The relentlessly breathless NFL news cycle began normal enough for Vikings fans at 6:25 Tuesday morning when someone tweeted a photo of Bengals defensive coordinator Mike Zimmer checking in with a Minneapolis gate agent inside the Cincinnati airport.
It was official. The front-runner among 10 candidates in General Manager Rick Spielman's three-week search to replace fired head coach Leslie Frazier was on his way to the Twin Cities for a second interview that would include team owners Zygi and Mark Wilf.
By 10:30 a.m., reporters began to gather outside the team's Winter Park facility. Helicopter TV coverage was put on hold, meaning the 57-year-old Zimmer's impending arrival wouldn't rise to the level of Brett Favre's welcoming party in 2009. But there were cameras on hand to capture the man who soon could become only the ninth head coach in the Vikings' 64-year history.
Shortly after 11 a.m., a local television station had posted video of a black Town Car with Zimmer inside pulling into Winter Park. Zimmer went inside the building and then, well … nothing. At least no decisions were made as of late Tuesday.
Hours passed with Zimmer and the Vikings still inside the building. No word from the team was passed to the outside world. No puffs of smoke. No response to multiple messages left for Spielman.
The day ended with Zimmer as neither the head coach nor out of the running. Contacted as he was entering the elevator in the lobby of his hotel shortly before 10 p.m., Zimmer said the Vikings had not offered him the job.
Meanwhile, as Zimmer and the Vikings holed up inside team headquarters, the endless NFL news cycle churned furiously outside.
In Tennessee, Ken Whisenhunt, the offensive mind that led the historically moribund Cardinals franchise to its only Super Bowl appearance during the 2008 season, was introduced as Titans head coach. Discussion quickly shifted to who his coordinators will be.