Report: Vikings interviewed Anthony Blevins for special teams job

Blevins, 44, served as an assistant special teams coach for the Cardinals from 2013-17 and for the Giants from 2018-19.

The Vikings are looking for the replacement for Mawan Maalouf after one nightmare season in Minnesota.

One possibility is Giants assistant defensive backs coach Anthony Blevins. Per Jordan Raanan, Blevins interviewed with the Vikings for the open special teams coordinator job.

Blevins, 44, served as an assistant special teams coach for the Cardinals from 2013-17 and for the Giants from 2018-19. Last season he was the assistant defensive backs coach for New York.

We’ll see if anything comes from the interview.

Vikings special teams coordinator Marwan Maalouf will not have his contract renewed

The Minnesota Vikings will be moving on from special teams coordinator Marwan Maalouf.

The Vikings special teams unit was defined by chaos this season.

Minnesota had muffed punts and fumbles on returns. K.J. Osborn averaged just 3.9 yards per punt return. Chad Beebe averaged 4.7 yards per return. The Vikings also gave up two blocked punts.

The Vikings had to waive a long snapper after he had errant snaps this year. Kicker Dan Bailey made just 68.2% of his field goals and 86% of his extra points, which ranks as his worst career performance in both categories.

So the special teams unit was not great — across the board. Now, Minnesota coach Mike Zimmer has announced that special teams coordinator Marwan Maalouf, whose contract is expiring, will not have his deal renewed, meaning the Vikings are moving on.

Maalouf coached Minnesota’s special teams for just two seasons. According to a report from NFL Network’s Tom Pelissero, the Vikings also might have to find a replacement offensive coordinator, with Gary Kubiak leaning towards retirement.

Vikings special teams coordinator Marwan Maalouf talks about the punt returning

Minnesota Vikings punt returner K.J. Osborn has averaged 1.5 yards per return on punts in 2020. Vikings special teams coordinator Marwan Maalouf recently talked about it.

The Vikings have been good on offense and improved on defense during the team’s three-game win streak.

Of course, that win streak was snapped last game against the Cowboys, mostly due to a poor defensive performance. But whether the Vikings are winning or losing as of late, one thing has been consistent: the special teams has been chaotic.

An aspect of that has to do with the punt returning. The Vikings got off to a bad start last game when K.J. Osborn muffed a punt after Minnesota stopped Dallas on its opening offensive drive.

The Vikings recovered, but it yet again revealed a problem: Minnesota has not cut it on special teams lately. Osborn has averaged 1.5 yards per punt return this season.

Vikings special teams coordinator Marwan Maalouf recently talked about the punt returning. He said that he can’t speak for Osborn, but he feels like the rookie is frustrated at the moment.

“I’m happy with K.J., I really am,” Maalouf said, via the Vikings Twitter account. “He wants to make a play. Sometimes, I think he forces it a little bit. I sound like a broken record probably, but the bottom line is: he hasn’t had a preseason, he hasn’t had a ton of reps, either. I can probably count on one hand how many true reps he’s had on punt return to actually advance a ball.”

The Vikings are not getting a lot of punt return yardage out of their special teams unit, but that’s not all on Osborn. It will be interesting to see if the Vikings end up making any changes in order to rectify their issues in that area. If not, I’m not so sure that the punt returning will improve for the team.

Three keys to success for Vikings special teams

The Vikings special teams unit performed well in several different aspects in 2019. Here’s how it can stay that way.

Minnesota has been tormented with inconsistent kicker play for years, but Dan Bailey’s resurgent 2019 helped ease some worries.

Bailey, after making 75% of his field goal attempts for two seasons in a row, went 27-29 last season for the Vikings. If he stays at or near that sort of production, the Vikings won’t have to worry about the kicker position.

The return game is more up in the air, though.

On punt returning, Mike Hughes led the team with 14 attempts in 2019. Hughes, however, might earn a bigger role on the defense after departures in free agency at cornerback.

The team also used Marcus Sherels, who had six returns. Sherels has a 50-50 chance of retiring, according to Chris Tomasson of the Pioneer Press.

On kickoffs, the Vikings mostly utilized Ameer Abdullah, who they re-signed this offseason. Abdullah led the team with 13 attempts.

The Vikings special teams unit looked good at times in 2019. Here is what should stay the same and what else needs to happen, in order for the Vikings to find success in that area.