Darrell Bevell wasn't about to let this conundrum get the best of him -- no matter how late the hour.
Sitting in his Winter Park office just past 11 p.m. with other members of the coaching staff waiting, the Vikings offensive coordinator searched for a solution. Finally, success.
Football problem resolved? Not even close.
Bevell had been trying to figure out how to create an origami for his oldest daughter, Kylie. Darrell's wife, Tammy, and Kylie had struggled with the confusing school assignment of folding paper into shapes representing flowers and birds and so they placed a late-night call to the man known around the house as "the homework master."
When Bevell got home, he placed the example on Kylie's pillow as she slept. This not only placed the father of three daughters in the running for parent of the year, it also served as an example of Bevell's ultra competitive nature.
Bevell's boyish looks make him appear younger than his 40 years, and his deep religious beliefs (he's never had a sip of alcohol) and patient nature seem to qualify him for residence in Mayberry R.F.D. But talk to Bevell or anyone close to him and it becomes apparent just how much he likes to compete and how little he likes to lose. It doesn't matter if it's assembling an origami, playing baseball for the Eden Prairie Lions Tap senior team or drawing up the Vikings' offensive game plan.
"He's as competitive right now as he was when he was in high school," Jim Bevell said of his son.
Pat Thompson, who manages the Minnesota Senior Men's Amateur Baseball Association team on which Bevell plays whenever he can, has seen it, too. "Darrell's always got a smile on his face but you can see the very serious side of him and his intensity very quickly when he's competitive," Thompson said. "He can be pretty hard on himself."