The phone rang at Bud Grant's house in Eden Prairie the day fellow Pro Football Hall of Famer Joe Gibbs came out of retirement to coach Washington in 2004.
Gibbs was 63 when he continued a trend of older fellas unretiring to coach or manage in professional sports. The Chiefs' Dick Vermeil was 67. The NBA's Hubie Brown was 70. Major League Baseball's Jack McKeon had just won a World Series at 72.
So, 76-year-old Grant was asked, do you miss coaching?
"Do I miss coaching?" he said. "Only when I go to the bank."
Grant hadn't coached since 1985 and said it was a young man's racket. Asked for any advice he'd give those young men, Grant's wit stayed sharp.
"Don't win too fast."
This was a self-deprecating nod to his own humble beginning in 1967.
Before he became a Hall of Famer and the eternal face of an entire state, Grant started 0-3 in home games played at Metropolitan Stadium. To this date, 63 years of Vikings football have produced only six 0-3 starts at home.