1. Bert Rose (1961-63)
2. Jim Finks (1964-73)
3. Mike Lynn (1975-90)
4. Jeff Diamond (1991-98)
5. Rick Spielman (2012-21)
6. Kwesi Adofo-Mensah (2022-25)
7. Nolan Teasley (2026-present)
Rob Brzezinski spent the past offseason as the interim general manager.
Unfortunately, the Vikings don’t have a sparkling GM tradition. Jim Finks and Rick Spielman were the only ones that brought legitimate scouting and team-building experience to the job. Nolan Teasley will be third. Bert Rose was brought in from the Los Angeles Rams after the Vikings franchise was granted. His role was really just to get the team going. He picked the team’s color scheme and name. When it came to selecting players, Joe Thomas was director of player personnel. He built the franchise’s first teams. The Vikings first true general manager in name and work was Finks. He was outstanding as he built the teams that went to four Super Bowls. He has a bust in Canton as one of the best team-builders in NFL history. When Finks left the Vikings in 1973, it started 24 yeas of general manager incompetence in Minnesota. Mike Lynn was a businessman. Maybe he was a good one. He was an idiot when came to football. Jeff Diamond wasn’t a football guy either as he started in public relations. Fortunately coaches and scouting mainstays Jerry Reichow, Frank Gilliam, and later Scott Studwell made most of the draft decisions during that time. When Lynn took at crack at football, it was often a disaster (Herschel Walker trade). After Diamond departed, personnel decisions were made by a collaboration of coaches, a player personnel person, and Rob Brzezinski. In 2012, the Vikings finally returned to an actual football guy as general manager when Spielman was given the title and responsibilities. When his time ran it’s course, the Vikings decided to take a big swing in hiring an analytics guy as the general manager. The hiring of Kwesi Adofo-Mensah resulted in one terrible draft and three suspect drafts. It was a gamble that didn’t work. That led to Brzezinski stepping up this offseason as the the Vikings interim general manager.
Now, it’s Nolan Teasley’s turn. Hopefully, his run is like that of Jim Finks. Just with Super Bowl wins rather than the four losses.