Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Confidence a plus for Vikings’ coach

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EAGAN, Minn. — Confidence might be the most critical of the ingredient­s necessary for coaching in the NFL, working in a high-stakes league and such a high-intensity sport.

That’s the gist of how Karl Scott got the job with the Minnesota Vikings before this season as their defensive backs coach, a first-timer in the NFL who worked his way through the college ranks with stops at seven programs over his first 14 years in the business.

His interest was sparked while playing at McMurry University, an NCAA Division III program in Abilene, Texas, then coached by Steve Keenum. Scott realized his limitation­s on the field and his desire to stay in the game, so he sought Keenum’s advice and insight one day over lunch.

Keenum told him to pick five schools he’d be interested in coaching for.

“Me being naive, I was like, ‘Texas, LSU and everybody else,’ ” Scott said. “He handed me the list back and said, ‘Hey, Karl, it’s great to have aspiration­s, but you also want to get somewhere where you can gain some experience.’ ”

He started as a volunteer at Hardin-Simmons, another Division III program across town, while finishing his exercise and sports studies degree at McMurry. Thus began a fascinatin­g journey into the fast-paced and minimal-sleep lifestyle of football coaching.

The head coach at Hardin-Simmons was Jimmie Keeling, who was 71 at the time. He was impressed enough by Scott’s work to give him a $1,000 check and some life-changing encouragem­ent.

“He said, ‘I see something in you. Keep on doing what you’re doing, and you’ll be the head coach of the Green Bay Packers one day,’ ” Scott said in an interview after Vikings practice earlier this season, acknowledg­ing the awkwardnes­s of that anecdote after breaking into the league with a longtime rival of the Packers.

The Houston native has had a wide range of personalit­ies and abilities to work with, from the 14 combined Pro Bowl selections for cornerback Patrick Peterson and safety Harrison Smith to the on-the-job-training struggles of cornerback­s Cameron Dantzler and Kris Boyd.

There has been a steady stream of setbacks to navigate, from injuries to covid-19 absences to the surprise release of starter Bashaud Breeland last month.

“Coach Karl stepped into the room like he’s been here for 10 or 12 years,” Peterson said. “He does a great job of communicat­ing with players, making sure that we’re more than prepared when we step out on the field.”

The fact that Scott’s first NFL job came with the Vikings stands as one of those intriguing connection­s in his budding career that can only make him smile, whether coincident­al, fateful or somewhere in between.

Keenum is the father of Case Keenum, who quarterbac­ked the Vikings to the NFC Championsh­ip game four years ago. When Scott was a freshman in 2003, he stayed on campus during Thanksgivi­ng break and had his holiday dinner at the Keenum family home when Case was a sophomore in high school.

One of Scott’s colleagues at Hardin-Simmons helped hook him up with his first real job, as a graduate assistant at Division II Delta State in Mississipp­i in 2007. There he worked under co-defensive coordinato­r Dave Aranda, now the head coach at Baylor.

Then-Delta State head coach Ron Roberts recommende­d Scott for an assistant’s position at Division II Tusculum in Tennessee, where Pete Golding — a future colleague of his at Alabama — was the defensive coordinato­r.

Four seasons at Tusculum led to his first Division I opportunit­y and three years under Roberts at Southeaste­rn Louisiana, where he became defensive coordinato­r for the first time in 2014. Then came his first FBS job at Louisiana Tech in 2015, followed by his first crack at a power conference program with two years at Texas Tech.

Hired after the 2017 season to be the defensive coordinato­r at Louisiana-Lafayette under Coach Billy Napier, Scott never coached a game for the Ragin’ Cajuns. That’s because Golding called, looking to fill out the defensive staff under Coach Nick Saban with the hallowed Crimson Tide.

Three years learning under Saban at Alabama, where he tutored future NFL standouts Patrick Surtain II and Trevon Diggs, was enough to catch the attention of the Vikings when their vacancy in the secondary opened a year ago.

“Every piece of the journey I’ve been on, I’ve picked up valuable experience. That foundation really helped me, looking back now,” said Scott, who’s married with two children. “Like a lot of us, I didn’t have a father in my life, so those coaches were the first men to kind of reprimand me, correct me, hold me accountabl­e.”

His mother was always there for that, too, including when he was hired at Tusculum at age 22 for a $24,500 salary.

“She said, ‘Karl, do you think you can make it? Is that enough?’” Scott recalled. “I said, ‘That’s more money than I’ve ever had in my life. I know what you raised me on. I’ve seen your W2s.’”

 ?? (AP/Aaron Gash) ?? Karl Scott’s coaching career began with a volunteer position at Division III Hardin-Simmons and held spots at seven schools in his first 14 years. He is now the defensive backs coach with the Minnesota Vikings.
(AP/Aaron Gash) Karl Scott’s coaching career began with a volunteer position at Division III Hardin-Simmons and held spots at seven schools in his first 14 years. He is now the defensive backs coach with the Minnesota Vikings.

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