Mike Zimmer didn't carry his team-issued iPad into the woods when a bye week finally allowed him to go hunting. But he did spend some of the past few nights off lounging in front of the wood-burning stove in his barn, scrolling through cut-ups of game tape of both his Vikings and their upcoming opponents.
While Zimmer's mind didn't stray far from his team, it seems even coaches need a break from the grind, too.
"He told us [last week] his plan was to get away from here and get away from us," safety Harrison Smith said. "Then [he told us], 'Come back and be ready to go.' "
Zimmer, sitting in front of that fire, was eager to see if his young team would listen.
Dating to organized team activities in the spring, he noticed an unwelcome trend with the Vikings whenever they got extended time away from Winter Park. His players lacked focus when they came back into the building, and that wasted precious time because Zimmer had to bring them back up to his speed.
So when the players walked back into the building on Monday morning for the first time in six days, Zimmer reminded them again that he hoped not to see many mental miscues during practice.
"I was curious to find out how they were mentally with their techniques, their footwork, their hand placements, the splits, everything that they did," Zimmer said. "And actually I was impressed today, and I don't get impressed much."
The energy on the practice field and the attention to detail after the bye week was critical for the Vikings, who can't afford any lapses when they travel to play the last-place Chicago Bears this weekend. They entered the bye week with back-to-back victories that buoyed their hopes.