Vikings right guard Anthony Herrera had three items on his to-do list when he woke up March 26: 1, Become a stronger, more well-conditioned NFL player; 2, Attend a scheduled appointment with coach Brad Childress; and, oh yeah, 3, Become a U.S. citizen.
One of the NFL's 76 foreign-born players in 2007 and the only one from the southern Caribbean islands of Trinidad and Tobago, Herrera completed his first to-do task with an early-morning workout at Winter Park. He was hoping to finish the second task early when he climbed the steps leading to Childress' office on the second floor of the Vikings complex.
"He popped his head in the doorway and asked, 'Coach, can we do this now? I have to be somewhere at 12:30,' " Childress said. "I said, 'Oh yeah, where?' He said, 'I have to be in St. Paul for a ceremony. I'm becoming a U.S. citizen today.' "
Childress congratulated Herrera and asked who was accompanying him to the big event. Herrera said, "No one but me." His wife and young daughter were in Mississippi. His mother was in Florida. And Herrera hadn't even thought to bother his teammates by asking them to join him.
"I said, 'Anthony, you can't get sworn in as a U.S. citizen and not have anyone with you,' " Childress said. "I said, 'Shoot, give me a minute. I'm going with you.' "
Herrera had already programmed directions to Bethel University's Benson Great Hall into his MapQuest Navigator. He would lead the way from Eden Prairie to St. Paul as Childress followed.
"We got lost," Childress said. "I knew Anthony had messed something up when we pulled into this neighborhood and he turned around. We were sitting there when I decided to plug the directions into my Navigator. A different route came up, so I said, 'OK, you follow me.' "
Brad Childress, Kick-Ass Leader, saved the day.