Twenty-five years ago Sunday, the Dallas Cowboys dealt Herschel Walker to the Vikings in the largest and most lopsided trade in NFL history.
In 1989, I covered the Cowboys for the Dallas Morning News and watched coach and de facto general manager Jimmy Johnson make a desperate play to revive a franchise that had hit bottom.
From 1990 through 1992, and for spells thereafter, I covered the Vikings for the Star Tribune, and watched the trade disassemble one of the most respected franchises in the league.
For a young reporter, it was like getting to cover the Cold War from both sides of the Berlin Wall.
You know by now that Johnson fleeced Vikings GM Mike Lynn, that Walker didn't fit into the offense run by coach Jerry Burns, and that the Vikings gave up eight draft picks and five players to land Walker.
What I'll offer are some memories that might not make it into the national documentaries and retrospectives.
In 1989, the NFL felt much more like a mom-and-pop corner grocery than the elaborately choreographed multibillion-dollar business it has become.
I had covered high school sports in Dallas, and transitioning to the Cowboys' Valley Ranch facility wasn't difficult. It was often easier to line up an interview with Johnson or owner Jerry Jones than a famous high school coach.