Wednesday, February 25, 2026

2026 Minnesota Vikings Coaching Staff

On the eve of the 2026 Scouting Combine, the Minnesota Vikings released their roster of coaches for the 2026 season. The weeks of patiently tracking the additions and subtractions and piecing the staff together are finally over. It’s done and I can move to the next phase of the Vikings offseason. 

In total, eight coaches departed:

Mike Pettine - Assistant Head Coach - retired
Michael Hutchings - Assistant DBs Coach - swiped by Cal
Chris Kuper - Offensive Line Coach - contract expired 
Marcus Dixon - Defensive Line Coach - contract expired
Daronte Jones - DBs/Pass Game Coordinator - swiped by Washington Commanders
Imarjaye Albury - Assistant DL Coach - swiped by Texas Tech
Tony Sorrentino: Assistant Receivers Coach - swiped by Arizona Cardinals
Brian Angelichio: TEs/Pass Game Coordinator - swiped by Pittsburgh Steelers

Seven new coaches were hired:

Frank Smith - Assistant Head Coach
Gerald Alexander - DB/Pass Game Coordinator 
Ryan Nielsen - DL/Run Game Coordinator
Derek Warehime - Assistant Offensive Line
Chili Davis - Assistant Special Teams
Kyle Caskey - Offensive QC
Will Johnson - Defensive Assistant 

Apparently, the Vikings will have one fewer coach than they had last season. 27 is still much more than the handful of coaches that got things done for Bud Grant. The league has changed greatly in the last 50 years. One of those changes is the incredible increase in size of coaching staffs across all level of football. A Vikings player roster of 53 players has 27 coaches. That’s a cozy situation of only two players for every coach. Even if you throw in the 16-member practice squad it’s an incredibly small player:coach ratio. Bud Grant spent much of his retirement years wondering what all of the coaches did on the rapidly growing staffs. During my brief and modest playing days, the coaches could comfortably fit in a Fiat while the players filled two school buses.

The remaining coaching changes on Kevin O’Connell’s fifth Vikings coaching staff were a handful of shuffles and promotions. Here’s what we have. 

Minnesota Vikings Coaching Staff

Head Coach: Kevin O’Connell

Assistant Head Coach: Frank Smith
Offensive Coordinator: Wes Phillips
Defensive Coordinator: Brian Flores
Special Teams Coordinator: Matt Daniels

Offense:

QBs/Pass Game Coordinator: Josh McCown
Assistant QB/Pass Game Specialist: Jordan Traylor
Assistant Offensive Coordinator: Chris O’Hara
RBs/Run Game Coordinator: Curtis Modkins
Receivers: Keenan McCardell
Assistant Receivers: Derron Montgomery
TEs/Pass Game Coordinator: Ryan Cordell
Offensive Line: Keith Carter
Assistant Offensive Line: Derek Warehime
Offensive Quality Control: Kyle Caskey
Offensive Assistant: Ben Ellefson
Assistant to the Head Coach: Henry Schneider IV

Defense:

DL/Run Game Coordinator: Ryan Nielsen
Assistant Defensive Line: Patrick Hill
Outside LBs: Thad Bogardus
Inside LBs/Senior Defensive Assistant: Mike Siravo 
Assistant LBs: Dalmin Gibson
DBs/Pass Game Coordinator: Gerald Alexander
Assistant DBs: Chenzo Funari
Defensive Assistant: Charlie Frye
Defensive Assistant: Will Johnson

Special Teams:

Assistant Special Teams: Chili Davis





Tuesday, February 24, 2026

NFL Title Tracker

Through the 2025 season, there have been 106 NFL champions. Technically, there have been 104 NFL Champions as the professional football league that we know as the National Football League was called the American Professional Football Association (APFA) in 1920 and 1921. 


From 1920 to 1932, the APFA/NFL champion was the team with the best regular season record, pending the approval of the league’s owners. Here are those champions.


NFL Champions


1920: Akron Pros

1921: Chicago Staleys (Bears)

1922: Canton Bulldogs

1923: Canton Bulldogs

1924: Cleveland Bulldogs

1925: Chicago Cardinals

1926: Frankford Yellow Jackets

1927: New York Giants

1928: Providence Steam Roller

1929: Green Bay Packers

1930: Green Bay Packers

1931: Green Bay Packers

1932: Chicago Bears


The 1932 NFL title was an historical pivot point for the young league. At the completion of the regular season, the Chicago Bears and Portsmouth Spartans (today’s Detroit Lions) were tied. The Bears were 6-1-6 and the Spartans were 6-1-4. In those years, ties were dropped when determining the best record. In those low-scoring years, there were a lot of ties. The Bears and Spartans played in a quickly arranged game to determine the 1932 NFL Champion. This game would change professional football more than any game ever played. The rule changes that came out of this game is a story by itself. The most obvious change, and the only change that matters here, was the addition of an NFL Championship Game to the league schedule.


NFL Championship Games


1933: Chicago Bears 23

          New York Giants 21


1934: New York Giants 30

          Chicago Bears 13


1935: Detroit Lions 26

          New York Giants 7


1936: Green Bay Packers 21

          Boston Redskins 6


1937: Washington Redskins 28

          Chicago Bears 21


1938: New York Giants 23

          Green Bay Packers 17


1939: Green Bay Packers 27

          New York Giants 0


1940: Chicago Bears 73

          Washington Redskins 0


1941: Chicago Bears 37

          New York Giants 9


1942: Washington Redskins 14

          Chicago Bears 6


1943: Chicago Bears 41

          Washington Redskins 21


1944: Green Bay Packers 14

          New York Giants 7


1945: Cleveland Rams 15

          Washington Redskins 14


1946: Chicago Bears 24

          New York Giants 14


1947: Chicago Cardinals 28

          Philadelphia Eagles 21


1948: Philadelphia Eagles 7

          Chicago Cardinals 0


1949: Philadelphia Eagles 14

          Los Angeles Rams 0


1950: Cleveland Browns 30

          Los Angeles Rams 28


At this point, I must introduce the All-America Football Conference. The NFL was challenged by “another league” on several occasions through its 106 years. Most everyone knows about the American Football League. There were actually three of those. Red Grange and his squirrelly agent C.C. “Cash and Carry” Pyle formed the first AFL in 1926. It wasn’t successful and Grange was soon back with the Bears. There was an AFL in the 1940s. That was less successful than the first one. Then there’s the AFL in the 1960s. That was a success as all of the teams from that league are now members of the NFL. The All-America Football Conference was formed in 1946. As players returned home from World War II and the country returned to some degree of normalcy, a few football dreamers decided that there was room for two leagues. The AAFC rivaled the NFL for four seasons. If success of “another league” is measured by its eventual absorption into the NFL, the AAFC was a partial success. The Cleveland Browns, San Francisco 49ers, and Baltimore Colts joined the NFL in 1950. The Colts team that joined the NFL in 1950 is not the Colts team that’s playing in Indianapolis today. It’s not even the Colts team that won titles for Baltimore in the late 1950s. The Colts team that joined the NFL in 1950 folded after a single season. The Colts team that’s playing in Indianapolis today finds it’s origins with the New York Yanks franchise that floundered in 1951, moved to Dallas, became the Texans, and folded after the 1952 season. That Yanks/Texans franchise was re-born as the Baltimore Colts in 1953. The absorption of the Browns and 49ers from the AAFC in 1950 and the nutty Colts addition would change the NFL title landscape. The incredibly talented Browns team would do so immediately. The Colts would do so quickly. The 49ers would eventually have their title run. 


1951: Los Angeles Rams 24

          Cleveland Browns 17


1952: Detroit Lions 17

          Cleveland Browns 7


1953: Detroit Lions 17 

          Cleveland Browns16


1954: Cleveland Browns 56

          Detroit Lions 10


1955: Cleveland Browns 38

          Los Angeles Rams 14


1956: New York Giants 47

          Chicago Bears 7


1957: Detroit Lions 59

          Cleveland Browns 14


1958: Baltimore Colts 23

          New York Giants 17


1959: Baltimore Colts 31

          New York Giants 16


Here, we must depart from the NFL titles to introduce the AFL titles. The American Football League joined the football fun in 1960 with eight teams peppered about the country. The eight owners, the “Foolish Club,” were determined and wealthy. Some were very, very wealthy. They also had a TV contract and they knew how to use it. The eight owners weren’t foolish. By the end of the decade, all eight teams and two teams added along the way would become part of the NFL. 


AFL Championship Games


1960: Houston Oilers 24

          Los Angeles Chargers 16


1961: Houston Oilers 10

          San Diego Chargers 3


1962: Dallas Texans 20 

          Houston Oilers 17


1963: San Diego Chargers 51

          Boston Patriots 10


1964: Buffalo Bills 20

          San Diego Chargers 7


1965: Buffalo Bills 23

          San Diego Chargers 0


1966: Kansas City Chiefs 31

          Buffalo Bills 7


1967: Oakland Raiders 40

          Houston Oilers 7

    

1968: New York Jets 27

          Oakland Raiders 23


1969: Kansas City Chiefs 17

          Oakland Raiders 7


Back to the NFL Championship Games


NFL Championship Games


1960: Philadelphia Eagles 17

          Green Bay Packers 13


1961: Green Bay Packers 37

          New York Giants 0


1962: Green Bay Packers 16

          New York Giants 7


1963: Chicago Bears 14

          New York Giants 10


1964: Cleveland Browns 27

          Baltimore Colts 0


1965: Green Bay Packers 23

          Cleveland Browns 12


1966: Green Bay Packers 34

          Dallas Cowboys 27


1967: Green Bay Packers 21

          Dallas Cowboys 17


1968: Baltimore Colts 34

          Cleveland Browns 0


1969: Minnesota Vikings 27

          Cleveland Browns 7



The NFL and AFL agreed to merge in June of 1966. Since the two leagues didn’t fully merge until the 1970 season, it would seem that the only thing to come out of the 1966 agreement was to hold a championship game between the two leagues. There was much more to it than that. Pete Rozelle became the commissioner of both leagues, there was a combined draft, and the junior league adopted the same playing rules of the senior league. The AFL competed their final four seasons under the umbrella of the NFL. The only thing kept separate between the two leagues was their regular season and playoffs. At the end of the 1966 season, the champions of the NFL played the champions of the AFL for the first time. The game had names like “World Championship Game” or “AFL-NFL World Championship.” That game wasn’t called the “Super Bowl.” Neither was the 1967 game. Kansas City Chiefs owner Lamar Hunt came up with “Super Bowl” as the name for the game. He was inspired by the Wham-o Super Ball toy that thrilled his children. One of those children is current Chiefs owner Clark Hunt. I’ve heard various tales as to when “Super Bowl” was officially put into use. Supposedly, it became the official name during the 1968 season. However, the ticket of what should be Super Bowl III had “Third World Championship Game” printed on it. Perhaps the tickets were printed before the decision was made. Who knows? Sometimes, I feel like I’m the only one that even cares. All of the games are Super Bowls now. Through the 2025 season, there have been 60 Super Bowls. Here are those games and the NFL champions from 1966-2021.


1966

Super Bowl I

Green Bay Packers 35

Kansas City Chiefs 10


1967

Super Bowl II

Green Bay Packers 33

Oakland Raiders 14


1968

Super Bowl III

New York Jets 16

Baltimore Colts 7


1969

Super Bowl IV

Kansas City Chiefs 23

Minnesota Vikings 7


1970

Super Bowl V

Baltimore Colts 16

Dallas Cowboys 13


1971

Super Bowl VI

Dallas Cowboys 24

Miami Dolphins 3


1972

Super Bowl VII

Miami Dolphins 14

Washington Redskins 7




1973

Super Bowl VIII

Miami Dolphins 24

Minnesota Vikings 7


1974

Super Bowl IX

Pittsburgh Steelers 16

Minnesota Vikings 6



1975

Super Bowl X

Pittsburgh Steelers 21

Dallas Cowboys 17


1976

Super Bowl XI

Oakland Raiders 32

Minnesota Vikings 14


1977

Super Bowl XII

Dallas Cowboys 27

Denver Broncos 10


1978 

Super Bowl XIII

Pittsburgh Steelers 35

Dallas Cowboys 31


1979 

Super Bowl XIV

Pittsburgh Steelers 31

Los Angeles Rams 19


1980 

Super Bowl XV

Oakland Raiders 27

Philadelphia Eagles 10


1981

Super Bowl XVI

San Francisco 49ers 26

Cincinnati Bengals 21


1982

Super Bowl XVII

Washington Redskins 27

Miami  Dolphins 17


1983

Super Bowl XVIII

Los Angeles Raiders 38

Washington Redskins 9


1984

Super Bowl XIX

San Francisco 49ers 38

Miami Dolphins 16


1985

Super Bowl XX

Chicago Bears 46

New England Patriots 10


1986 

Super Bowl XXI

New York Giants 39

Denver Broncos 20


1987

Super Bowl XXII

Washington Redskins 42

Denver Broncos 10


1988 

Super Bowl XXIII

San Francisco 49ers 20

Cincinnati Bengals 16


1989 

Super Bowl XXIV

San Francisco 49ers 55

Denver Broncos 10


1990

Super Bowl XXV

New York Giants 20

Buffalo Bills 19


1991

Super Bowl XXVI

Washington Redskins 37

Buffalo Bills 24


1992 

Super Bowl XXVII

Dallas Cowboys 52

Buffalo Bills 17


1993

Super Bowl XVIII

Dallas Cowboys 30

Buffalo Bills 13


1994

Super Bowl XXIX

San Francisco 49ers 49

San Diego Chargers 26


1995

Super Bowl XXX

Dallas Cowboys 27

Pittsburgh Steelers 17


1996

Super Bowl XXXI

Green Bay Packers 35

New England Patriots 21


1997

Super Bowl XXXII

Denver Broncos 31

Green Bay Packers 24

1998

Super Bowl XXXIII

Denver Broncos 34

Atlanta Falcons 19


1999

Super Bowl XXXIV

St. Louis Rams 23

Tennessee Titans 16


2000

Super Bowl XXXV

Baltimore Ravens 34

New York Giants 7


2001

Super Bowl XXXVI

New England Patriots 20

Los Angeles Rams 17


2002

Super Bowl XXXVII

Tampa Bay Buccaneers 48

Oakland Raiders 21


2003

Super Bowl XXXVIII

New England Patriots 32

Carolina Panthers 29


2004

Super Bowl XXXIX

New England Patriots 24

Philadelphia Eagles 21


2005

Super Bowl XL

Pittsburgh Steelers 21

Seattle Seahawks 10


2006

Super Bowl XLI

Indianapolis Colts 29

Chicago Bears 17


2007

Super Bowl XLII

New York Giants 17

New England Patriots 14


2008

Super Bowl XLIII

Pittsburgh Steelers 27

Arizona Cardinals 23


2009

Super Bowl XLIV

New Orleans Saints 31

Indianapolis Colts 17


2010

Super Bowl XLV

Green Bay Packers 31

Pittsburgh Steelers 25


2011

Super Bowl XLVI

New York Giants 21

New England Patriots 17


2012

Super Bowl XLVII

Baltimore Ravens 34

San Francisco 49ers 31


2013

Super Bowl XLVIII

Seattle Seahawks 43

Denver Broncos 8


2014

Super Bowl XLIX

New England Patriots 28

Seattle Seahawks 24


2015

Super Bowl L

Denver Broncos 24

Carolina Panthers 10


2016

Super Bowl LI

New England Patriots 34

Atlanta Falcons 28


2017

Super Bowl LII

Philadelphia Eagles 41

New England Patriots 33


2018

Super Bowl LIII

New England Patriots 13

Los Angeles Rams 3


2019

Super Bowl LIV

Kansas City Chiefs 31

San Francisco 49ers 20


2020

Super Bowl LV

Tampa Bay Buccaneers 31

Kansas City Chiefs 9


2021 

Super Bowl LVI

Los Angeles Rams 23

Cincinnati Bengals 20


2022

Super Bowl LVII

Kansas City Chiefs 38

Philadelphia Eagles 35


2023

Super Bowl LVIII

Kansas City Chiefs 25

San Francisco 49ers 22


Super Bowl LIX

Philadelphia Eagles 40

Kansas City Chiefs 22


Super Bowl LX

Seattle Seahawks 29

New England Patriots 13


NFL Title Tally

13 Green Bay Packers

  9 Chicago Bears

  8 New York Giants 

  6 New England Patriots

  6 Pittsburgh Steelers

  5 Philadelphia Eagles 

  5 San Francisco 49ers

  5 Dallas Cowboys

  5 Washington Commanders

  4 Kansas City Chiefs

  4 Los Angeles Rams

  4 Cleveland Browns

  4 Indianapolis Colts

  4 Detroit Lions

  3 Denver Broncos

  3 Las Vegas Raiders

  3 Canton/Cleveland Bulldogs

  2 Seattle Seahawks

  2 Miami Dolphins

  2 Arizona Cardinals 

  2 Baltimore Ravens 

  2 Tampa Bay Buccaneers

  1 New Orleans Saints

  1 New York Jets 

  1 Providence Steam Roller

  1 Frankford Yellow Jackets

  1 Akron Pros