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    Sources: Vikings finalize hire of Wes Phillips as new offensive coordinator

    The Minnesota Vikings are expected to hire Rams passing game coordinator and TEs coach Wes Phillips as their new offensive coordinator.

    The Minnesota Vikings have finalized their hire of Los Angeles Rams tight ends coach and passing game coordinator Wes Phillips as their new offensive coordinator for head coach Kevin O’Connell’s coaching staff, according to league sources not authorized to speak publicly.

    Minnesota Vikings hired Wes Phillips as offensive coordinator

    Phillips’ NFL family is steeped in the rich tradition of the game. His grandfather is the late Houston Oilers coach Bum Phillips. A Texas legend and colorful figure who wore a cowboy hat on the sideline, Bum reached a pair of AFC Championship Games while coaching Hall of Fame running back Earl Campbell.

    And Wade Phillips, Wes’ father, was a head coach with the Buffalo Bills, Dallas Cowboys, and Denver Broncos. He was also one of the top defensive coordinators in NFL history, reaching three Super Bowls and earning one Vince Lombardi Trophy.

    Now, Wes Phillips, 42, is taking his expected to take his talents to Minnesota. He is a well-respected coach and was a key figure in the Rams’ dynamic offensive machine along with head coach Sean McVay, offensive coordinator Kevin O’Connell, quarterback Matthew Stafford, and wide receivers Cooper Kupp and Odell Beckham Jr., leading to a Super Bowl championship.

    Phillips has been preparing for this moment his whole life

    “He’s smart,” Wade Phillips, who lives in Thousand Oaks, California, and attends Rams games with his wife Laurie and daughter Tracie, said before the Super Bowl. “He knows what I know, and he knows what he knows. So he knows a lot, and he’s ahead of me that way. He’s a great coach. I’m living vicariously through Wes. I’m very proud and excited for him, and he’s doing a great job.

    “I’m so happy to be there with him. I wish my dad would have been there for the Super Bowl we won with the Broncos. He was able to be there for the first one I lost. And I just wish he had been there for the one we were able to win over the Panthers. This is very special for us. Wes has worked so hard and is doing really well. He worked his way up in this family profession.”

    A family tradition

    For Wes, his coaching journey began after being born in Houston when grandfather Bum was coaching the Oilers during the Luv Ya Blue era, and Wade was the defensive line coach. Wes played high school football in upstate New York at Williamsville North High School. He then played quarterback at UTEP.

    After playing professionally in the AF2 Arena Football League, he started coaching and hasn’t looked back.

    After starting his coaching career at UTEP, West Texas A&M hired Phillips as a quarterbacks coach. Baylor then hired him for the same position before he moved on to the NFL. Phillips joined his father in Dallas as a quality control offensive assistant.

    Phillips got promoted to assistant offensive line coach under Jason Garrett before working for the Washington franchise as a tight ends coach under Jay Gruden. That’s when he began working with McVay and coached Vernon Davis and Jordan Reed.

    Wes Phillips wanted to be like his dad Wade

    “He got being smart from his mom, not from me,” Wade Phillips said. “He has a real knack for working well with people, and, really, that’s what coaching is all about.”

    Since joining the Rams as a tight ends coach in 2019 and being promoted to passing game coordinator, Wes’ role continued to grow.

    “I just wanted to be like my dad,” Phillips said. “Being around football, you know, kind of learning a lot through osmosis, really, with him, and the conversations I was having as a kid were with an NFL coach, where I was learning a lot of things I didn’t always know I was learning at the time. You end up picking up a lot of things just from those experiences. A lot of my philosophy on coaching is that it’s a teaching job, really, and you’re here to serve the players. All of those things I learned from him.

    “Once I got in the league, his reputation as a man and as a coach has really been good for me, just in the fact that he’s well respected, but also really well-liked by both players and coaches that he worked with. So, when they meet me — until they really get to know me — they think I’m a good guy, too.”

    Phillips’ time in Buffalo extended from high school to college while his father was running the Bills.

    “It was one of those things where you just keep learning over and over that the people make the place,” Phillips said. “It ended up being one of the great stops in dad’s coaching career and my young life.”

    Unique place in NFL history

    The Phillips family is one of only two third-generation coaching families in NFL history, including the Don Shula family tree.

    “Whatever his great grandparents did, what’s in their bloodline for all of them to be great coaches, you know, maybe I need to learn something and get it from them just in case I want to get into the coaching game after I’m done,” Rams tight end Kendall Blanton said.

    Wes Phillips broke into NFL coaching with his father. Then, he became the position coach for Jason Witten. All of the time soaking up information at home and at work from his father paid off with major dividends.

    Learning all the time

    “It certainly helped me a lot, just from conversations with dad watching football games, about clock management, timeouts, situations, those sort of things,” Wes Phillips said. “It wasn’t like I was at home drawing up things on the grease board with him. And then the opportunities I had as a young kid. To be able to go to the facility, to not only kind of sit in the back in some of the meetings with the coaches, but also to watch NFL football players, to see them up close.

    “To be a ball boy at training camp and kind of see the athletes in this league, for a long time doing that. I felt like when I actually got to this level, that I maybe had a sense of what these guys were supposed to look like.”

    Focused on the task at hand

    Chasing jobs or promotions hasn’t been Phillips’ focus at all, though.

    “The ring is the thing,” Wade Phillips said. “When you win, all of that other stuff, the jobs, it all kind of takes care of itself. He’s done a great job, and the people that need to know, they know that.”

    Focusing on the Bengals’ defense and the big moment wasn’t difficult for Wes. He simply keeps watching the tape and coaching up his guys.

    “I know a lot of coaches say this, but I really try to kind of stay away from a lot of the talk, whether it’s good or bad,” Phillips said before the Super Bowl. “Certainly, you work hard. You try to do the best you can, and you hope that at some point you have an opportunity to advance, wherever that might be.

    “We all have our ambitions. But really I just try to focus on being a good staff member, helping Sean, in this case, in any way I can, and making sure my guys know that I’m giving them everything I can every day and that I’m the same person every day. I can be a steady force that is going to always do everything I can to help them get better. And, really, that’s my goal as far as coaching.”

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