Vikings' Michael Pierce says he's healing quickly and 'anxious' to don pads again
The defensive tackle, the team's top 2020 free-agent signing, strained a calf earlier this summer, but said Thursday he's healing more quickly than trainers anticipated.
By Andrew Krammer Star Tribune JULY 29, 2021 — 6:18PM
CARLOS GONZALEZ, STAR TRIBUNE
Vikings defensive tackle Michael Pierce is both eager and nervous as he returns to football after opting out of the 2020 season because of COVID-19 concerns and rehabbing a calf strain from earlier this summer.
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With a compression sleeve on his left calf, nose tackle Michael Pierce moved around at Thursday's Vikings practice like a 340-pound defender who doesn't expect to miss much more time.
Pierce, the Vikings' top 2020 free-agent signing who opted out last season because of COVID-19 concerns, said he should be healed "soon" from a calf strain he suffered while training in Alabama this summer. After participating in defensive line drills, he's been rehabbing off to the side of practices while mending an injury that wasn't reported until last week.
"I actually injured it three weeks before you guys found out," Pierce said. "So it's doing a lot better, is a lot further along than what Coach and them expected. When I came back from 'Bama and started getting treatments, they were pretty shocked, so that's a good thing."
Coach Mike Zimmer said the Vikings training staff is "taking it easy" with Pierce with over six weeks to go before the Sept. 12 season opener in Cincinnati. Pierce said he wasn't taking it easy this summer when he got injured during agility drills.
"I was doing a little bit too much D-end stuff," Pierce said, "change of direction and all of those little things. We're going to peel back on that next summer, but yeah, I'm feeling pretty good."
Pierce was signed last year to replace nose tackle Linval Joseph. The two worked out together this summer, when Pierce said Joseph "gave me his blessing" as the new anchor in the middle of the Vikings defense.
It's been 18 months since Pierce last donned shoulder pads, in his last game for the Ravens in January 2020, and the anticipation is mounting as he waits on his calf strain to heal.
"It will be a little bit of nervousness, a little butterflies, but I think that happens at any point in camp," Pierce said. "Just anxiousness. I'll probably have to like pull myself back a little bit. I'm itching. If you can't tell, I'm fidgety, but once this calf gets to 100 percent, I'll be able to roll."