The legend is that Dennis Green always had a rocky relationship with sports columnists from the Twin Cities dailies. This is not true, unless you want to count the fact that Sid Hartman publicly confronted Roger Headrick at Green's initial news conference, with Sid claiming that Headrick had told him Pete Carroll would get the job.
As always, Sid rallied to have a better relationship with Green than the rest of us columnists during the coach's successful 10-year run as the Vikings coach.
Green's family revealed Friday that he had died at 67. It would be preferable at this time to offer some grand, personal recollections of Denny's decade in charge of the Purple, but there are really none.
Permit me to insist on this:
The Twin Cities sports media greeted Green in January 1992 as a proper choice made by Headrick. The reporters and sporting public in unison celebrated Green's proclamation that he was the "new sheriff in town."
He was referred to as the Sheriff for months, if not years. He went 11-5 and won the NFL Central in his first season of 1992, and we were all on board, even with a disappointing home loss to Washington in the wild-card round.
I had my longest conversation with him before the start of his second season. Several reporters were invited to Winter Park that summer for one-on-one conversations.
Denny had trimmed down, he was wearing a perfect white shirt with a tie, and there was jazz playing on the sound system in his office. He turned the music down, and we talked for quite a while, and everything was hunky-dory.