Leslie Frazier was walking off the field following a Thursday practice the week before Christmas. Already sensing the firing that would come 11 days later, the then-Vikings coach took a moment to elaborate on a national radio interview he gave in which he denounced the lack of patience being practiced by most NFL owners and general managers.
"Today's NFL is a different deal," Frazier said. "You're trying to develop young rosters [because of the salary cap]. It's hard to keep a veteran-laden team. You need time to develop these young guys. And some coaches are fired after one year?"
At the time, 77 NFL head coaches had been fired since 2000. That number has grown to 83 — 5.9 a season — since the end of the regular season and includes not only Frazier, but Rob Chudzinski, whose stay in Cleveland lasted all of 344 days.
Chudzinski's quick exit wasn't even unusual. In fact, it marked the sixth time in six years that a coach was fired after one season. And that doesn't include Lane Kiffin, who managed to survive 20 games with the Oakland Raiders.
On that Thursday before Christmas, Frazier also talked about the crème de la crème job that Mike Tomlin, his predecessor as Vikings defensive coordinator, landed in 2007. Tomlin was 34 when the Rooney family hired him as Pittsburgh Steelers coach. If nearly half a century of tradition continues, Tomlin will remain there until he chooses to retire.
The Steelers have won a league-high six Super Bowls in eight appearances. They also haven't fired a head coach since 1968, when Bill Austin was removed to make room for Chuck Noll.
"The Rooneys, they get it," Frazier said. "Patience."
They got it. But it's sure not contagious.