Vikings third-year wide receiver Jordan Addison received a three-game regular season suspension from the NFL yesterday for violating the league’s substance abuse policy, but head coach Kevin O’Connell is standing by his player because he sees accountability and behavior he likes. He referred today to Addison having a “heart of gold,” praising his relationships with teammates and his work ethic.
Addison pled guilty this summer to a misdemeanor charge stemming from a traffic incident last year in Los Angeles. O’Connell is a fan of Addison’s talent on the field but that wouldn’t cut it if he didn’t see that the 23-year-old USC alum has “taken full accountability” for his situation off the field.
O’Connell said the suspension is a “temporary setback” for Addison and he expects him to have a great season. The coach said it’s fortunate that Addison’s suspension will only prevent him from practicing for the first game, not the next two.
Injuries have caused multiple offensive players, including superstar WR Justin Jefferson, to miss stretches of training camp. A healthy unit might be more on O’Connell’s mind now than usual. “We want to make sure we’re as healthy as possible knowing that we’re going to be without Jordan there for not only the opener but for the first three,” he said.
Addison had 875 receiving yards last season, second on the team to Jefferson with 1,553. O’Connell wouldn’t speculate who will emerge to replace Addison for the first three games.
Kickoff Saturday for the opening preseason game against the Texans in Minneapolis is 3 p.m. with the game simulcasted on FOX 9 (television) and KFAN (radio). Announcers are Paul Allen, Pete Bercich and Ben Leber. The game will also air on NFL Network.
The view here is the Vikings will include rookie quarterback Max Brosmer on the final 53-man roster. The brass may be too impressed with the astute former Golden Gopher to risk losing him on waivers when the season roster is determined. The intent is likely to keep three quarterbacks on the roster: McCarthy, No. 2 Sam Howell and Brosmer, with veteran Brett Rypien cut from the team.
The annual NFL Draft has never been held in Minnesota but the Vikings and the Minnesota Sports and Events organization are working to change that. Vikings owner Mark Wilf made intentions clear recently at training camp.

“We certainly have been working with the Minnesota events group and the NFL to put our community out there to make sure we can get a draft,” Wilf said. “We’ve shown we can do big events, whether it’s a Super Bowl or Final Four. And I know our team is hard at work to putting an effort together. So, it’ll be an outstanding venue when we get it, and we’re working very hard to get it here.”
The 2024 NFL Draft in Detroit had a record reported attendance of 775,000, while Green Bay’s number earlier this year was more than 600,000. The 2026 draft will be in Pittsburgh, with the 2027 draft in Washington D.C.
Vikings NFL Hall of Famer and former NFL MVP Alan Page, once a Minnesota Supreme Court justice, turns 80 tomorrow.
The Vikings expect about 40,000 fans to visit training camp this year, a similar total as in the past. Among those in attendance today was Senator Amy Klobuchar.
The Gophers don’t have a lot in common with the all-time goliath of college football, the Alabama Crimson Tide, but there are a couple of timely notes. University of Washington transfer Kahlee Tafai, an offensive tackle who figures in Gopher plans this season, turned down Alabama, as did two prominent recruits who will be part of the 2026 prep recruiting class, Roman Voss and Ryan Estrada.
Tafai, listed at 6-5 and 340-pounds, will have three seasons of eligibility at Minnesota after starting four games last season for the Huskies. He was ranked as the No. 64 tackle in the nation coming out of high school in California.
Voss, the consensus No. 1 2025 football recruit in the state of Minnesota, reduced his final college choices to the Gophers and Crimson Tide. Then in June the coveted athlete from Jackson, who projects as a tight end in college, announced he will attend Minnesota.
Estrada, a highly recruited running back from El Paso, turned down blue-blood programs Michigan and Alabama. 247Sports ranks both him and Voss as composite 4-star players.
Kalen DeBoer, the Alabama head coach going into his second season, has recruiting roots in the five-state region that includes Minnesota. He once was head coach at Sioux Falls University where Tide offensive coordinator Ryan Grubb worked for him.
Let’s not get carried away with saying the Gophers have any significant edge on the Tide but it’s worth noting on the field the two programs have played once with Minnesota the winner. In the 2004 Music City Bowl Glen Mason’s Gophers defeated ‘Bama, 20-16.
In 2032 and 2033 Minnesota and Alabama will play a home and home series. The first game will be in Minneapolis.
Double-A Wichita outfielder Walker Jenkins was named Texas League Player of the Week on Monday. In six games, he hit .500 (12-for-24) with two doubles, three home runs, five RBI, eight runs scored, four walks, two stolen bases, a .552 on-base percentage, a .958 slugging percentage and a 1.510 OPS. He is ranked by MLB.com as the Twins top prospect and 12th-best in pro baseball.
Gotta figure the Pohlads are heavy favorites to win Patrick Reusse’s Turkey of the Year Award.
A Sports Headliners reader emailed with this comment: “Remember allowing Jack Morris to declare his free agency a few days after Game Seven, 1991 (World Series)? Allowing him to leave deprived the team of a good chance to repeat in 1992. That was a wake-up call per the Pohlads’ willingness to invest in their team.”