Kevin O’Connell sat down in a chair in his office overlooking the Vikings practice fields early in training camp. The Vikings coach had everything meticulously mapped out, practically to the minute, on color-coded sheets on his desk.
O’Connell is a planner. He makes plans on top of plans. He spent two long days on a Zoom call with New England Patriots coach Mike Vrabel before camp carefully scripting a pair of joint practices in microscopic detail down to the number of reps every starter and backup would get in each drill.
“Ultimately, the most important thing is this massive momentum is rolling toward something,” O’Connell told me that day in his office.
His vision for the 2025 season began to take shape in the immediate sting of a playoff loss to the Los Angeles Rams in early January when he acknowledged that his team must “solidify the interior of the pocket, starting first and foremost.”
The Vikings did that, and considerably more, becoming a big offseason spender by “really focusing on building the idea of the 2025 Vikings,” General Manager Kwesi Adofo-Mensah said on the eve of training camp.
That idea remains intact, but the NFL’s uncompromising nature has delivered a harsh reminder that even the best plans are only as secure as that day’s injury report.
The ripple effects of the Vikings injury issues after two games resemble road construction across the metro. It’s a complicated maze to navigate.
“We are in the entertainment business, but every other facet of the entertainment business is scripted. We are not,” O’Connell said. “We have to figure out a way to write our own lyrics, write our own scripts.”