Viktor
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- Mar 19, 2019
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When fans and viewers tuned into the 2020 NFL Draft, they saw Vikings General Manager Rick Spielman working the draft from his Minnesota home, while Vikings Head Coach Mike Zimmer was stationed at his ranch in Kentucky.
The Vikings draft was a lengthy one — with a seven-round record of 15 picks — and also a smooth operation. The virtual three-day event seemingly went off without a hitch, despite hundreds of coaches, scouts and front-office personnel spread apart and on their own across the country.
Greg Bishop of Sports Illustrated recently profiled Minnesota's entire draft operation and the incredible work that the IT department and others executed.
Bishop wrote:
The preparations began last spring, unknowingly, when Cheryl Nygaard (information technology director) and Paul Nelson (information systems director) and their employees put together a business continuity plan. This report examined the infrastructure already in place, while planning for upgrades and improvements over the next five years. It even had a section on how the Vikings would handle a natural disaster, should some event occur that would force the entire organization to function remotely.
Like, well, a global pandemic.
When the novel coronavirus shut down the sports world in mid-March, the Vikings were more ready than most, and they moved quickly to implement creative solutions.
Bishop delved into the relentless and ever-changing preparations that the Nygaard, Nelson and numerous others conquered over the past month or so.
The Vikings initially moved their draft operation to a vacant office building in Eagan, but government orders forced them to change those plans. So Minnesota's staff relocated to a hotel at the Mall of America, with Spielman living full-time at the hotel for almost a month.
Everyone then changed course again because of a league mandate that employees must work from their homes.
Nygaard ran point at Spielman's house, making sure he was easily connected to the 31 other general managers and also helping update the Vikings draft board as picks trickled in. Nelson helped Spielman feel as if he was in Twin Cities Orthopedics Performance Center, building the GM a smaller replica of the Vikings state-of-the-art draft board for his home.
The end result was a multitude of collaboration between dozens of people to help the Vikings pull off a successful draft haul.
Bishop wrote:
Most pundits placed the Vikings among their draft "winners," or graded Spielman with As and A-s … and Spielman knew exactly who to credit beyond the usual folks, like his coaches and his scouts.
"You rarely hear about the work that the IT department does," Spielman says. "But to me, they were the heroes of this draft."
Bishop's full feature on Minnesota's draft process can be found here.