Minnesota Vikings (left) in 1961 Van Brocklin cut his ties with the Eagles after his belief that the team had reneged on an agreement to name him head coach to replace the retiring
Buck Shaw, as they instead wanted him to serve as a player-coach when he really wanted to go out on top as a player. On January 18, 1961, he accepted the head coaching position for the expansion
Minnesota Vikings, less than a month after winning the NFL Championship game. Van Brocklin personally looked at film for over two dozen quarterbacks before picking
Fran Tarkenton in the third round of the draft. In training camp, he emphasized for Tarkenton to "hum the ball", complete with making him do weight exercises and practicing throws on a line. He also allowed Tarkenton to call his own plays. Van Brocklin tapped
George Shaw as the starting quarterback for the first game of the season, but he prepared Tarkenton the week before the first game by having him come over to his house to study film night after night. When the Vikings played the
Chicago Bears on September 17, Van Brocklin tapped Tarkenton to replace Shaw after the first quarter. Tarkenton proceeded to throw 17-of-23 for 250 yards with four touchdowns in the 37–13 victory. Dubbed "Stormin' Norman" for his fiery temper towards players and even officials (which once saw him throw a pocketful of change at an official), Van Brocklin compiled a record of 29–51–4 () in six seasons. The tenure was highlighted by his contentious relationship with quarterback Fran Tarkenton. Van Brocklin was displeased with Tarkenton's penchant for
scrambling, preferring that he stay in the pocket. The feud culminated with Tarkenton's demand for a trade While the Vikings attempted to dissuade Tarkenton from being traded with the departure of Van Brocklin, Tarkenton stayed firm with his desire for a trade in the belief of not wanting to be thought of as having Van Brocklin's departure tied to him. Tarkenton was traded to the
New York Giants shortly after Van Brocklin's departure. He was reacquired by Van Brocklin's successor,
Bud Grant, five years later in
1972. One thing Van Brocklin was known for was his disdain for soccer-style kickers (now the standard in the NFL). In one game, soccer-style kicker
Garo Yepremian beat Van Brocklin's team and after the game, a reporter asked how he felt about losing the game on a last-second field goal, and he replied, "They ought to change the god-damned immigration laws in this country". However, Van Brocklin did end up having a soccer-style kicker in
Nick Mike-Mayer in his final two seasons as coach of the Falcons, in 1973 and 1974. During his first year off the field in over two decades, Van Brocklin served as a commentator on NFL broadcasts in
1967 for
CBS.
Atlanta Falcons In
1968, Van Brocklin took over as head coach of the
Atlanta Falcons on October 1, replacing
Norb Hecker, who had started the season with three defeats, extending the team losing streak to ten games. Over the next seven seasons, Van Brocklin had mixed results, putting together a 37–49–3 mark. He led the team to its first winning season in
1971 with a 7–6–1 record, then challenged for a playoff spot in
1973 with a 9–5 mark. His 1973 Falcons handed the Fran Tarkenton-led, 9–0 Minnesota Vikings its first defeat, on
Monday Night Football. However, after winning just two of his first eight games in
1974, he was fired. ==Career statistics==