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Vikings long-snapper Cullen Loeffler enjoys a game of catch during training camp at Minnesota State University.
John Cross / The Free Press


Published August 15, 2007 11:50 pm - Vikings long-snapper Cullen Loeffler has quietly made himself a mainstay on the Vikings' special teams unit.

Vikes’ Loeffler laying low
Long-snapper figures no news is good news for him

By Jim Rueda
Free Press Sports Editor

MANKATO

Most of you probably didn’t notice Cullen Loeffler in last Friday’s preseason game against St. Louis ... and that’s precisely the way he wants it.

Loeffler, a long-snapper starting his fourth year with the Vikings, says he’s only doing his job if people don’t notice him.

“If a receiver runs a wrong route or drops a ball, that’s just a dropped ball or the wrong route has been run,” he said. “But a specialist like I am only gets one shot to get it right.

“If I screw up, the kick or the punt breaks down and it usually turns into a big play for the other team. Nobody really notices you when you’re doing things right, they just notice you when you do things wrong.”

The Vikings special teams, as a unit, did not play well last Friday. Punter Chris Kluwe struggled and both the return and coverage teams could have player better.

Loeffler’s snaps, however, were right where they needed to be. More importantly, he didn’t let any defenders through the line to harass Kluwe or place-kicker Ryan Longwell.

“A lot of people don’t realize that the snap is only one small part of the play,” he said. “You have to be able to move and get on our block after you snap it.

“A lot of guys can throw a good ball and hit their target, but when you have a 270-pound guy over your head who’s trying to block a kick, there’s a lot of added pressure in there. You have to snap and be moving your feet at the same time. It comes down to throwing a good ball and securing your block.”

Vikings’ special teams coach Paul Ferraro says there are only 32 long snappers in the NFL and they’d better be pretty good at what they do or they’re not going to last long.

“It’s just like a punter or kicker, there are a lot of them out there so you have to do your job well,” he said. “Cullen has always had great velocity on his snaps but his protection was something we felt needed to get better after last year. We worked with him on it during the offseason and he’s shown much improvement. We could see already in the Kansas City scrimmage that he was better at it.”

Loeffler, a quarterback in high school, was converted to tight end and played on special teams at the University of Texas. The Longhorns’ special teams struggled his freshman season and Loeffler was asked at the start of his sophomore year to try long-snapping. He agreed and held on to that spot for three seasons.

He never set the goal of trying to be a long-snapper in the pro ranks but admits the thought crossed his mind his last two years of college. He graduated with a finance degree in 2004 and the Vikings signed him as a free agent where he played in every game as a rookie.

“I never talked out loud about playing professionally,” he said. “The odds are against you but I guess I was lucky I ended up here.

“Still, the NFL is game-to-game, what-have-you-done-for-me-lately situation. I could have one bad game and, the next thing you know, I’m out on the street looking for another job.”



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