The Vikings were not the first team to inquire this offseason about making Philadelphia Eagles quarterbacks coach John DeFilippo their new offensive coordinator. By the time they lost the NFC Championship Game to the Eagles, and they knew they'd need someone to fill the job after Pat Shurmur became the New York Giants head coach, they would have to wait until after the Super Bowl even to speak with DeFilippo.
But when coach Mike Zimmer and General Manager Rick Spielman sat down with DeFilippo in Philadelphia on Thursday night, hours after the Eagles celebrated their first Super Bowl championship with a parade down Broad Street, they knew they had his attention.
"There were a few other opportunities to be an offensive coordinator in the league — I'm not going to name names — but when the Minnesota Vikings want to talk to you, that's a whole different ballgame," DeFilippo said Friday. "As an offensive coach, I've never been more on edge game-planning for a defense than them the last two years."
Now, DeFilippo will be in charge of helping the Vikings get past the team he just helped win a Lombardi Trophy.
The 39-year-old, who becomes an NFL offensive coordinator for the second time in his career, will succeed Shurmur as the Vikings offense enters a pivotal offseason. The new Vikings coordinator said he will "have as much say as they want me to" in the team's quarterback decision between three potential in-house free agents (Sam Bradford, Teddy Bridgewater and Case Keenum) and outside options, though he stressed the importance of the QB being "something we all agree on."
DeFilippo demurred when asked which quarterback he has coached — from Derek Carr and Carson Wentz to Nick Foles and Josh McCown — best epitomized what he's looking for in his offense.
But he made it clear a few things are non-negotiable: character, decision-making ability, timing and accuracy. And, he said, his quarterbacks have to be athletic.
"I am not a big believer in quarterbacks that are sticks in the mud back there; they're in cement back there at 7½ yards deep," he said. "Our quarterbacks are going to need to show some form of athleticism, yes."