Patrick Reusse
The Vikings assembled for a first practice on July 7, 1961, in the leafy summer days of Bemidji. The season opener was 72 days in the distance, on Sept. 17, 1961, against the Chicago Bears at Met Stadium.
There was five exhibition games from Aug. 5 to Sept. 10, all losses, including 30-7 to the Bears in early September in Cedar Rapids, Iowa. This was a time when rosters were small. The players you were going to see in the regular season also were playing long minutes in the exhibitions.
Readers of the Twin Cities newspapers were told often as the exhibition losses mounted that this was the reality of being the newest of 14 NFL teams, and to be patient.
Heck, if coach Norm Van Brocklin had been more of an excuse-maker, he could have described tha inaugural season as "Year Zero."
The theory then was an NFL team needed an experienced quarterback to show any level of competence. Way back in January, before the expansion draft, General Manager Bert Rose traded the Vikings' first-rounder in the 1962 draft to the New York Giants for George Shaw.
Even with Shaw, 28 and a former No. 1 overall selection in 1955, there was little in the way of expectation when the Vikings met the Bears on that fine Sunday in September.
Shaw started, completed two of three passes for 22 yards and the Vikings were leading 3-0. A couple of drives had been mishandled, in Van Brocklin's opinion, and he switched to rookie Fran Tarkenton in the second quarter.
The term "scrambler" came to football on that afternoon. Tarkenton darted around, with fearsome Bears such as end Doug Atkins lumbering in hapless pursuit. Tarkenton went 17-for-23 for 250 yards and four touchdowns, and the Vikings embarrassed the Bears 37-13.