MANKATO – As the Vikings trickled off the practice field at Minnesota State Mankato and biked back to Sears Hall one final time to pack up their things and head back up Hwy. 169 to the Twin Cities, there didn't seem to be much sadness about coach Mike Zimmer's first training camp coming to a close.
That's not to say the players didn't appreciate the hospitality, the catered meals in the dorms and the sunburned, autograph-seeking fans (they did).
Or that Zimmer overworked them (he didn't).
It's just that the conclusion of camp puts them one step closer to the regular season and a new chapter of Vikings football.
And, well, it allows them to sleep in their plush, king-size beds again.
Zimmer described his first training camp as an NFL head coach as "productive," and he accomplished many of the things on his checklist, answered a number of pressing questions and climbed into his truck knowing that his team departed Mankato relatively healthy.
"Hopefully I learned something every day about this team, but they haven't disappointed me. They have been very willing to do whatever," Zimmer said. "I like this team; they are good guys and they work real hard. As long as we play together as a team, we play real hard, we do the things that we are trying to coach them to do, then we have a chance to be a good football team."
No, Zimmer's first camp wasn't anything out of Van Brocklin's playbook or a Hollywood script. There were no grueling two-a-days. No devastating collisions. No practicing until players puked. Sure, the collective bargaining agreement played a major role in that. But as it turns out, the gruff guy we thought we saw on "Hard Knocks" a few years back is much more compassionate — and much savvier — than given credit for.