"Yeah, we banged heads. Like once," Childress said. "You could say I knew him from the outside and I knew his body of work, but I probably didn't know the wiring that was involved with that. Safe to say he didn't know how I was wired."
The Vikings have a lot of other good players and a lot of other intriguing story lines, but none of them captivate quite such as Favre, love or loathe.
Though the coach was relaxed as can be at the office, wearing sandals, shorts and a purple polo on the verge of his last quiet summer weekend, Favre is clearly on his mind. Twice, Childress was asked about his own lingering feelings from the NFC championship game loss to the Saints, and in both answers he found a way to work in a couple of comments about Favre.
Childress also said there's no rift between him and running back Adrian Peterson, who missed the mandatory minicamp last month to attend a hometown festival in his honor in Texas.
"We're both men. It wasn't earth-shattering. It wasn't the end of the world by any stretch of the imagination," Childress said.
Will it be the end of the world if Favre doesn't come back? The always placid coach wouldn't acknowledge any anxiety about it.
"He knows that nothing's promised," Childress said. "He can say he's coming back and pull a calf the first day, and he can't get over it. ... He knows how fragile this thing is."
[Associated Press;
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