ALLEN PARK, MICH. - This is the NFL, where one man's headache can be another man's shining example of how the game should be played and practiced.
"You know how the league works," said safety Dwight Smith, the former Vikings starter who's now starting in Detroit. "New Orleans got rid of me [in 2006]. But the Vikings came along because they had [defensive coordinator] Mike Tomlin, who was familiar with me from Tampa. Mike left and they got rid of me a year later.
"Now, I'm here with [Lions coach] Rod Marinelli, who is familiar with me from Tampa. And [Vikings defensive coordinator] Leslie Frazier's got [safety] Madieu Williams because he was familiar with him from Cincinnati."
The Vikings released Smith in February even though his eight interceptions the past two seasons tied him with fellow safety Darren Sharper for most on the team.
"Teams send a letter saying why they released you," Smith said. "The Vikings said they got guys who were better than me behind me."
The reality is the Vikings acquired Smith's replacement (Williams) and their top two backup safeties (Michael Boulware and rookie Tyrell Johnson) long after Smith was released. Of course, Smith didn't believe the Vikings actually felt the players behind him were better.
"Well, I led the team in interceptions two straight years there, and Darren Sharper was there with me," Smith said. "So you tell me if they had better players behind me."
At the time of his release, Smith said he didn't think it had to do with his off-the-field issues. He changed his mind at Lions camp on Tuesday.