All that remains necessary to bring quarterback Donovan McNabb to the Vikings is the news conference to announce the deal.
The negotiations have been nearly completed with a few minor details left to settle, unless the Vikings and McNabb's agent, Fletcher Smith, have a last-minute disagreement on the terms of a new contract.
McNabb is no stranger to current and past coaching staffs at Winter Park. Former Vikings coach Brad Childress, current coach Leslie Frazier and ex-quarterbacks coach Kevin Rogers have worked with the former Syracuse quarterback in the past and studied him on film more than once when the Vikings were considering making a deal for him when he previously was with Philadelphia and now with Washington.
Childress coached McNabb as the Eagles quarterbacks coach and offensive coordinator from 1999 to 2005. Frazier was the Eagles defensive backs coach for three years (1999 to 2002) while McNabb was there and knows how good McNabb can be. Rogers coached McNabb at Syracuse.
Childress said he might have brought McNabb aboard last season had Brett Favre not come back, because McNabb has been a proven winner. The Eagles went to four NFC Championship Games and one Super Bowl following the 2004 season while McNabb and Childress were together in Philadelphia.
"He did a damn good job," Childress said. "You'll have to look up how many years he was [a Pro Bowl player] there [six times], but it was quite a few. I can only speak for the eight years I was with him at the Eagles."
McNabb had a 5-1 record against the Vikings, including two playoff victories, his only loss coming while with the Redskins last season. And he can become only the 12th quarterback to win 100 games because he enters this season with a 96-62-1 record in regular-season games and is 9-7 in the playoffs.
Good character "He's an A-character guy," Childress said. "I know that he'll lock his jaw, not unlike Favre coming in here from the Jets wanting to rehabilitate his image. I expect you'll see the same resolve from Donovan.