Coach Fired After His Team Won

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Kramer
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Coach Fired After His Team Won

Post by Kramer »

a Bizarre thing happen in Minnesota
--After the vikings football team won 34-10 against chicago.
Mike Tice the vikings coach was fired right after the game
Laughing Laughing Laughing he let the team a victory and this is the thanks he got???
its not only him -four other football coaches were fired across the States.
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Post by Advocator »

why?????
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Post by Moguul21 »

EDEN PRAIRIE, Minn. (AP) -- Firing Mike Tice shortly after the season finale has the Minnesota Vikings on a growing line of NFL teams searching for a head coach.

Vowing Monday to pick a replacement quickly, owner Zygi Wilf continued to place his stamp on the franchise he and his fellow investors purchased this summer. Also on the agenda this month is finding a new personnel director to serve as a de facto general manager.

"You see from what is happening around the NFL," Wilf said. "It has become a very competitive field for the pursuit of coaches, and we want to be up there making sure that the person we want, we get."

Some were upset by the timing of Wilf's announcement, made less than an hour after Sunday's meaningless victory over the Chicago Bears with the majority of players and coaches already gone from the stadium. But the move was met with little, if any, surprise following a 9-7 finish marked by inconsistency on the field and scandalous incidents off it.

"There is no easy way, or a good time, to let someone know that their contract will not be renewed," said Wilf, who repeatedly praised Tice for his effort and attitude. "We didn't want him to twist in the wind another night."

Wilf said his mind was not made up until the Vikings were eliminated from playoff contention. After six straight wins to salvage a 2-5 start, they lost at home to Pittsburgh on Dec. 18, and at Baltimore the next week to seal their fate.

Failures on the field are why Tice is out. Not, according to the boss, because of the ticket-scalping caper, that infamous bye-week boat party or any of the other off-field embarrassments that occurred during his four-year tenure. Wilf was also asked if Tice's low approval rating from fans factored in, with the Vikings seeking public support for a new stadium.

"Not at all," Wilf said.

Though there was some sense in the locker room of a need for a fresh start, accountability for Tice's dismissal came from the players.

"We can go out and win," tight end Jermaine Wiggins said. "We've just got to do it consistently."

Tice talked briefly with the team, giving out his phone number in case players wanted to keep in touch and expressing his pride in their refusal to quit when the outlook appeared hopeless in early November.

Later addressing the media, Tice predicted that Minnesota would eventually win that elusive Super Bowl and insisted the Wilf family was on its way to becoming "great owners." He thanked Red McCombs for hiring him in January 2002 with no experience above supervising the offensive line, rattled off several names of people he'll miss working with -- and proudly noted that the Vikings and Seattle are the only two NFC teams to finish .500 or better in each of the last three seasons.

"I think this year that I proved that I worked hard for four years to earn my stripes, and hopefully there will be other organizations around the league that will see it that way," said Tice, who took no questions. "I love to teach. I love to teach."

With vacancies piling up, Tice ought to find some interest around the NFL -- as an offensive coordinator at the very least. His son, Nate, will be a high school senior in the fall, though, which will weigh heavily on Tice's decision to accept a new job.

"When the dust clears down the road, I know that Mike will have some other opportunities come his way," said offensive coordinator Steve Loney, also thrown into flux with the firing.

Minnesota was one of seven teams already in the hunt for a new coach, with the strong possibility of more. First on the priority list for Wilf, though, is adding an executive to head the personnel department. Possibilities are inside and outside the organization, with Philadelphia vice president of player personnel Tom Heckert widely mentioned as one option. Wilf, who confirmed a three-year contract extension for vice president of football operations Rob Brzezinski, declined to comment on Heckert.

The owner said his choice for personnel director would act as a general manager and make final decisions on all roster matters -- and indicated that person would supervise the coaching search he hoped would be completed by the end of the month.

"One of the things I have learned -- and it is a very important element in the future of this ballclub -- will be the necessity of having communication from the top all the way down," Wilf said.
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Post by M.O.H.A »

i think NORV TURNER of the raiders deserved second chance
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Post by First Lady »

Dont tell me it was Coach Carter Crying or Very sad
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