Like the rest of us, new Vikings receivers coach Keenan McCardell is hoping for a return to NFL gameday normalcy after a year of COVID-19 protocols that left stadiums with few to no fans.
During a recent interview, he looked forward to his new home at U.S. Bank Stadium while remembering the far-less-glamorous NFL home stadium he first played in.
"I still tell stories to the young guys about Cleveland Municipal Stadium," said McCardell, who joined the Browns as a free agent in 1992 after spending his rookie season on Washington's injured reserve.
It was a storied old behemoth on the rusty shores of Lake Erie. In its football heyday, it housed an NFL dynasty and Hall of Famers the likes of Paul Brown, Otto Graham, Marion Motley and Jim Brown.
By the time McCardell played there as a Brown from 1992 to '95, it was, well, an outdated dump that drove the original Browns to move to Baltimore after the 1995 season.
"We had two locker rooms," said McCardell. "We had one upstairs for the young players and one downstairs for the veterans."
The upstairs locker room was especially cramped. But McCardell and his fellow young guns started calling it "The Penthouse."
"Downstairs had no heat," McCardell said. "Upstairs in the Penthouse is where the heat came in. When it got cold, the vets would come up and hang with us in the Penthouse to stay warm before the game."