There was a time when you just didn't mess with Mick Tingelhoff or anyone under his protection on or off the football field.
"We had this crabby neighbor when we lived in Edina," said Pat Tingelhoff, Mick's son. "My brother Mike and I were running across his lawn. He grabs Mike and throws him into the bushes. We ran home crying and told Mick."
Mick was a quiet, mild-mannered introvert most of the time. He also was one of the toughest players in the 95-year history of the NFL. As center and co-captain on Bud Grant's four Super Bowl teams, he never missed a start during a 17-year career (1962-78) that finally will reach Canton, Ohio, and the Pro Football Hall of Fame during Saturday's enshrinement.
"Mick just nods, real quiet, and says, 'OK,' " Pat said. "Then he walks down, knocks on the guy's door. Guy opens the door, and boom! Mick dropped him."
This was the early '70s. Problem solved.
"But Mick did call the Vikings and say, 'You better get a lawyer ready,' " said Phyllis, Mick's wife of 54 years.
"Mick says to me, 'What if this guy calls the cops?' " said former Vikings running back Dave Osborn (1965-75). "Eventually, someone told him that if the guy didn't file a complaint in 24 hours, Mick would be OK."
"I sweated it out for 24 hours," said Tingelhoff, laughing as he sat across from Osborn over a cup of coffee at one of their weekly get-togethers with old friends at the truck-stop McDonald's just off Interstate 35 in Lakeville.