1961.
[2] Ole Haugsrud was added to the NFL team ownership because of an agreement he had with the NFL since the 1920s when he sold his
Duluth Eskimos team back to the league. The agreement allowed him 10% of any future Minnesota team.
1960s
The team was officially named the Minnesota
Vikings on September 27, 1960; the name is partly meant to reflect Minnesota's place as a center of
Scandinavian American culture.
[3] From the start, the Vikings embraced an energetic marketing program that produced a first-year season ticket sales of nearly 26,000 and an average home attendance of 34,586, about 85 percent of the capacity of 40,800 for
Metropolitan Stadium. Eventually Met Stadium capacity was increased to 47,900. The search for the first head coach had the team court then-
Northwestern University head coach
Ara Parseghian, who according to
Minneapolis Star writer
Jim Klobuchar -- the Vikings' first beat reporter for that newspaper -- visited team management in the
Twin Cities under the condition that his visit was to be kept secret from his current employer. His cover was blown by local columnist
Sid Hartman who reported the visit and forced Parseghian to issue denials.
Philadelphia Eagles assistant Nick Skorich and a man with Minnesota ties who was working in the
CFL,
Bud Grant, were also candidates until a different Eagle, quarterback
Norm Van Brocklin, was hired early in 1961. Van Brocklin had just finished his career as a player on a high note, having defeated the
Green Bay Packers in the
1960 NFL championship.
With the first overall selection in the
1961 NFL Draft, the Vikings selected running back
Tommy Mason of
Tulane. They took a young quarterback from the
University of Georgia named
Fran Tarkenton in the third round. Notable veterans acquired in the offseason were
Norm Snead and
Hugh McElhenny. The Vikings won their first regular season game, defeating the
Chicago Bears 37–13 on Opening Day
1961. Tarkenton came off the bench to throw four touchdown passes and run for another to lead the upset. Reality set in as the expansion team lost its next seven games on their way to a 3-11 record.
On March 7, 1967, quarterback
Fran Tarkenton was traded to the
New York Giants for a 1st and 2nd-round choice in 1967, a 1st-round choice in 1968 and a 2nd-round choice in 1969. With the picks Minnesota selected
Clinton Jones and
Bob Grim in 1967,
Ron Yary in 1968 and
Ed White in 1969.
[4] Three days later on March 10, the Vikings hired new head coach
Bud Grant to replace Van Brocklin, who resigned following the
1966 NFL season. Grant came to the Vikings from the
Canadian Football League as head coach for the
Winnipeg Blue Bombers, who he led to four
Grey Cup Championships in 10 years.
During the late 1960s, the Vikings were building a powerful defense known as the
Purple People Eaters, led by
Alan Page,
Carl Eller,
Gary Larsen, and
Jim Marshall.
[5] In
1968, that stingy defense earned the Vikings their first Central Division Title and their first playoff berth.
In
1969 the
Vikings went 12–2, the best record in the NFL.
The team had 12 straight victories, the longest single-season winning streak in 35 years.
[6] The Vikings defeated the
Cleveland Browns, 27–7, in the
NFL Championship Game on Jan. 4, 1970, at Metropolitan Stadium. Minnesota became the first modern NFL expansion team to win an
NFL Championship Game,
and earned a berth in
Super Bowl IV. The heavily favored Vikings lost that game to the
Kansas City Chiefs 23-7.
[7]
1970s
The team continued to shine in
1970 and
1971 as their "Purple People Eater" defense led them back to the playoffs. In 1971 the defense was impressive enough that Alan Page won the
NFL Most Valuable Player Award given by the
Associated Press. He was the first defensive player to win the award.
In
1972 the
Vikings traded
Norm Snead, Bob Grim, Vince Clements and a 1st-round draft choice in 1972 and 1973 to the New York Giants to reacquire the popular
Tarkenton.
While the acquisitions of
Fran Tarkenton and wide receiver
John Gilliam improved the passing attack, the running game was inconsistent and the Vikings finished with a disappointing 7–7 record. The Vikings addressed the problem by drafting running back
Chuck Foreman with their first pick in the
1973 draft. Co-owner Bill Boyer died in 1972 and was replaced on the team's board of directors by his son-in-law Jack Steele.
The
Vikings won their first 9 games of
1973 and finished the season with a 12–2 record.
The Vikings then advanced to their second Super Bowl in franchise history,
Super Bowl VIII, against the
Miami Dolphins at
Rice Stadium in
Houston,
Texas. However, the Dolphins prevailed, 24–7.
The
Vikings won the Central Division again in
1974 with a 10–4 record, which was a tie for the best record in the conference.
In the playoffs they built on their cold weather reputation, defeating both the
St. Louis Cardinals 30–14 and the
Los Angeles Rams 14–10 in frozen Metropolitan Stadium. The Vikings played in their second straight Super Bowl,
Super Bowl IX (3rd overall), losing to the
Pittsburgh Steelers, 16–6, at
Tulane Stadium in New Orleans on January 12, 1975.
In
1975, the
Vikings, led by Tarkenton and running back
Chuck Foreman, got off to a 10–0 start and easily won another division title.
However, the Vikings lost to the
Dallas Cowboys in the
playoffs, 17–14, on a controversial touchdown pass from the Cowboys' quarterback
Roger Staubach to wide receiver
Drew Pearson that became known as the
Hail Mary.
[8] The touchdown was controversial because many felt that Pearson pushed off on Vikings
defensive back Nate Wright, which is
pass interference, a violation of the rules. As the Metropolitan Stadium crowd was stunned to learn that no penalty was called, debris was thrown on the field for several minutes. One bottle (Jack Daniels) struck a game official, rendering him unconscious.
The
Vikings played in
Super Bowl XI, their third Super Bowl (4th overall) in 4 years, against the
Oakland Raiders at the
Rose Bowl in
Pasadena, California,on January 9, 1977. The Vikings, however, couldn't break their bad luck in the Super Bowl. Minnesota lost, 32–14.
In
1977, the
Vikings again won the Central Division with a 9–5 record and advanced to their 4th NFC Championship Game in 5 years,
but were defeated by the eventual Super Bowl Champion
Cowboys, 23–6, at
Texas Stadium.
By
1978, age was taking its toll on the
Vikings, but they still made the playoffs with an 8–7–1 record. There was no more playoff magic as the
Rams finally defeated the Vikings, 34–10 in Los Angeles.
Quarterback Fran Tarkenton retired following the season holding league passer records in attempts (6,467), completions (3,686), yards (47,003), and touchdowns (342).
[9]
In December, 1979, ground is broken for construction of the
Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome in downtown Minneapolis.
1980s
On May 15, 1981, the Vikings moved into a new facility in suburban
Eden Prairie that houses the team's offices, locker room and practice fields. The complex was named "Winter Park" after Max Winter, one of the Vikings' founders, who served as the team's president from 1965 to 1987.
The Vikings played their final game at Metropolitan Stadium on December 20th to conclude the
1981 NFL season by losing to the
Kansas City Chiefs, 10–6.
The Vikings played their first game at the Metrodome in a preseason matchup against the
Seattle Seahawks on August 21, 1982 in a game Minnesota won, 7–3.
The first touchdown in the new facility was scored by
Joe Senser on an 11 yard pass from
Tommy Kramer.
The first regular-season game in the
Metrodome was the 1982 opener on September 12, when the Vikings defeated
Tampa Bay, 17–10.
Rickey Young scored the first regular-season touchdown in the facility on a 3 yard run in the 2nd quarter.
On January 27, 1984, Bud Grant retired as head coach of the Vikings. With a career regular-season record of 151–87–5 (.632) in 17 seasons with Minnesota, Grant led the franchise to 12 playoff appearances, 11 division titles, and four Super Bowls.
Les Steckel, who was an offensive assistant with the Vikings for 5 seasons, was then named the 3rd head coach in franchise history. Steckel, who came to the Vikings in 1979 after working as an assistant with the 49ers, was the youngest head coach in the NFL in 1984 at age 38.
However, the Vikings lost a franchise-worst 13 games.
After the season Steckel was fired, and on December 18, 1984, Bud Grant was rehired as the head coach of the Vikings.
On January 6, 1986, following the
1985 season, Bud Grant re-retired as head coach of the Vikings. At the time of his retirement he was the 6th winningest coach in NFL history with 168 career wins, including playoffs. In 18 seasons, he led the Vikings to a 158–96–5 regular season record.
[10] Longtime Vikings assistant coach
Jerry Burns was named the 4th head coach in team history on January 7, 1986.
He served as the Vikings' offensive coordinator from 1968–85, when the team won 11 division titles and played in 4 Super Bowls. In his first season, the
Vikings led by the
NFL Comeback Player of the Year Tommy Kramer, went 9–7,
their first winning record in 4 years. On August 2, 1986, Fran Tarkenton was the first player who played the majority of his career with the Vikings, to be inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame.
Following the
strike-shortened 1987 season, the 8–7
Vikings --- who had finished 8–4 in regular games but 0–3 using strike-replacement players --- pulled two upsets in the playoffs by beating the two teams with the best regular season records. They beat the 12–3
New Orleans Saints, 44–10, at the
Louisiana Superdome in the Wild Card Playoff game. The following week, in the Divisional Playoff game, they beat the 13–2
San Francisco 49ers, 36–24;, at
Candlestick Park. During that game
Anthony Carter set the all-time record for most receiving yards in a playoff game with 227 yards. The Vikings played the
Washington Redskins in the NFC Championship Game on January 17, 1988, at
RFK Stadium. Trailing 17–10, the Vikings drove to the Redskins' six yard line with a little over a minute left in the game but failed to get the ball into the end zone. Darren Nelson dropped a pass from
Wade Wilson at the goal line to officially end the Vikings' hopes of a Super Bowl.
The Vikings would make what would be considered its biggest personnel blunder in team history. On October 12, 1989, the Vikings
acquired Herschel Walker from Dallas. The final result of the trade gave the Vikings Walker, third-round choice
Mike Jones, fifth-round choice Reggie Thornton and tenth-round choice
Pat Newman in 1990 and a third-round choice in 1991
Jake Reed, while Dallas received Issiac Holt, David Howard, Darrin Nelson, Jesse Solomon, Alex Stewart, a 1st, 2nd and 6th-round choice in 1990, 1st and 2nd-round choices in 1991 and a 1st, 2nd and 3rd-round choice in 1992. Two of those selections turned into
Emmitt Smith and
Darren Woodson. Herschel's performance fell short of expectations in his three seasons with the Vikings, while the Cowboys rode their draft picks to three Super Bowl victories in the early to mid 1990s.
1990s
On December 3, 1991, Jerry Burns announced his retirement. In six seasons as Head Coach of the Vikings, Burns compiled a career record of 52–43 (.547). He also led Minnesota to three playoff appearances, including a division title and an NFC Championship Game.
Dennis Green was later named the fifth Head Coach in team history. He came to Minnesota after turning around a struggling
Stanford University football program as head coach from 1989–91. In his 10 seasons as the coach of the Vikings, Green won 4 NFC Central division titles, had 8 playoff appearances, 2 NFC Championship game appearances and an all-time record of 97–62.
1998
1998 was a year to remember for the franchise. With a spectacular offense led by quarterback
Brad Johnson, who after being injured was replaced by
Randall Cunningham, who had his best NFL season, running back
Robert Smith, veteran wide receiver
Cris Carter, and explosive rookie
Randy Moss, the Vikings set a then-NFL record by scoring a total of 556 points, never scoring fewer than 24 in a game. The record was later broken by the
2007 New England Patriots, a team of which, not coincidentally, Randy Moss was also a member. The Vikings finished the season 15–1, their only loss by 3 points to the
Tampa Bay Buccaneers in week nine. In the playoffs, the Vikings rolled past the
Arizona Cardinals 41–21, and came into the Metrodome heavily favored for their NFC title showdown with the
Atlanta Falcons, which lost only one game more than the Vikings, at 14–2. However, kicker
Gary Anderson, who had just completed the first perfect regular season in NFL history (not missing a single extra point or field goal attempt the entire year), missed a 38 yard attempt with less than 2 minutes remaining. That allowed the Falcons to tie the game. Though the Vikings won the coin toss, Atlanta went on to win it 30–27 in overtime on
Morten Andersen's field goal, which was, coincidentally, also a 38-yarder. The Vikings became the first 15–1 team to fail to reach the Super Bowl (in this case, it was
Super Bowl XXXIII). The Falcons lost Super Bowl XXXIII to
John Elway and the
Denver Broncos.
1999
Cunningham resumed duties again in 1999, but after a lukewarm 2–4 start,
Jeff George was given the starting job. He finished the season with an 8–2 record, and led the Vikings into the postseason once again, with an overall team record of 10–6. Minnesota beat
Dallas in the Wild Card game 27–10, and faced playoff newcomer
Kurt Warner and the
St. Louis Rams in the Divisional matchup. The game was a shootout which Minnesota led 17–14 at halftime, but the Rams outscored Minnesota 35–20 in the second half to win 49–37.
[11] St. Louis would go on to win
Super Bowl XXXIV.
2000s
2000
In
2000, the Vikings went 11–5. The Vikings were 11–2 after 14 weeks, but slumped briefly, losing their last three to the
Rams,
Packers and
Colts while starting
quarterback Daunte Culpepper was hampered by injury. Nonetheless, the Vikings made the playoffs for the fifth straight year. After easily beating the
Saints in the Divisional game 34–16, they went to
New York to face the
New York Giants in the NFC Championship Game. Though they were the road team, the Vikings were actually favored to win the game (since most considered their 12–2 record with Culpepper more indicative than their 0–3 record when he was out). But the Vikings were humiliated by the Giants 41–0, the worst loss in franchise history.
[12] Robert Smith, who ran for a team record (and NFL best) 1521 yards that season, retired at the end of the year after only playing eight NFL seasons.
[13]
2001–05
In
2001, after a disappointing 5–11 season, the Vikings bought out the contract of
Dennis Green, despite his successful coaching tenure with the team.
Mike Tice coached the final game of 2001, losing to the
Ravens.
[14] Tice was named the permanent coach after the season, but he would not lead the Vikings back to the playoffs until 2004.
During the
2003 season, the
Vikings came close to getting into the playoffs. However, the
Arizona Cardinals completed a game winning touchdown with 0:00 left knocking the Vikings out of the playoffs. The moment of Arizona's touchdown was actually the first moment the entire season in which the Vikings hadn't led their division. The Vikings became the second team in football history to miss the playoffs after getting off to a 6–0 start; the other was the Washington Redskins.
In
2004, Daunte Culpepper amassed MVP-like statistics, throwing for 4,717 passing yards (leading the
NFL), 39 passing touchdowns (a Viking record), and 5,123 total yards (an NFL record). In the wild card game, the Vikings
defeated the rival
Green Bay Packers in their first-ever playoff meeting, 31–17.
[15] In doing so, the Vikings became the second team in NFL history to have a .500 record (8–8) in the regular season and win a playoff game (The
St. Louis Rams did the same thing only a day earlier). In the divisional round, the Vikings
were defeated by the eventual NFC champion
Philadelphia Eagles.
[16]
On March 2, 2005, Vikings wide receiver Randy Moss was traded to the Oakland Raiders for linebacker
Napoleon Harris and the Raiders' first round draft pick. After struggling to a disappointing 2–5 start to the
2005 season, Vikings lost quarterback Daunte Culpepper to a season ending knee injury. This injury was a very significant part to this Minnesota Vikings team due to the fact they also lost Randy Moss. The dynamic duo from years earlier were now lost and a new leader would eventually emerge. The Vikings finished the 2005 season with a 9–7 record, one win away from the playoffs.
Head Coach Mike Tice was let go after the 2005 season and was replaced by
Brad Childress. This was one of many significant front office moves made by the new ownership team, led by
Zygi Wilf.
2006–present
Minnesota began the
2006 season 4–2 (and Childress becoming the first coach in Vikings history to start 2–0 in his first year), but would finish the year at 6–10, tying for the 7th worst record in the NFL and receiving the 7th pick in the
NFL Draft; with it, the Vikings selected
Adrian Peterson out of the
University of Oklahoma.
Peterson's first career TD was a 60 yard screen pass in his first career game against the
Atlanta Falcons. When the Minnesota Vikings played the
Chicago Bears in the first of their two games, Peterson broke the record for single game All-Purpose (rushing, receiving, kick returning) yards (361, 224 of them rushing yards). In Week 9 of the 2007 season, Peterson would break the NFL record set by
Jamal Lewis in 2003 for most rushing yards in one game (296 rushing yards against the San Diego Chargers). Despite a strong push in the middle of the 2007 season winning five straight games, the Vikings lost their final two games to finish the season at 8–8, missing the playoffs. In week 13 of the
2008 season against the
Bears,
Gus Frerotte hooked up with
Bernard Berrian for a 99 yard touchdown pass after an epic goal line stand by the Vikings. This was the longest play in Vikings history.
Adrian Peterson had 1760 yards, first in the NFL in rushing yards, in front of Atlanta's Michael Turner. The Vikings are 10–6 under
Tarvaris Jackson. A journeyman from the
Chicago Bears, Bernard Berrian lead the team in receiving yards with 795, and
Bobby Wade leads the team in catches. After Week 14, the Vikings had a very tough game against the winless
Detroit Lions who gave them a run for their money. The Lions led through halftime, although the Vikings managed a 20–16 win. Frerotte was injured in the game and still has the starting job if he is able to play. In Week 15 the Vikings beat the
Arizona Cardinals 35 to 14. Tarvaris Jackson started this game and threw for four touchdowns. Bernard Berrian caught a touchdown pass and returned a punt for a touchdown. Adrian Peterson broke the franchise record for most single season rush yards. In Week 16, the Vikings faced the Atlanta Falcons at the Metrodome, looking to clinch the NFC North with a victory. However, they suffered from 7 fumbles, 4 of them resulting in turnovers, and lost 24–17. Starter Tarvaris Jackson had another good game for Minnesota, as did tight end Visanthe Shiancoe, who caught 2 touchdowns from Jackson. The Vikings clinched the
NFC North championship by defeating the
New York Giants 20–19 in week 17 of the 2008 NFL Season, when kicker
Ryan Longwell was successful in his attempt at the game-winning field goal.
On January 4, 2009, the Vikings hosted the
Philadelphia Eagles for the Wild Card round and for the first time in eight years, the Vikings hosted a playoff game. The Vikings held the Eagles 14–16 at halftime, but the Eagles, coming off of a 44–6 victory over the
Dallas Cowboys, defeated the Vikings, 26–14. The Eagles would go on to defeat the defending Super Bowl champion New York Giants in the Divisional round only to lose to the Arizona Cardinals (who in turn lost Super Bowl XLIII to the
Pittsburgh Steelers) in the NFC Championship Game.
Since 2006, the Vikings are particularly known for their strong defense against the run (#1 in the NFL in 2006, 2007, and 2008, first NFL team to accomplish this) anchored by the nicknamed “Williams Wall”/"Williams Wrecking Crew" consisting of defensive tackle
Kevin Williams and nose tackle
Pat Williams (no relation).
[17]. Starting with the addition of
Jared Allen in 2008 the front four began being called the Four Norsemen of the Apocalypse.
On August 18, 2009, after months of speculation and negotiations,
Quarterback Brett Favre, who, until 2007 played for division rival
Green Bay Packers, signed a two-year, $25 million deal with the Vikings.
Ownership
The team is currently owned by
Zygi Wilf, Jeffrey Wilf, Leonard Wilf, David Mandelbaum, Alan Landis and
Reggie Fowler. The Vikings have been conducting summer training camp at
Minnesota State University, Mankato since 1966. From 1961–65 they held camp at
Bemidji State University.
Season-by-season records
Logo and uniforms
From the team's debut in 1961 to 1995, the Vikings' logos and uniforms essentially remained the same. One of the team's two primary logos consists of a profile of a blond
norseman, while the other consists of a white Viking horn.
The team's helmet is purple with a Viking horn logo on each side. The horn logo was slightly revised in 2006. The original uniform design consisted of white pants, gold trim, and either purple or white jerseys. From 1961 to 1964, the Vikings wore purple pants with their white jerseys (The Vikings, with their new uniform, still wear, on occasion, purple pants with yellow and white trim). In a design that was unique among American football teams, the white jerseys had a completely different stripe pattern, which was over the shoulders, than the purple ones, which was around the sleeve cuff. These unique shoulder stripes on the white jerseys did not appear until 1969, the year they went to their first Super Bowl. There have also been minor changes to the uniform design throughout the years, such as changing the color of the facemask from gray to white (1980), and then to purple (1985); and adding the Norseman logo to the sleeves (1996). The Vikings wore black shoes until Les Steckel became the coach in 1984. In 2006 team returned to black shoes for first time since the 1983 season.
During the 1964 season, the Vikings along with several other NFL teams wore their white jerseys for home games to allow their fans to see what the other teams primary jerseys looked like. The Lions played at
Metropolitan Stadium on October 11. The Lions only brought their white jerseys. The Vikings had also brought their white jerseys to the stadium. The team practiced at
Midway Stadium in St. Paul and that is where they stored their equipment. Both teams started the game in their white jerseys. By the second quarter the Vikings had been able to get their purple jerseys to Met Stadium. The team changed jerseys on the sidelines and finished the game in purple jerseys and purple pants. It wasn't until 43 years later, on December 17, 2007 (a Monday Night Football game versus the Chicago Bears) that the Vikings again donned all purple jerseys and pants.
From 1969 through 1973, the Vikings had an alternate purple jersey without stripes for warm-weather games.
The team's uniforms were redesigned in 2006, the first significant change in the franchise's 46-year history. Although the team colors remained the same, trim lines were added to the outside shoulders and sleeves, and the sides of the jerseys and pants. In addition the horn on the helmet was slightly more defined. Included in the new design are both white and purple pants.
[18]
The team wore black armbands for the last four games in 1978 in memory of Jack "Jocko" Nelson, an assistant coach who died during the season. In 1985 the team wore a 25 years patch on their jerseys. In 1989, they wore a "40 for 60" patch honoring the 1969 NFL championship team. They wore a 35 years patch in 1995, 40 years in 2000 and 45 years in 2005. They also wore patches in 1999 for assistant coach
Chip Myers who died in the offseason and in 2001 for
Korey Stringer. The Vikings like the other teams wore NFL 50 and 75 year patches in 1969 and 1994.
Mascots
Current mascots
The current team
mascot is Ragnar (played by Joseph Juranitch). Ragnar has been working for the Vikings since 1994, and claims to be the most widely-recognized mascot in the world. Juranitch admits to being somewhat of an
eccentric—he holds the current world record for fastest time shaving a
beard with an
axe. Ragnar drives onto the field at the beginning of the game dressed in Viking garb, on a motorcycle, while a cheerleader used to ride a snowmobile.
After several failed attempts at developing an official team-owned mascot, the Vikings finally introduced Viktor E. Viking during the 2007 Vikings' season.
[19] Team officials had long indicated that they were after a mascot concept that would primarily appeal to the team's younger fan base.
[20] Viktor the Viking, a muscle-bound, blonde-haired and mustachioed character wears a Vikings' #1 jersey and an oversized Vikings' helmet with protruding horns and a small yellow nose guard.
Historic mascots
During the 1970s and 1980s, Hub Meeds dressed as a Viking and served as the team mascot.
Another mascot associated with the Vikings was "Vikadontis Rex", a purple foam dinosaur. Vikadontis was the official mascot of the Minnesota Vikings Children's Fund and took part in the 1995 Celebrity Mascot Olympics. Vikadontis was retired starting with the 2000 season.
Traditions
Fight song
"Skol, Vikings" is the fight song of the Minnesota Vikings. It was introduced around the time the team was founded in 1961 and is always played whenever the team scores as well as half time and the end of regulation.
Rivals
- Detroit Lions
- Green Bay Packers
- Chicago Bears
Helga hats
Viking fans are known to dress up in "Helga hats", or purple hats with white horns and blond braids, mimicking the helmets popularly believed to have been worn by
Viking warriors. The original Helga Hats are still hand assembled in the Twin Cities area; however, some vendors have since imported other versions from overseas in recent years.
Vikings horn
During home games at the
Metrodome, the Vikings Gjallarhorn is loudly played and sounds often after the team has a big play or scores a touchdown. In addition, a flash cannon fires upon Vikings touchdowns.
Players of note
Current roster
|
Quarterbacks
- 4 John David Booty
- 12 Gus Frerotte
- 7 Tarvaris Jackson
Running Backs
- 83 Jeff Dugan FB
- 43 Maurice Hicks KR
- 28 Adrian Peterson
- 38 Naufahu Tahi FB
- 29 Chester Taylor
Wide Receivers
- 84 Aundrae Allison KR/PR
- 87 Bernard Berrian
- 82 Darius Reynaud
- 18 Sidney Rice
- 19 Bobby Wade
Tight Ends
- 40 Jim Kleinsasser
- 45 Garrett Mills FB
- 81 Visanthe Shiancoe
|
| Offensive Linemen
- 78 Matt Birk C
- 62 Ryan Cook T
- 64 Anthony Herrera G
- 79 Artis Hicks T/G
- 76 Steve Hutchinson G
- 72 Marcus Johnson T
- 74 Bryant McKinnie T
- 65 John Sullivan
C
Defensive Linemen
- 69 Jared Allen DE
- 91 Ray Edwards DE
- 90 Fred Evans DT
- 73 Otis Grigsby DE
- 98 Letroy Guion
DT
- 71 Jimmy Kennedy DT
- 96 Brian Robison DE
- 94 Pat Williams DT
- 93 Kevin Williams DT
- 97 Ellis Wyms DT
|
| Linebackers
- 54 Vinny Ciurciu OLB
- 52 Chad Greenway OLB
- 99 Napoleon Harris ILB
- 50 Erin Henderson
OLB
- 58 David Herron ILB
- 51 Ben Leber OLB
- 55 Dontarrious Thomas ILB
Defensive Backs
- 39 Husain Abdullah
S
- 37 Eric Frampton SS
- 23 Cedric Griffin CB
- 25 Tyrell Johnson
S
- 21 Marcus McCauley CB
- 22 Benny Sapp CB
- 42 Darren Sharper SS
- 20 Madieu Williams FS
- 26 Antoine Winfield CB
Special Teams
- 5 Chris Kluwe P
- 46 Cullen Loeffler LS
- 8 Ryan Longwell K
|
| Reserve Lists
- 71 Kenderick Allen DT (IR)
- 27 Michael Boulware SS (IR)
- 59 Heath Farwell OLB (IR)
- 41 Charles Gordon CB (IR)
- 56 E. J. Henderson ILB (IR)
- 92 Jayme Mitchell DE (IR)
- 60 Drew Radovich
OT (IR)
- 95 Kenechi Udeze DE (NF-Ill.)
Practice Squad
- 61 Martail Burnett
DE
- 75 Chris Clark
OT
- 63 Brian Daniels G
- 11 Jaymar Johnson
WR
- 27 Derrick Roberson CB
- 31 Roderick Rogers S
- 24 Marcus Walker
CB
- 34 Albert Young
RB
Rookies in italics
updated 2008-12-20
•
53 Active, 8 Inactive, 8 PS
? More rosters
|
Pro Football Hall of Famers
Minnesota Vikings Hall of Famers
|
No.
| Player
| Position(s)
| Seasons as a Viking
| Year Inducted
|
10
| Fran Tarkenton
| QB
| 1961-1966, 1972-1978
| 1986
|
22
| Paul Krause
| S
| 1968-1979
| 1998
|
64
| Randall McDaniel
| G
| 1988-1999
| 2009
|
65
| Gary Zimmerman
| OT
| 1986-1992
| 2008
|
73
| Ron Yary
| OT
| 1968-1981
| 2001
|
81
| Carl Eller
| DE
| 1964-1978
| 2004
|
88
| Alan Page
| DT
| 1967-1978
| 1988
|
--
| Jim Finks
| General Manager
| 1964-1973
| 1995
|
--
| Bud Grant
| Head Coach
| 1967-1983, 1985
| 1994
|
Retired numbers
Minnesota Vikings Retired Numbers
|
No.
| Player
|
10
| Fran Tarkenton
|
53
| Mick Tingelhoff
|
70
| Jim Marshall
|
77
| Korey Stringer
|
80
| Cris Carter
|
88
| Alan Page
|
Ring of Honor
Minnesota Vikings Ring of Honor
[21]
|
No.
| Player
| Position(s)
| Seasons as a Viking
| Date Inducted
|
10
| Fran Tarkenton
| QB
| 1961-1966, 1972-1978
| September 9, 1998
|
22
| Paul Krause
| S
| 1968-1979
| November 15, 1998
|
30
| Bill Brown
| RB
| 1962-1974
| September 26, 2004
|
44
| Chuck Foreman
| RB
| 1973-1979
| September 30, 2007
|
53
| Mick Tingelhoff
| C
| 1962-1978
| November 25, 2001
|
64
| Randall McDaniel
| G
| 1988-1999
| December 17, 2006
|
70
| Jim Marshall
| DE
| 1961-1979
| November 28, 1999
|
73
| Ron Yary
| OT
| 1968-1981
| September 9, 2001
|
77
| Korey Stringer
| OT
| 1995-2000
| November 19, 2001
|
80
| Cris Carter
| WR
| 1990-2001
| September 14, 2003
|
81
| Carl Eller
| DE
| 1964-1978
| November 10, 2002
|
88
| Alan Page
| DT
| 1967-1978
| September 20, 1998
|
93
| John Randle
| DT
| 1990-2000
| November 30, 2008
|
--
| Jerry Burns
| Head Coach
| 1986-1991
| November 6, 2005
|
--
| Jim Finks
| General Manager
| 1964-1973
| October 18, 1998
|
--
| Bud Grant
| Head Coach
| 1967-1983, 1985
| November 8, 1998
|
--
| Fred Zamberletti
| Medical Adviser
| 1961-Present
| December 20, 1998
|
40th Anniversary Team
- Fran Tarkenton QB, #10
- Chuck Foreman RB, #44
- Robert Smith RB, #26
- Ahmad Rashad WR, #28
- Cris Carter WR, #80
- Steve Jordan TE, #83
- Ron Yary OT, #73
- Randall McDaniel OG, #64
- Mick Tingelhoff C, #53
- Ed White OG, #62
- Tim Irwin OT, #76
|
- Jim Marshall DE, #70
- Alan Page DT, #88
- John Randle DT, #93
- Carl Eller DE, #81
- Matt Blair LB, #59
- Scott Studwell LB, #55
- Jeff Siemon LB, #50
- Bobby Bryant CB, #20
- Carl Lee CB, #39
- Paul Krause S, #22
- Joey Browner S, #47
|
- Greg Coleman P, #8
- Fred Cox K, #14
- Darrin Nelson KR, #20
- Bill Brown ST, #30
|
Coaches of note
Head coaches
Name
| Years
| Won
| Lost
| Ties
| Winning %
| Post Season
|
Norm Van Brocklin
| 1961-1966
| 29
| 51
| 4
| .363
|
Bud Grant
| 1967-1983
| 151
| 87
| 5
| .634
| 1968-71, 1973-78, 1980, 1982
|
Les Steckel
| 1984
| 3
| 13
| 0
| .188
|
Bud Grant
| 1985
| 7
| 9
| 0
| .438
|
Jerry Burns
| 1986-1991
| 52
| 43
| 0
| .547
| 1987-89
|
Dennis Green
| 1992-2001
| 97
| 62
| 0
| .610
| 1992-94, 1996-2000
|
Mike Tice
| 2001-2005
| 32
| 33
| 0
| .492
| 2004
|
Brad Childress
| 2006- present
| 24
| 24
| 0
| .500
| 2008
|
Current staff
|
|
| Front Office
- Owner/Chairman - Zygi Wilf
- Owner/President - Mark Wilf
- Owner/Vice Chairman - Leonard Wilf
- Vice President of Football Operations - Rob Brzezinski
- Vice President of Player Personnel - Rick Spielman
- Director of Football Administration - Dave Blando
- Director of Player Personnel - George Paton
- Director of College Scouting - Scott Studwell
Head Coaches
- Head Coach - Brad Childress
- Assistant Head Coach/Defensive Coordinator - Leslie Frazier
Offensive Coaches
- Offensive Coordinator - Darrell Bevell
- Quarterbacks - Kevin Rogers
- Running Backs - Eric Bieniemy
- Wide Receivers - George Stewart
- Tight Ends - Jimmie Johnson
- Offensive Line - Pat Morris
- Assistant Offensive Line - Jim Hueber
- Offensive Quality Control - Chad O'Shea
- Offensive Quality Control - Ryan Ficken
|
|
|
Defensive Coaches
- Defensive Line - Karl Dunbar
- Linebackers - Fred Pagac
- Defensive Backs - Joe Woods
- Assistant Defensive Backs - Derek Mason
- Defensive Quality Control - Jeff Imamura
- Defensive Quality Control - Brendan Daly
Special Teams Coaches
- Special Teams Coordinator - Paul Ferraro
- Assistant Special Teams - Brian Murphy
Strength and Conditioning
- Head Strength and Conditioning - Tom Kanavy
- Assistant Strength and Conditioning - Juney Barnett
- Assistant Strength and Conditioning - Martin Streight
Coaching Assistants
- Ryan Silverfield (Offensive/Defensive Assistant)
?
? More NFL staffs
|
Radio and television
The Vikings' flagship radio station is
KFAN-AM (1130). The games are also heard on the "KFAN Radio Network" in
Minnesota,
Wisconsin,
Iowa,
South Dakota, and
North Dakota, as well as many other outlets. Paul Allen has been the
play-by-play announcer since the
2002 NFL season and
Pete Bercich is the analyst, who began his first season in 2007.
Telecasts of preseason games not shown on national networks are aired on
KSTP-TV (Channel 5) in the Twin Cities with
Ari Wolfe doing play-by-play.
Notes and references
- THE MINNEAPOLIS MARINES: MINNESOTA'S FORGOTTEN NFL TEAM
- Minnesota Vikings
- Minnesota Vikings
- History: Team Timeline
- The Purple People Eaters
- Super Bowl I-X Collector's Set
- All-Time Super Bowl Odds
- The Famous Hail Mary Pass
- FRAN TARKENTON
- BUD GRANT
- NFL Scoreboard: Recap: St. Louis 49, Minnesota 37
- 2000 Minnesota Vikings Statistics & Players - Pro-Football-Reference.com
- ESPN.com - NFL - Vikings' Smith surprises with retirement
- ESPN.com - Green, Vikings agree to buyout
- 2004 Minnesota Vikings Statistics & Players - Pro-Football-Reference.com
- ESPN - Eagles outplay self-destructing Vikings - NFL Football Recap
- Williams duo middlemen in Vikings’ defense
- http://www.vikings.com/news_detail_objectname_NewJerseyLaunch42706.html
- Vikings : Viktor
- OP firm develops NFL's Vikings mascot - Kansas City Business Journal:
- Vikings : Ring Of Honor
See also
- Pro Football Hall of Fame
- Minnesota Vikings starting quarterbacks