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Dirty Harry Swan Song?
#1
The scene looked like a continuation of Snoop Dogg’s lavish halftime show. Vikings safety Harrison Smith stood next to teammates wearing Santa-like red robes. A large dollop of fake snow rested on Smith’s head. He tore into a large chunk of meat provided by the Netflix hosts, and gazed around U.S. Bank Stadium, knowing he might have only one more game remaining in his career.

On Dec. 25, in a 23-10 victory over the Lions, Smith didn’t just turn back the clock. He might have reset it.

In the penultimate game of what has been a quietly effective season, Smith made loud noises, producing a sack, two tackles for losses, an interception and three passes defended. He looked like he was 25 instead of 36. He looked like the kind of guy you’d want around for more than a few days of the 2026 calendar year.

So as Smith fought back tears during an emotional postgame interview, I asked him if recent events could persuade him to play one more season. He knocked down the question as if it were a pass from Lions quarterback Jared Goff, saying he wanted to stay “in the moment.”

I think Smith should come back.

Am I a prisoner of the moment?

When the moment is this good, yes.

Smith had an undisclosed ailment that robbed him of preparation time this summer and in training camp, and he wasn’t much of a factor early in the season. I figured the Vikings should have spent their money elsewhere, instead of providing a farewell tour for a great player.

Smith has changed my mind. He has helped what appeared to be an overmatched secondary improve dramatically over the course of the season. He remains by far the team’s best safety. If he is still capable of the kinds of explosive plays we saw from him against Detroit, why wouldn’t you bring him back?

When his coaches and teammates speak about him, you can tell they’re not offering mere platitudes.

“We wanted to once again give Harrison the ability to win the pre-snap,” Vikings coach Kevin O’Connell said. “And then what I think he did tonight was win the post-snap in many ways.”

Translating to common English: Smith is able to read offenses and adjust the defense before the ball is snapped. And after the ball is snapped, Smith looks like a player who should wind up in the Hall of Fame.

The Vikings’ four-game winning streak has come in virtually meaningless games, but that doesn’t mean it’s meaningless.

Smith has given himself reason to consider playing another season, which would be a coup for the Vikings.

Linebacker Dallas Turner has become much more productive.

J.J. McCarthy looks like a winning, if developing, quarterback.

Aaron Jones Sr. has proved he is not merely a quality running back but that he will play through injuries in games of little consequence.
In a remarkably unpredictable league, it would not be surprising to see the Vikings become a force in the NFC North again next year, especially considering they are one Bears kickoff return away from being 4-1 in the division this season.

When they were 4-8 and one of the most disappointing teams in the league, the Vikings could have splintered or sagged. Football is a hard game to play without obvious motivation.

They have won four in a row, and on Jan. 4 Harrison Smith will play against the Green Bay Packers in U.S. Bank Stadium in the year 2026.

Returning for “one more year” is always a risk. Sports can’t guarantee a happy ending. Maybe Smith wants to go out playing like a star, with his limbs and lobes intact.

The guy we watched against Detroit — and the guy who teared up talking about Vikings fans after the game — should linger on this stage.

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#2
I always had a saying when I played pickup basketball. Always leave one game before you think you should. Hard to be any better than he was against Detroit. But the year could have gone much better. So for him, yeah, I want him back one more year.
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#3
His personal illness pretty much trashed his season. And once he was able to play, it seemed like a mos till he got his sea-legs back.

Selfishly, I'd like to have him back another year for mentoring newbies and field general. Unlike a lot of players, I think he's smart enough to do whats best for him and his family.

One of the big off-season talkers for sure.
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#4
Sounds like he left it open. I am sure it's whether or not he feels like he can get ready from week to week....Ohhh Kwesi, we are gonna need a capable Safety this year...you know like a Kyle...Hamilton...
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#5
(3 hours ago)Vikesrock Wrote: Sounds like he left it open.  I am sure it's whether or not he feels like he can get ready from week to week....Ohhh Kwesi, we are gonna need a capable Safety this year...you know like a Kyle...Hamilton...

Agreed they need to draft one and probably draft one early. 

Problem is to put a rook in that D (if BFlo stays) who makes the calls and alignments would be too much for a kid. 

They probably have to draft one and hope Harry returns, some other vet on roster + rook or a FA vet + draft choice.
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#6
I thought Harry stuck around maybe a year longer than he should have. But he surprised me. Hreally played well this year, especially late. I think the team was probably counting on getting his money off the books in '26, but I'd welcome him back if he wanted play one more year. 

I think we draft a safety somewhere in the first three rounds regardless. By the way, Jay Ward has been playing well the last few weeks.
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#7
(2 hours ago)MaroonBells Wrote: I thought Harry stuck around maybe a year longer than he should have. But he surprised me. Hreally played well this year, especially late. I think the team was probably counting on getting his money off the books in '26, but I'd welcome him back if he wanted play one more year. 

I think we draft a safety somewhere in the first three rounds regardless. By the way, Jay Ward has been playing well the last few weeks.

I think Daronte Jones has done an exceptional job with not a lot of Corner/S talent to play with this season. I mentioned him in the BFlo thread too. 

He'll get an NFL DC job somewhere and soon.
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