The Minnesota Vikings tweaked their main leadership group last Friday, firing general manager Kwesi Adofo-Mensah and, for the time being, replacing him with Vice President of Football Operations Rob Brzezinski. Kevin O’Connell and Brian Flores are expected to have more personnel input, which means one thing: O’Connell is certifiably on the hot seat.
As the Vikings recalibrate authority at the top, O’Connell enters a season where results will carry more weight than you might expect.
O’Connell basically has a one-season trial to prove he’s the right man to hold most of the power.
Kevin O’Connell’s 2026 Season Is a Referendum
It’s quite the change in leadership for Minnesota.
Adofo-Mensah Out
The Vikings canned their top boss, and The Athletic‘s Alec Lewis opined, “For weeks, executives and coaches inside the Vikings’ building and throughout the NFL had speculated that Adofo-Mensah’s job could be in jeopardy, even after he received an extension last offseason and even though the Vikings produced a 43-25 record over his four seasons.”
“While Adofo-Mensah had close personal relationships with many players and staffers, questions about his job status persisted for several reasons. Only four of Adofo-Mensah’s 28 draft picks are surefire starters for the future, a paltry return.”
Adofo-Mensah’s draft record alone mandated a change.
Lewis continued. “The team’s 2025 quarterback plan, following a 14-win season, contributed to a playoff-less finish at the same time former quarterback Sam Darnold was leading the Seattle Seahawks to the Super Bowl. Adofo-Mensah’s Wall Street-trading background created skepticism among some football people inside and outside the organization that never completely faded.”
“And tension had spilled over between Adofo-Mensah and key members of the coaching staff, who questioned his experience to do the job.”
Without an immediate search for a replacement, O’Connell wields more power than ever.
A Trial of Sorts for O’Connell
Ready for the Spider-Man quote? With great power comes great responsibility.
That’s where O’Connell is as he enters the 2026 offseason. He’ll probably be in charge of the roster more than ever, but that doesn’t mean he’s free and clear. With Adofo-Mensah out of the way, the urgency for O’Connell to win now spikes.
Imagine this: the Vikings, having fired Adofo-Mensah, embark on the 2026 season, fresh with roster additions orchestrated by O’Connell and Flores. For their troubles, the team encounters a losing season, somewhere in the ballpark of 6-11 or 7-10, as the J.J. McCarthy experiment fundamentally flopped.
Do you really think that the Wilfs would just waltz into the 2027 offseason with the same leadership personnel and structure? Nope — O’Connell will be on the hot seat. He must prove that his ways are optimal. He’s already entering Year No. 5 with zero playoff wins. He needs to reach the postseason tournament and probably win at least one game. Most head coaches don’t see a Year No. 5 without a playoff dub on their resume.
SI.com‘s Will Ragatz noted this week, “O’Connell is the Vikings’ head coach, but he’s also essentially the CEO of the organization. After ownership, everything the team does moving forward begins with O’Connell. He’s going to be the one leading the most important item on the franchise’s agenda this offseason, which is how to address the quarterback position by either bringing in a high-level starter or adding competition for McCarthy.”
“He’ll have major influence on free agent signing and possible trades, especially involving players on the offensive side of the ball. And when it comes time to make draft picks in late April, it feels safe to assume O’Connell will have the final say in the war room.”
This … Rarely Works
In the last half-decade, the Tennessee Titans and Carolina Panthers have fired their general managers while keeping their head coach. Months later, the head coach was also fired.
Most teams don’t do this — fire the GM and retain the head coach. It’s mainly because the next general manager wants to pick his head coach, and rightfully so: that person’s job and legacy are tied to the head coach, and it’s arguably his most crucial decision overall.
For a moment down the stretch of 2025, it seemed the Miami Dolphins would try the general manager-only termination approach. A few weeks later, Mike McDaniel was canned, too.
The Vikings are travelling down a usually unsuccessful path, keeping the head coach but getting rid of the general manager. History shows that this typically ends poorly for the head coach.
Coaching Candidates if the Experiment Flops
Peeking around the bend and assuming a doomsday scenario: O’Connell fits the historical pattern of head coaches not succeeding after the general manager’s termination. Believe it or not, the Vikings’ head coach options in 2027 would be pretty impressive. A list could look like this:
- Brian Flores
- Kliff Kingsbury
- Mike McDaniel
- Nate Scheelhaase
- Chris Shula
- Mike Tomlin
- Grant Udinski
On Tomlin, it’s worth noting that the Vikings would have to fire off a trade to the Steelers, not unlike the Denver Broncos and New Orleans Saints in 2023 for Sean Payton.
O’Connell essentially has to win now. He doesn’t have the leeway to kick back and try a new four-year plan.
